The topic for this month is organization. When
it comes to writing there are several areas that need organization.
First
is where you write. Not only the
environment but the computer you use.
Follow whatever arrangement seems most logical to you and that fits your
situation. I have on my desk within easy reach a first name book, a surname
book, a thesaurus, a dictionary and the relevant books I’m using for fact
checking in my current book. Many of
these items can now be online resources. I have those I use frequently bookmarked
in a folder named Resources on my browser.
Having them in a folder organizes them for fast and easy use instead
looking through a ton of bookmarks.
For
my writing I organize my computer files in folders. I have a main folder for a book in which I
save the writing files and then subfolders for whatever areas that particular
book needs. I still have a binder for each book I write despite the fact I also
now keep the same information on my computer.
In both binder and computer I have a section/folder on characters where
I paste a picture and also have a physical description as well as character
traits and important events in the life of that character that predate where
the book begins. Since I write
historicals I also have a calendar section for the months of the particular
year(s) I am writing, like September through December of 1810 for my present
book and a timeline of real and fictional events in the story. Another section is for plot outlines and
scene notes. I also have a section for
locations with photos or pictures clipped from wherever along with notes and
diagrams of homes or castles or forts that my characters will have to move-fight
through. When I am writing and find I
must make big changes I re-save my file with the present date. That way I have the “old’ and “new’
versions. I also save scenes I cut,
especially if they are long. You never
know when you might want that information or scene again. And since I sometimes self-publish I also
have a folder for what I need to include in the ebook version.
Writing
time also has to be marshalled to be available.
That may be exceedingly difficult in a busy life but I’ve learned if you
don’t plan a time for it, you will never find any in which to actually write. I don’t think it should be carved in stone
but some workable framework has to be constructed to find available slots for
writing in your day. Once those are
identified, set small incremental goals to use them.
All
of this organizing will make writing easier.
You won’t waste time looking for information you know you have and will
get more productive writing accomplished.
I’m sure I missed some areas and/or didn’t expand enough on others. What organization techniques do you find most
useful in your writing?
2 comments:
My method for files is much the same, Joan. It's been tweaked along the way, but it's still basically the same as when I started, and it can move from computer to computer. Like you, I also like to have a hard copy that can travel with me, if needed.
Now if someone would come in and clear out all the stuff in my office, I'd have it made!
Joan, you've a neat/organized brain or way of using it. Me, I have all of those files and multiple copies of each because I was afraid I'd lose them and did--because the computer hid them from me in different areas (I'm swearing it was the computer.). Then I backed up a computer or three as time has passed into new computers.
And obviously, I had to have the first novel in usable portions, so I have files in sections. Oh, and let's not forget I spent all last year working on editing a wrong copy of the novel or perhaps two copies. I'll never find out now.
To top that, I have the computer self/save my documents every three minutes. I once lost about a half hour of writing while in the midst of a writing frenzy. Took the life out of me for a month.
And to make sure the computer copies are ok, I have cloud backup with My PC Backup which allows me to sleep at night, and also cd copies and also cd copies and hard copies in a lockbox.
Can we spell paranoid?
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