Tag Archives: writing tips

No research, no outline, no problems

Confession: When Maria and Beckie first invited me to be part of Restless Writers, I put them off. I was working full time. My kids were young. I wouldn’t be able to fit in one more thing…

I had no shortage of excuses to cover up the truth which was, I was scared I wasn’t good enough. I had very specific things in my mind about what a writer should be. They are someone who carefully crafts an outline, mapping out their entire novel before ever putting a word on a page. More than likely, they are someone who hops on a plane to learn more about a locale central to their story. Or one who interviews a veteran detective to get inside the mind of their main character. These were not things I was doing. I was just winging it.

Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

While I eventually took the leap and joined our merry band of RWs, that annoying doubt that I didn’t have the discipline to be a true writer lived on. It’s firmly planted on my shoulder, in a tiny little critic who begins chirping any time I sit down to draft a new chapter or consider a new project. “This is not going to work. Do you think a real published author would write a book without knowing where the story is going?” And on it goes.

So, you can imagine my satisfaction, and delight, when I recently discovered, that yes — yes, they absolutely would.

Earlier this summer, I took part in an author talk featuring the New York Times best-selling author Lisa Jewell. The webinar, Explore the Unexpected Twists and Turns with Lisa Jewell, was hosted by the Library Speakers Consortium, in partnership with my local library. The Consortium livestreams events every month featuring best-selling authors. Each event includes an interactive Q&A session and is recorded.

Throughout the hour-long webinar, Lisa shared a lot of valuable behind-the-scenes insights about her work and writing process, but two things really stood out and had me feeling freed of my own writerly expectations.

No research

During the event, Lisa explained she doesn’t choose subjects for her books where research is needed. Fans of the 23 psychological thrillers she’s written will know many of her books tend to focus on domestic drama. This is intentional:

I’m a very domestic person. I live in a tiny bubble, and I like to only kind of know about things that are close to me. My home, my children, my animals, my friends, my plans, my life. Obviously, I co-exist in the world with all the big things that are happening, but when it comes to my main focus… I want to understand about the small things happening to small people, small lives that are blown apart by tiny events that nobody could have foreseen happening.

Did you hear that little critic?!

I don’t like researching, so the idea of writing about like… financial markets, or police procedure, or espionage… I don’t know how those things work, and I don’t really have any interest in learning about how those things work. So, I like to stick to the territory that I’m familiar with and fascinated by.

While she has respect for authors that ground their writing in research, it is not part of her process.

… There are so many authors who are just so different to me, and they consider that to be part of their job. They can’t start writing a novel until they’ve spent weeks, months making phone calls, doing site visits, reading books… whereas me, literally, ‘okay, I’ve got to start writing my book today’ and I just start typing…

No outline

And guess what? She skips the outlining stage too!

While she has a very clear image of the first chapter, Lisa says she typically has no plan of where the story will go, from chapter to chapter:

I can’t write a book, or can’t plot a book, or think about a book, or do anything about a book anywhere apart from inside my head or inside the manuscript… Post-it Notes, white boards – those things don’t work for me. I wouldn’t know what to do with them.

🤯

No problems

With every passing minute of the webinar, I could feel the little critic on my shoulder getting quieter. Am I a functioning adult who fully understands there is more than one way to approach most things in life? Absolutely. But was it still incredibly validating to hear a beloved writer say that a no-research, no-outline process can not only work but also lead to real success? Heck, yes! It was a much-needed reminder that writing is an art, not a science—and that I need to trust my instincts more and care less about how others may perceive my process.

If you’re curious to hear more of Lisa’s insights—including her thoughts on leap-frogging genres and why she believes the epilogue is the most important part of a novel—you can catch her full webinar through Library Speakers. You can also check out upcoming events.

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Are you a starter or a finisher?

The Restless Writers have just returned from our annual writing retreat. It was filled with stories of true confession, a lightning round of Trivial Pursuit (Canadian edition), a birthday party with Sparkling Stars, beaucoup prompts, a new word (deliciate: to indulge and make yourself happy), and…something very special.

We’ve been working on a collaborative project for a couple years now that we’ve finally committed to finishing—and launching in the Spring of 2025. You heard it here! It’s a project we’ve been weaving together that commemorates our sixteen year friendship. Our hope for the project is it will allow us to support and celebrate writers on a similar journey to ours. Writers helping writers.

Like any creative project, it’s been a challenge to keep it moving forward. Each one of us brings a different productivity persona to the table. Meaning, a couple of us live for the creative beginnings of a new project and a couple of us are eager to execute! Lucky for us, we’re the perfect combination of ideas, plans, skills, and whimsy. We can do this, and we will.

As writers, we have always approached our individual creative journeys differently. We daydream. We abandon. And when it feels right, we give life to those ideas that tug on our shirt sleeves and keep us up at night. We live for these moments! Some projects completed, some published, some still living in notebooks and on USB keys, enduring edit after edit. And that’s okay. It allows us the freedom and flexibility as writers to use the right approach for the job, and at the time when it suits us.

We’re starters. We’re finishers. And we need each other. For encouragement, for accountability, and for butter tart runs to the farm. These are just a few of the things that make us a badass writing team. More to come on our pet project.

Do you consider yourself a starter or a finisher or somewhere in the middle? Tell us more in the comments.

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Fighting writer’s block

Oh the dreaded writer’s block. Just the word “block” itself is enough to make any writer cringe – like saying the word ‘castration’ to any human male. It’s physically painful, mentally stressful and emotionally draining.

And it happens when you know you have something brilliant brewing inside you. You can feel it churning and hear its silent screams of agony pleading with your brain to get out of the way so it can take over control of your fingers and guide them to a perfect, eloquent expression that will alter existence as we know it. But there are simply too many luscious words to choose from and your brain is overwhelmed by the possibility.

Well, I say, “Block, be damned!” Instead of fighting you, I will embrace you. Instead of fearing you, I will call to you and dare you to enter my being. For I am writer. Hear me roar (figuratively in your face using my onslaught of carefully chosen words and cunning turns of phrase.)

And how will I do that, you may ask? How do I dare speak so boldly to the invisible one who appears without sign or warning? How will I fight an immortal foe who has plagued every writer in history of writers? How will I conjure such brilliance in the presence of one who appears all powerful?

With the element of surprise, that’s how. I will take the unexpected road. I will diverge from my usual routine. I will break the walls around me and step outside my comfort zone. I will release my secure blankey of the known and explore unchartered territory. Simply put, I will try something new.

And how do I know it will work? How can I speak with such confidence? Well, just think of those times when you can’t for the life of you remember someone’s name, or the name of that damn song, or that friggin’ actor from that friggin’ movie. Your forehead strains. Your mind hurts as you beg in vain for the name to appear on your tongue. And when it doesn’t come, what do you do? You walk away. You let it go and move on, until a time when you are completely immersed in something else, or just about to fall asleep, and the name uncontrollably – with a volume that startles even you – blurts from your lips.

That’s what writers need to do too. Lose the block by becoming immersed in something else, in something that takes you outside of your usual approach to writing – like writing in a different style; writing about a subject that is foreign to you; writing a different genre. It will help you let go of the stress you have built up and explore a new path if only for a little while. You might even surprise yourself by finding something new you are good at, or at the very least, breathe new life into your current composition.

Here are some ideas. Pick one and let it surprise you with what you may discover about yourself:

5 ideas to step outside your writing comfort zone

  1. If you’re not a poet, write a poem. If you are a poet, give yourself a challenge to write a completely different style of poetry.
  2. Open a book to a random page and make the opening line of your new piece the sentence your finger touches. Or write one based on a random tweet. Lots of great material there. (This one is thanks to @thegrahammilne.)
  3. Write about a first experience (e.g., first sexual experience – these are usually juicy with awkwardness)
  4. Write the opposite of what you usually do (e.g., write a fictional story vs a non-fiction essay)
  5. Set the timer for 30 minutes and don’t let your pen stop moving. Write any and all words that come to your head regardless if they make sense, come in full sentences, or are the same word repeated over and over again for the full half hour (in fact – that might very well tell you what you should be writing about.)

We write to discover more deeply who we are and what it means to be human, but this discovery can become stilted when our reliance on our usual writing routines and styles becomes more powerful than the freedom we demand as artists to express ourselves.

Try it. Have the courage to let the element of surprise be both your guide and your weapon – and tell us at Restless Writers how it went.

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