WRITING: Plotting 101, Part 2
Hi Everyone!
On 9.20 we talked about PLOTTING and how the plot is, one way or another, tied with your characters and their personality. You can’t do one without the other. If you try, then you will more than likely, write out-of-character which will earn you a reject.
Utilizing HEART OF THE JAGUAR, my first paranormal book written in 1999 (and available in reprint right here, right now on eharlequin.com), I’m allowing you to get inside my head and follow how I plot. That said, also remember I’m a deep characterization writer first and the plot spins out of the personality of my hero/heroine.
NECESSARY BARE BONES OF PLOTTING
Above all, remember: who, what, when, why, where and how. This is your roadmap to creating a great plot. Let’s check back in with WHO.
INDEX CARDS HELP IN PLOTTING AND CHARACTERIZATION
One thing I do on a large book is I have lined index cards. On each card I write the character’s name, hair color, eye color, height, weight, age, career and any other things I need to know about her or him. These are what I call ‘reminder’ cards because when you’re writing a book, you tend to forget things because you’re like a control tower with twenty airplanes circling you all at the same time.
So, my short cut is these cards. I have ‘character’ cards. These would be for the primary characters, the hero/heroine, and also for each secondary character. And then, I have ‘chapter’ cards. Your chapters ARE your plot. As you develop your plot, you can jot down in what chapter this scene/friction/conflict/resolution/first hand holding/first kiss/ almost making love/love scene(s), are going to take place.
As I fill out these cards, I get an idea of what is going on in each chapter card. If I have twelve chapters in Silhouette Nocturne book, which is approximately 75,000 words, then I can read them to see if I have enough tension romantically speaking, enough danger, tension, ect.
THE ‘WHAT IF’ GAME...
And if I don’t, I can sit there and think up what I call a “WHAT IF....???” You know, ‘what if?’ serves as one of the best questions to stimulate your idea factory up in your head. This is called thinking outside the box of ourselves when we start putting questions to our characters. What would Mike Houston do in this situation? What would he do in that situation? And so on....
ECHO BLUE--the “idea” factory Flower Essence
And....I have another little secret for people who are weak on plotting! Most of you probably don’t know this, but I have a flower and gem essence business. I have about fifty different flowers and gems that I have worked with over the years and I’ve found one that is just perfect for plotting. It is called Echo Blue. It is the Lisianthus flower. And the ‘strain’ is Echo Blue. I make this flower essence and many writers use it with great results. I use it too--especially if I paint myself into a plot corner and can’t get out of it. I take 4 drops under the tongue, wait five minutes and pretty soon, ideas come pouring in. With these ideas, I can unblock my plot and move on. Please note, this is a flower essence and nothing else. It’s not a drug. Nor is it addictive. I could write a book on the healing effects of flower and gem essences--but that’s not today’s topic. I only wanted you to know that there is something from Nature that can help us open the vault to our ideas within ourselves.
THE ROLE OF SPOUSE AND FRIENDS
Or, you can ask your spouse if he or she is tuned into your book idea, for ‘what if’s’. Or your friends. You’re not limited as to who you asked and certainly, if you are stuck do go for outside help. Just be sure to winnow wheat from chaff!
PLOTTING, PART 2
Yesterday, 9.12.06, we left you with opening your novel and plot. I’m sure everyone has told you to have a bang, flash opening to your book. The reason is simple: you want to not only draw in, but engage the reader from the gitgo. If they are entertained, they stay and continue to read. If not, they stop. And that’s a death knell.
A plot opening hinges on the characters personalities. In this case, I decided to open with Major Mike Houston. He is, after all, an alpha male first and shape shifter second (and the reader doesn’t really know this until later....a good book plot never gives everything away in the first page or indeed, the first chapter. You sprinkle amazing aha’s about your characters throughout the book plot--that is called pacing in the sense that by reading the book, there is some new discovery about the characters in EACH chapter. Plot that in. Your readers will be happy. That means you have to know what you’re going to put in every chapter before you start. This is part of plotting.)
I decided to open my book with the following:
“Oh, hell...I’m dying....”
Now, you have to admit...that’s a pretty grabby hook, huh? Yep.
And in this particular book, I needed a prologue, which is a plot device or ‘tool.’ A prologue is utilized when we need to ‘catch the reader up’ in a hurry because we don’t want to waste chapters on explanation. And if we did go the long route, i.e., chapters, it would slow the pacing down and that’s death. Instead, we ‘cut to the chase’ with a prologue which is designed to bring out a short, sharply cut scene (remember, every scene has: who,what, where, why, when and sometimes, how) to divulge maximum into to set the reader up for chapter 1.
In this prologue I, the author, introduce you, the reader, to Major Mike Houston....and he’s dying. So, the WHO in this prologue (which is usually a scene but it can be several scenes--just depends), is Houston. The WHAT is: he was flying in a Peruvian Army helicopter when drug runners brought it down . And Houston is the only survivor. The WHERE is: The helicopter has crashed into the jungles of Peru. The WHY is revealed later as Houston is laying in a depression, the blood leaking out of him. He knows he’s going to die.
We learn he’s part Quechua Indian, his other from Peru, and part caucasian, his father in the military of the USA. We learn his Peruvian Indian mother has taught him a lot of mystical knowledge. And, as he lay dying, he is thinking, “I’m dying now. I’m going between the worlds.” This is a cue and tip-off to the reader that Houston is more than just an alpha male. There is something DIFFERENT about him.
And then, as a drug runner who is hunting him approaches, who will find and shoot him, Houston feels his consciousness slipping from him. A white and gold light surrounds him and he thinks he’s dying. And then, a tiny voice in his head tells him to open his eyes and look down at his arm. What he sees is NOT human....his dark, hairy arm is turning a gold fur color with black crescents across it. Because he’s losing consciousness, he’s unsure of WHAT is happening.
And within a minute, his world changes. All his six senses have become acute and sharpened far beyond the human range. He spots the drug runner stalking him and sees the dark light around him. Houston knows this man is evil and wants to kill him.
I lead the reader through an amazing shape shifting process with Houston. And at the end, he returns to his human form after banishing the drug runner and saving his own life. It is then that Houston is weary, semiconscious and finds an old man with long, white hair and two younger people appearing before him. They aren’t drug runners. Who are they?
The old man tells Houston that he will come with them to the Village. That he will be safe there...
And I end the prologue there.
Hopefully, as a writer telling a story, I’ve plotted this at the beginning enough to push the reader to go on and read Chapter 1.
In this example, I’ve used a prologue to divulge the who, what, where, when, why and how to the reader. Not only that, it is within the realm of characterization. Houston is Special Forces. What better way to introduce him than in a fire fight? That is what I mean by being in character. Whatever the beginning of your story, it should grow out of the background of the hero/heroine.
And, I wanted an exciting, dramatic opening to this paranormal. I wanted to SHOW the reader that it was a paranormal without saying show. I SHOWED it instead of TOLD it, via the character and putting Houston into a situation where he had to shape shift to save his own neck.
Go back to your book. Look at the opening. Ask yourself these plot questions:
1. Is the opening a hook or not?
2. Is the character in the opening in character?
3. Have you placed them in some kind of situation that is riveting? Not every book can be a life-or-death opening. But you need to look and know your main character well enough to realize what kind of a scene would work through them to hook your reader.
4. Do you need a prologue or not? Usually, on longer books, mass market types, prologue and epilogue work well. In series books, they aren’t usually necessary although they certainly can be used on a case by case basis. It just all depends....
That’s it for today! I hope you’ve enjoyed this repartee and look forward to any questions or comments you might have. Tomorrow: Plotting 101, Part 3!
In Spirit....











































