THE WRITING LIFE – CRAPPY FIRST DRAFTS

The blog is a little overdue again, partly because I’ve been working hard like a good novelist, and partly because, if I’m honest, I’ve been a bit stressed and nervous this last couple of weeks. As regular readers will know, I’m struggling massively with my third novel. Far more, I think, than I did with books one and two. I wrote a pretty disastrous first draft. Well, I suppose there were some things I could keep. In fact, it wasn’t too far away from this brilliant pie chart, which I printed off some time ago from  writingyablogspot.com and pinned to my noticeboard.

In my case, rather than forty per cent ‘not entirely hopeless, possibly reusable bits’, I probably had about twenty-five per cent. Where the pie chart suggests fifteen per cent ‘unnecessary back story’, I reckon mine was about twenty per cent. And I’d say twenty per cent of that draft contained scenes (and characters!) that belonged ‘in another story entirely’.

Yes, fellow writers and esteemed readers, it was crap with a capital ‘C’. Thing is, there were those ‘not entirely hopeless’ bits, and there was five per cent gold (potentially gold, anyway.)  I knew that somewhere in that draft was a story I definitely wanted to tell, so I virtually started again. I kept my central characters, rewriting them quite extensively, I got rid of a major character and two minor ones, and I rewrote a fairly important character to incorporate some of the things I’d lost by dumping the others

The initial structure was chronological but jumping forward years at a time with pointless ‘filler’ scenes in between (what was I thinking??) and although I knew it didn’t work, I couldn’t see what to do to make it work. I’m still wrestling with the structure to a certain extent, but it’s definitely working better now.

Anyway, to come back to why I was feeling stressed. I’ve never made any secret of the fact that I’m finding this novel challenging, I’ve been extremely open and honest, not only with you lot, but also with my agent and editor. Other writers have questioned the wisdom of this, (and don’t think I haven’t questioned it myself!) But at the end of the day, if you’ll forgive the cliche, I see no point in pretending everything is going swimmingly when it just plain isn’t. So, during my last conversation with my wonderful agent, Kate, I told her that my confidence was swinging wildly from, ‘yes, I’ve got it now,’ to ‘why the hell would anyone want to read this?’ We had a long chat and then Kate suggested it might be helpful for me to polish up and submit my first fifty pages to her and my editor, together with a chapter breakdown outlining the structure of the rest of the novel.

It took ages to ‘polish up’ the first fifty pages, because so much had changed. (these were the new fifty pages, mind, not the original ones) Every single decision you make impacts on the rest of the novel. I had to rewrite several chapters simply because I’d changed the layout of the house! Anyway, eventually, I managed to get those fifty pages in the best shape I was able to at this stage – they’ll change again, of course – and I sent them off.

Then came the tense waiting. They would either say, yes, you’re on the right track, carry on, or no, this really isn’t working.

They got back to me within a week, which, knowing how busy they both are, I really appreciated. Basically, the news is good. There are issues that need addressing, but overall they think it’s working much better, they think I can do it; they say carry on!

The relief! I hadn’t realised quite how tense I was until I got this feedback. I read the email twice and then felt my whole body slump, as though someone had pulled the plug out. I then had to curl up on the sofa in my study and have a little nap, after which I felt much better and was itching to get back to it. I’ve said I’ll deliver this new draft by the end of August, and there’s quite a bit to do so I need to really focus now. I still have several new chapters to draft, and lots of editing and rewriting before I submit. And of course there will be lots more revisions afterwards.

So after well over a year of false starts, wrong turnings, rubbish drafts and re-drafts, I now feel as though the end is in sight. I’m feeling good at the moment. I know there’s loads more work to do, but I’m feeling much more confident about doing it now. Watch this space!

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9 thoughts on “THE WRITING LIFE – CRAPPY FIRST DRAFTS

  1. JO says:

    Your persistence with gives us all hope – those weeks and weeks of ploughing on, trying to shape something until it at least makes sense – looks like it's paid off. Hurrah!

  2. Susan Elliot Wright says:

    thanks, Jo. That's absolutely it, it's a question of ploughing on regardless until it at least makes sense. There is a lot more to do yet, but I'm feeling much more hopeful. Thanks so much for your continued support.

  3. Rachael Dunlop says:

    Hurrah! This is excellent news. I have also just sought feedback on my rewrite and have been given a thumbs up for both the first 50 pages and the synopsis. I staggered around like a stunned fool for about half a day afterwards.

  4. Jo says:

    This blog post gives me hope! Hallelujah….. it's not just me who stumbles around in the dark! Thank you for your honesty, Susan. I only wish more novelists were so candid about their struggles.

  5. Susan Elliot Wright says:

    Thanks, Jo. I'm surprised at how many novelists suffer in silence. Maybe there's a concern that if you speak your fears, they'll come true. I don't know, but I'll probably carry on blathering my mouth off!

  6. J Rose says:

    I agree with Jo. The solitary nature of writing makes your 'virtual' candour a Godsend! Thank you for sharing this. Could I ask, do you think that part of the trepidation of a third or fourth novel has to do with expectation (either your own or that of those around you, albeit supportive) and its influence on your sense of creative freedom?

  7. Susan Elliot Wright says:

    Thank you so much! That's exactly how I feel about it – it's such a solitary business. And to answer your question, yes, definitely! I suffered this particularly with my second novel, because the first (which if I'm honest, I'm not sure is as technically accomplished) was so very well received. Readers seemed to have a huge emotional connection with that book and I had dozens of emails about it, so I was terrified that the second book would be a letdown. Fortunately, my original readers seemed to like it as much, and in some cases more, but what that means is that the pressure I feel for novel number three is even greater. Heaven only knows what it must be like for those wonderful novelists with ten or more books behind them. You can't get it right every time, can you?

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