When it comes to writing a hardboiled mystery novel, I’ve always found it helpful to break down the scenes on index cards. A story has a beginning, a middle, and an end. I make it a point of knowing (roughly) how I’d like my story to end. That way, I can create a map of sorts for getting from Point A (the beginning) to Point B (the midpoint) and Point C (the resolution).
This technique is even more important when writing a screenplay. Each beat of a story needs to fall within a certain page count. In screenwriting, one page equals about one minute of screen time. And so, like an actor hitting his or her mark, a screenplay must accomplish various parts of the story at certain times.
Now, there are all sorts of fancy programs with organizing tools and such, which are supposed to make this easier. But say your Internet or electricity goes out. What then?
Like a print book, there’s nothing to replace the feel of index cards. I lay the scenes out like playing cards, and it gives me a “bird’s eye” view of the overall plot. I can move the cards around, substitute new ones (with different colors, like replacement pages in scripts), combine scenes, strike others.
As for creating the actual story, as Ernest Hemingway would say, “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.”
As the video for this week, I’ve uploaded the trailer for my first novel, Identity Crisis!
The book is currently available for only 99 cents per download on Amazon! 🙂
PS: Here’s a cartoon that’s too awesome not to share! 🙂
I HAVE to admit, I’ve never actually though of using index cards: but I leave the real writing STRICTLY to the professionals, like yourself … !
But I DO tend to have something of a fixed formula for the #Teasers. I basically open with a intro: whatever happens to be floating through my mind, when I wake up, basically.
THEN I try to move onto the questions: along with yesterday’s questions and answers.
But you’d possibly noticed … ?
But here: that’s a tune …
Nice tune! 🙂
Yeah, I’ve got the whole album: Sweetpea, Sir Harry, and Don and David Was can knock out a good one … !
(And getting hold of Kris Kristopherson for that song? Smooth move!)