The next three issues of “Do you know where YOUR story Is?” will deal with approaching the problem of sizeable revisions. This issue offers some straightforward methods to help you tackle the problem. For a more whimsical approach, continue on to Issue 12.2. And for the professional’s opinion on handling developmental problems, please check out Issue 12.3. All three articles will post on the same day.
This material also appears, with a slightly different introduction, on my web site: “Finding Robin’s Story”.
What do you do when you have to replace a major chunk of your story with new material? A rebuild of the story that redirects it and has ripple effects further down the line?
After you cry and tear your hair out and maybe down a glass or two of motor-oil strength iced tea, you apply your seat to your chair and get busy.
Revision is difficult. No writer will dispute that. It is, however, a completely necessary evil. Our writing suffers, even dies without it.
Handling things like grammar, spelling, punctuation, the occasional awkward word or sentence is easy. Deciding to eliminate words you’ve already labored over is difficult. And doing wholesale re-writes, changes, and adjustments feels absolutely impossible. It isn’t.
Once you have reached the conclusion that segments need to be either reworded or replaced, you need to stop and identify both what the actual problems with the current words are and how they need to be changed. (See our upcoming article in Issue 12.3 on how to analyze and develop your story revisions.)
When you have done the analysis and at least some of your new material is ready, it’s time to face the page and dig in. This is where it breaks down for so many writers and results in so many days of hiding in bed, taking long walks, cleaning the garage or drinking the comforting beverage of your choice by the gallon. I have faced this same paralysis, and while I don’t have a perfect remedy, I’ve figured out a few things that help in getting--and keeping-- going on this task.
Step #1: Getting your words ready.
Whether you do this as a standalone task or tackle it by working within your manuscript, start with fixing the obvious. What will replace the words you/your editor/your reader/critique group have decided need to go? Everything else will depend on getting this set. It may be improving a description, changing dialogue, even laying out a new plotline with all that entails.
Take your time. Plot carefully so as to disrupt as few other passages as possible--but make sure you are happy with the new material. The point is to improve your manuscript, and skimping on new material to save time... won’t. It won’t save agony either. Put as much in print as you can, and make sure there’s a special storage place in your brain for the potential things you’ll need to add/change later.
Step #2: Locating relevant scenes and passages.
Check your manuscript carefully for anything related to the offending passage(s). This is where search functions are so handy. Look for words that ONLY relate to the material changes. An easy example is a name change, which can usually be accomplished entirely with FIND AND REPLACE. If you’re not changing a name, searching out a character’s name can still help you find much of the related material, especially if the action centers around that character. Using DOCUMENT MAP (MSWord) when you write helps, as that can track chapters and other headlines.
Changes have repercussions, so any succeeding passages that relate will need to be adjusted based on the new material. This also applies to ‘set-up’ sections that precede the segment that is being revised. Highlight them, underline them, copy them out--use whatever organizational process works for you, but make sure you don’t miss any.
Step #3: Take-down and build-up.
This next step is somewhat personal. For some writers, seeing the words written on the page makes them immutable. Others like to leave them on the page as a sort of reference. Personally, most of the time I’m in the first group. When I’m having to replace content, I completely remove it, but I copy it over to another document--just in case. With open space, my brain is free to focus on the new material and where it will lead me. You may choose to write differently, keeping the old material on the page so you can cannibalize it as you write.
The joy of doing this hard work is that as you tackle it, new ideas arise and come together like puzzle pieces. You see improvements as they hit the page. Something clicks when you get the right words in place. That in itself is inspiring. And the new ideas that sprout up will make your manuscript even better.
Now the related material needs to be coordinated with what was just written. I tend to start by backing up to preceding material, the set-up scenes. When a change is made there, it will create its own ripples that will need follow-up. It may affect more things than just what you’ve re-written. Taking care of these makes this step more complicated than dealing with the material that comes after your big change. When you go on to deal with the ramifications that cascade from the changes, working through them will be a little more straightforward. Granted, things can all get a little gnarled up, but working through them makes the writing stronger.
This is not the only way to deal with large revisions. Every writer develops their own preferred technique, often accompanied by pretzels or chips, beer or tea, or even a huge bowl of grapes. Some do yoga between rewrites, or take a break for a walk in the yard. You get the idea. The important thing is to find a technique that works for you. You don’t want to be held from crossing the finish line because you are overwhelmed by revision work. Knowing you have a method that lets you face the task with relative comfort sets you up to deal with the writing with confidence.
for more on dealing with large revisions, see Issue 12.2, An Analogy of Sorts and issue 12.3, Treating Your Manuscript, by guest contributor, Mackenzie Minnick