By Catherine Hudson
I am, unashamedly, a Pantzer—one who would
love to have the wonderful structure that seems to be available to Plotters.
Structuring your Novel by K.M Weiland, has helped me begin to find that
structure, without losing my natural fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants style. To put
it in plain English, as far as writing craft books go, this is one I love.
Perhaps it was an advantage that I had a
finished manuscript to mentally compare to as I read this gem, but I think
anyone would benefit from the advice laid out by Ms Weiland, in particular, new
writers wanting to get a handle on the basics of structure.
After clearly telling us why we need
structure (something I will not attempt to debate here, that’s a whole other
blog post), she lays out structure from the hook to the resolution, before
adding further chapters on scene and sequel.
The simple layout, using examples from
literature and film, demonstrates exactly what is being taught. I have to admit,
this is the book that made me finally understand the concept of a hook. I found
myself Googling famous hooks and scribbling down various attempts for my own
book. (No, I have not settled on one yet, but I’ll let you know when I do!)
Another useful element is the use of
approximate percentages where a writer should place such things as inciting
incidents, and character reflection, within their work. This was useful as I
could go to my highly-edited, nipped and tucked WIP, and see if my inciting
incidences now occurred at the right points to register subconsciously for the
reader. Readers expect these moments and even though they may not be able to
express this in writing terms, it will register when the structural pillars are
missing from a novel.
Structuring your novel clearly teaches how
to implement what is needed to produce a well-structured novel that holds up
your story, rather than bringing it down.
Highly recommended.