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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!agate!rsoft!mindlink!a710
- From: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca (Crawford Kilian)
- Subject: Writing Fiction on Computer
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 01:56:26 GMT
- Message-ID: <20105@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Sender: news@deep.rsoft.bc.ca (Usenet)
- Lines: 148
-
- First of all, no one ever taught me how to write fiction on a computer, so if
- you have a better way of doing something, please let us all know. While I
- wrote several novels on a PC, for the last few years I've used a Mac and Word
- 4.0 and 5.0. Much of what I have to say is equally applicable to either
- system; where it isn't, I'm sure PC users will see ways to get the same
- results.
-
- Format:
- Maybe you like a lot of text on your screen; I don't, so I write with the
- format I'll use when I print out--double spaced text with margins of about an
- inch or so either side. I use 14-point Times, which is easy to read on the
- screen, prints out nicely, and coincidentally puts about 250 words on a page
- just like a typewriter.
-
- I don't bother with a header. A simple Arabic page number goes in the upper
- right corner. With Word 4.0 and 5.0 you can forbid splitting paragraphs
- between pages, by invoking Keep With Next Paragraph and Keep Lines Together.
- Do so, even if it sometimes means an extra-wide lower margin, because it will
- simplify the editor's job.
-
- I set a half-inch indent for paragraphs, which is more than some authorities
- recommend, but it feels comfortable for me. Knowing that editors don't like a
- right-justified margin (nor do I), I use a ragged-right margin. I don't put
- an extra double-space between paragraphs unless I want a similar gap to
- appear in the printed version to indicate a shift in locale or a gap in time.
-
- "I use double quotation marks for dialogue," Crawford said pedantically, "and
- I put commas and periods inside them. I don't use single quotes unless I want
- to quote within a quote--for example, by setting off an unusual word like
- 'quotidian.'" The aged hack went on: "If a single quotation runs to more than
- one paragraph, I leave the quotes off the end of every paragraph until the
- concluding one.
-
- "Then I close off the quotation."
-
- Since Word for the Mac enables me to use "smart quotes" that curve like
- typeset quotation marks, I use them--but if I used them in a textfile like
- this upload, I would get slightly garbled text. I also use "em dashes," which
- are solid dash marks about as long as two hyphens. Again, this may cause
- problems if you're uploading your manuscript to your publisher. Smart quotes
- and em dashes are pleasant but not essential in a hard-copy ms.
-
- What about italics? Use them if you've got them, but do so sparingly. They're
- hard to read in long passages, and your editor won't enjoy the extra advice
- she must give the typesetters because of them. Please don't combine italics
- and underlines--one or the other, but not both.
-
- I'm going on about format because I want you to minimize your editor's
- problems as she puts your manuscript into printable shape. She is one of a
- very few people who will read your ms.; you should make her job as easy as
- possible.
-
- Production:
- I create a separate folder (or directory for PC types) for every novel. Since
- my chapters tend to run between 3000 and 6000 words, I create a new file for
- each chapter. In Word, I can keep the chapters in consecutive order if I name
- them Chapter 01, Chapter 02, and so on; otherwise, Word reads them as Chapter
- 10, Chapter 20, etc.
-
- I can minimize hassle by creating a stationery file that I call A New
- Chapter. It has all the formatting I choose, but I can't accidentally save it
- as "A New Chapter." When I open it up, it appears as "Untitled 1" or
- whatever; when I save it, I'll have to give it a permanent name. (By the way,
- I've just named this file because I've set my Mac to prompt me to save every
- 20 minutes. The prompt can be annoying, but losing a whole day's work is a
- lot worse!)
-
- When I create a new chapter, I have to go to some trouble to start with a
- page number consecutive with that of the end of the last chapter. (This is a
- drawback in Word, and don't talk to me about linking files so paging is
- automatic--that has drawbacks too.)
-
- I often begin a new chapter with some notes to myself about what ought to
- happen in it; the chapter usually fills up fast, so I have a few ideas left
- over for the next chapter. I give my chapters simple, centered titles:
- Chapter 1. No unusual fonts, no boldface. Then one doublespace and straight
- into the first paragraph.
-
- Here's one useful gimmick: When I stop, I do a word count on the chapter so
- far. Then I open up a file titled Log, in which I enter the name of each
- chapter, the word count, and the date on which I've last worked in the
- chapter. I put my latest count into the current chapter. By keeping the
- chapter word counts in a column, set off by tabs, I can hold down the Option
- key, select the word-count column, and then hit Command-=. In the bottom of
- the window I will see the *total* of all my chapters suddenly appear. If I
- select (highlight) the existing total at the bottom of my column, and then
- hit Command-v, I can paste the new total at the bottom of the column.
-
- This is a good way to boost your productivity because you can see progress;
- so you decide to bash away for another 20 minutes or so, and you're that much
- further along. By the way, I put an "alias" of my Log file in my Apple menu,
- so it's quickly available. I also close it up as a very small window, so it
- won't take over the whole screen the next time I open it.
-
- Spell checkers and grammar checkers are useful but limited. Use them by all
- means, but don't trust them alone to support your reputation as a literate
- person.
-
- Backstage Work:
- I keep a Journal file in my novel folder as well. This is a single,
- increasingly long diary of my thoughts and ideas; it often starts as plot
- summary, but soon turns into editorial self-criticism. By forcing myself to
- articulate what's going right and wrong, I can usually solve any problems
- very quickly. So if I can see the need for a tricky plot twist, just to get
- someone from the living room to the kitchen, I usually come up with the twist
- while writing in my Journal. Producing such messages to yourself is the
- single biggest help I know of; if you think you can solve such problems by
- talking them out with your significant other, your next novel may be about
- the horrors of divorce.
-
- Other files may include lists of names, resumes of important characters,
- formal outlines, and so on. You can use an outliner, or a neat application
- like Storyspace, but even the simplest word processor will let you rearrange
- various ideas into a story line. And you may find it convenient to include
- novel-related correspondence in the same folder.
-
- You will of course make a couple of copies of your folder on floppy disks,
- and keep at least one of them in a separate location. Fire, error or theft
- could wipe out more work than you want to even think about.
-
- Printing:
- If you can laser-print your text, go to it! I use a Hewlett-Packard
- Deskwriter, with ruinously expensive bond paper, because the result is very
- good indeed. Inkjet printers using ordinary photocopy-quality paper will
- create okay but somewhat messy results. A laser printer, of course, can make
- photocopy paper look just fine.
-
- Dot-matrix is quite acceptable (except to the people within earshot of the
- damn printer) as long as you've set it on near letter quality. That means the
- printer produces a darker, sharper text than it does when set on "draft." If
- you have only a draft-quality printer, consider photocopying the result with
- the darkness control jacked way up, and using the photocopy as your real ms.
-
- What about printing off sections of draft? Sure. Some people really need to
- scribble on paper. I'm used by now to correcting on-screen most of the time,
- though I often print off, say, a chapter in progress if I'm going to be away
- from my computer and I want to do some writing in longhand.
-
- I hope this helps some of you, at least. By all means raise questions,
- objections and alternatives...and keep writing!
-
-
- --
- Crawford Kilian Communications Department Capilano College
- North Vancouver BC Canada V7J 3H5
- Usenet: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca
- Internet: ckilian@first.etc.bc.ca
-
-