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Saturday, March 22nd, 2008 12:02 am
So, I have a file sitting on my computer, entitled 'Big Bang notes' into which, currently, everything I'm thinking about for this story is being shoved. It's a better way of keeping things together than endless post-it notes, which is how I organised my entire working life when I was working somewhere that I had a desk.

Currently, the contents of this file are about half a page of A4, and there is one thing that is actualy a major plot point. It's three words: search for Elizabeth?

Everything else is notes for little moments that I'd like to have in the story; some of them are tiny ideas, like 'Cam having a this is so cool moment' and 'Lorne with Parrish and Cadman, being teased for something really embarrassing that's happened recently'; some of them are actually vaguely related to plot, like 'Cam and Rodney get stuck somewhere to make it up' (because hell no are they going to get along in the beginning) and 'Cam sent to Atlantis because of injury?' (because, really, wouldn't Daniel be a much better choice?).

There's also half a dozen or so lines of a fight between John and Rodney, because even I in my happy John/Cam OTP land think that John's feelings for Rodney by season 4 aren't just friendship. Actually, this scene has been bouncing round in my head all week.

I still don't have an actual plot, but I figure I'm going to go with my tried and true method of plotting, which is to say, start it and the plot will develop as I go along. Plotting everything out beforehand bores me to tears, to be honest, because I feel like I'm just writing up what I already know, and there are no surprises.

I've been reading a lot of posts about people plotting out their stories by chapter, or by main plot points, or even just knowing most of what's going to happen, though, and I'm kind of curious about this. How do you know what's going to happen? Does the plot come to you pretty much fully-formed, or do you develop it as you write your notes or what? Explain this mysterious method of plotting to me! I don't get it!

Also - do you make notes for other stuff as you go along? Every story I've ever written has had a page at the bottom as I've gone along where I've stuck ideas for what will come next, and bits of dialogue, or description that I'm thinking of using, and sometimes even the end line (not always - more often than not, I'm writing away happily and suddenly realise, huh, that's the end and I have nothing else to say). Do you do that? Do you find yourself walking around with your main characters playing out a scene you haven't written yet in your head? Do you wake up with a brilliant idea for what comes next, or find yourself jotting ideas in the margins of your lecture notes? If you make notes, what kind of things go into them? Do you usually use everything that you jot down or does some of it never happen? Does your plot ever get derailed partway through, or are you stronger than that and keep it going where you originally intended? What makes the difference?

If you're anything like me, you love to talk about how you write, how you plot, why you do it that way... so come tell me!
Saturday, March 22nd, 2008 08:07 pm (UTC)
because it's mostly snippets of media coverage of what happened in the important scenes.

Cool - I love reading bits of documentation the people make up, it's fascinating to see how they do it, and to try and read between the lines.

This is a big bang fic, yes?

The icon's imagery of solar flares from a NASA satellite.

It's so pretty - I shall go and google for some pictures of these (funnily, I've just spent an hour talking about moon landings and NASA with my housemate - she doesn't believe they ever happened, and I can't get my head around the idea that before the end of my life-time there will be no-one left alive who's ever set foot on another world, because *no-one has ever gone back*).
Saturday, March 22nd, 2008 08:28 pm (UTC)
I'm actually worried about the way my fic meanders a bit, but I figure when it's finished I can go back and cut parts out as separate fics. It's actually not for Big Bang, I started it back in January and it's up to 35,000 words now. It'll probably end up around 45-50k. I'm not doing Big Bang this year, because I've got school and other fics to work on.

Also, you must get your housemate to check out the Bad Astronomer's stuff on the moon landings, because seriously, not believing in them is so stupid it burns. Hopefully we'll go back before we're dead... hopefully. Maybe given sufficient life-extending medicinal advances....
Saturday, March 22nd, 2008 09:26 pm (UTC)
I'm not doing Big Bang this year, because I've got school and other fics to work on.

Oh, sorry - I thought I remembered seeing your name on the sign-ups, but clearly I'm just hallucinating :)

Hopefully we'll go back before we're dead... hopefully. Maybe given sufficient life-extending medicinal advances....

I just don't understand how we can have all these people studying our own planet, and then, after one trip to the moon, everyone's all, right, done that, what next? I mean, seriously - you got every scrap of possible information on the place in one trip? Because if that's true, those guys need work on the Earth - total understanding in less than a day!