Stepping into the forest of my mind

Stepping into the forest of my mind
Just as every journey begins with a first step, every story begins with the first word.

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Revision: A Fact of Life—for Writers

Adventures in Writing
Sometimes I feel like I'm always at my computer.
Hook the reader in the beginning of a story or novel.  Yes, even in memoir.  It’s too easy to just close a book and move on if the story’s not interesting.  But to keep the reader hooked throughout the duration of the book, now that’s the difficult part.

            As I pick my way through yet another revision of my manuscript, I’m attempting to see how I can ratchet up the adventure:  the decisions, the obstacles, the fear of attending college as a non-traditional student, a student with five children, a student with a special needs daughter, a student who has a home to maintain and a family to keep in check as her children grow and face their own educational and life obstacles. 

You see, I had completed a revision of the memoir.  And I still laughed in all the same places.  The flow is there; scene into scene, chapter into the next chapter.  There is a timeline showing primarily my maturation as a college student as well as that of my children growing up.   I’m a scene painter, as I’ve said before.  Perhaps I missed my calling and should be a screenwriter or a playwright.     

However, the more I try to consider my college journey, the more my mind is divided with substituting for the media center specialist for the rest of the school year at the high school, the more the family and all their issues cloud my mind.  I think I need to wait for summer vacation and then hide in the library to seriously consider revising the tension in my memoir about attending college with five children in tow.  I think there may be bloodshed among my darlings in this memoir.   


Thanks for any tips you may offer as to how you handle keeping the reader’s interest in your story, be it memoir or fiction. 

12 comments:

  1. I wish you all the luck with your revisions.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much, Michelle. It is greatly appreciated. I think I'm going to need it. Thanks again for visiting my Adventures in Writing blog.

      Delete
  2. There you are! I always look forward to your posts.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks, Marie. I truly appreciate your visiting my Adventures in Writing blog and leaving a comment. It means a lot. Hope all is well.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sometimes letting it rest a bit helps me regroup and come back with more insight and fresh ideas. Wishing you well with this project! :)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank you so much, Karen. This is very helpful and very true. Since I'm quite busy substituting, I'm trying to convince myself that I'm also allowing my mind to refresh before I attack the next revision. Thanks again for visiting my Adventures in Writing blog and leaving a comment. It is appreciated more than you know.

    ReplyDelete
  6. All the best with the revisions!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thank you so much, Nas, for visiting my Adventures in Writing blog. And thanks for the good wishes for my revisions. I'm going to need them.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hang in there as you revise again, Victoria!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Thank you so much, Theresa, for visiting my Adventures in Writing blog and leaving a comment. It is appreciated more than you know. I'll keep hammering away at this memoir manuscript.

    ReplyDelete