Subscribe
Tweets
- @damiengwalter Hah. Yes. I think SF was always something I was expected to grow out of. 5 hours ago
- @damiengwalter A lot of people preferred it to The Avengers. 5 hours ago
- @damiengwalter As a teenager, I read Pratchett, Zelazny and Lumley among others. Also, lots and lots of Dr. Who novelisations. 5 hours ago
Now Reading
Music
Photos
Links
- Bookworm Blues
- Dark Fiction Magazine
- Floor to Ceiling Books
- GavReads
- Gentle, Parochial Horror
- Mulholland Books
- NanoWriMo
- NextRead
- Only the Best Sci Fi
- Schizopolitan
- Scrivener
- The Eloquent Page
- Walker of Worlds
- Words and Pictures
Bluster
This is a writing blog and may contain... Notes on writing. Commentary, short pieces, reviews and other such entertainments. Food, drink, conversation and other such comforts. Music, storms, explosions and other such amusements. Enjoy.
Categories
Archive
- November 2011 (3)
- October 2011 (1)
- May 2011 (2)
- April 2011 (2)
- January 2011 (1)
- August 2010 (1)
- July 2010 (1)
- June 2010 (1)
- May 2010 (1)
- April 2010 (2)
- March 2010 (2)
- January 2010 (2)
- December 2009 (1)
- November 2009 (2)
- October 2009 (3)
- September 2009 (8)
- July 2009 (2)
- June 2009 (1)
- May 2009 (5)
- October 2008 (2)
- September 2008 (2)
- August 2008 (2)
- June 2008 (4)
- May 2008 (6)
- April 2008 (4)
- March 2008 (12)
- February 2008 (12)
- January 2008 (16)
- December 2007 (16)
- November 2007 (17)
- October 2007 (42)
- September 2007 (36)
- August 2007 (21)

The Step Outline
Disclaimer: Okay this may read like stupidly obvious advice. A step outline may just seem like any other set of notes. For me I think it's more a case of my writing mentality adjusting.
I feel compelled to talk a little more about the step outline. We were introduced to them as a stage in the screenwriting process. I'm finding I use them increasingly often in any and all my writings. Even before I begin I have ideas for the story I want to tell. These ideas are more often than not scattered throughout the whole and there are gaping chasms that need filling before any of it will hold together. The step outline allows me to get around that. It gives me permission to write less. By this I mean I can summarise rather than get lost in prose. I can sketch out the entire piece before getting bogged down in the details.
This is a bit of a departure for me. In the past I'd been taught to free write and been a great advocate of free writing in general. There's still something attractive about plowing into a story and letting it unfold itself. But here's the thing: There's always something nagging away when I free write. I feel like I'm on the crest of a wave of words and any minute it's going to break and I'll be left unable to continue. It's because I don't know what's going to happen next. At all. A step outline lets me avoid that. I can still free write a scene and if it's strong enough it may alter the outline but I know how things are supposed to fit together. And that helps.
So yeah. Obvious advice. But useful... for me anyway.