Hello everyone!
Welcome to another week of the outlining process for In the Maws and Claws. I felt it was another good week in the process.
As I was breaking down what was going to happen in the chapters in detail, I noticed that although the chapters still feel like they’ll be short (by which I mean that when it’s published, its not going to be like 15 to 20 pages to get through them, probably more like 10 or even less), there is still a lot of information that is going to be packed into each one of them.
I also felt that these chapters are really going to open up the book a lot. Last week, I mentioned that after finishing part one, I thought it would play out well that the reader would get some time to focus solely on the main character before diving into the rest of the characters. The reason for that was because there are plenty of characters that play a major role in this manuscript, each one having a lot to unpack about them.
While I did feel that the reader would benefit from knowing and understanding the protagonist first, the challenge was then on me to bridge the story from where it’s starting to where I want it to go. It’s still going to be a process from it’s current state in the outlining process through the numerous edits that will follow, but I’m feeling good that I’ve transitioned the story from the main character to now encompass the antagonists and other characters that shape the story.
Another aspect that I felt good about this week was the chapter variety. I think readers can tell from my stories that I like to keep the plot moving. I want the pacing to feel crisp, and this can sometimes be a challenge when the story needs to relay information to the reader to set up future events. I feel stories can easily stagnate here.
I’d done something similar for I’m Not My Father. It’s not a thriller, like the rest of my books have been, and I wanted the reader to constantly be finding out something new about the small town murder twenty five years prior, as well as aspects of Cal’s life. To try and keep things fresh for the reader, locations changed from chapter to chapter, characters were doing something new, and new characters were introduced and interacted with throughout so that the reader was experiencing a story rather then a novelized checklist of relevant information.
One of the things I’ve been doing while outlining Maws is describing the intended atmosphere in each chapter. There’ve been a lot of benefits to this. I’ve been able to see if the story is being built properly, or if there are issues with the flow. If an act of the book starts out dread-ridden, but the rest of the act is calm and tensionless, I can spot it easier and ask myself if this was my intention. I can ask myself what I can do to start building a pressure cooker until the next big moment in the book.
This came into play at the end of act two. I think what I initially had down for what happened in the final chapter of this section fell into the dreaded pitfall of stagnation. While what happens sets up the rest of the book, it boils down to the protagonist talking to the antagonist. There was a hint of agency to why the protagonist had to talk to them, but by seeing the the atmosphere was kind of blah, I added urgency to the scene, that not only do they have to talk to their enemy, they’re also racing a kind of ticking clock. Because I needed something to create that urgency, it allowed me to lace the scene with hints and reminders about the other characters and subplots I want in the story, as I believe this all sets up later events that will hopefully keep building on one another to the finale. So I think it’s a great sign that changes that I’m making in the outlining process are complimenting other aspects that I want to have in the book.
Until next week.