Monday, June 26, 2023

4 Writerly Types—Which One Fits You Best


by Ane Mulligan @AneMulligan

Mary Poppins: The Intuitive Writer

Mary sits down, opens a new document and starts her first draft without anything but a kernel of an idea. As she writes, she populates her story with new characters and situations. And somehow, with a spoonful of sugar, everything comes to a happily-every-after ending. Granted, she will have a lot of editing to do. She must go back and weave in those characters who suddenly popped up. She'll have to edit in some background (Q-Factor) for a rescue that would be implausible without foreshadowing. But in the end, Mary Poppins always succeeds. 

Indiana Jones: The Seat-of-the-pants Writer

Indiana is different from Mary Poppins in that he has a goal in mind. He knows the end of the story. He also knows some of the stops he has to make along the way to reach it and get the prize. He knows his hero, having done a little background on him. He has the antagonist in mind but knows another might pop up, so he keeps his options open. What he doesn't do is a detailed outline. He can't follow one. So he has a vague "map" containing the beginning, the middle, and the end. The middle is rather sparse, since he doesn't know the terrain yet.

Rocky Balboa: The Plotter

Rocky knows exactly what he must do to win. He writes a detailed outline, chapter by chapter, then fills in the details. His outline is close to a first draft by the time he's done. Then, all he has to do is fill in all the details and flesh out the scenes. Rocky doesn't have to do as much content editing as Mary or Indiana. His greatest creativity comes in the outline. His story is in there. 

Scarlett O'Hara: The Planster

Scarlett falls somewhere in between the others. She has a goal and she knows what it will take to get there but isn't always sure how that will happen. So, she sets down a vague outline, sparse in detail. As long as she can get to point A, then she can figure out how to get to point B. Scarlett spends more time in character preparation. She writes her heroine's backstory to learn her secrets. By the time she starts writing the story, she knows her characters well. She knows how they will react to any given situation. Scarlett has the fun of Indiana or Mary in discovery, but she also has somewhat of an outline to follow, in case she gets blocked.

These are the four types of writers I've identified. Where do you fall? And is there another type I've missed? Please join the conversation!

TWEETABLE

Ane Mulligan lives life from a director’s chair, both in theatre and at her desk creating novels. Entranced with story by age three, at five, she saw PETER PAN onstage and was struck with a fever from which she never recovered—stage fever. One day, her passions collided, and an award-winning, bestselling novelist immerged. She believes chocolate and coffee are two of the four major food groups and lives in Sugar Hill, GA, with her artist husband and a rascally Rottweiler. Find Ane on her website, Amazon Author page, Facebook, Instagram,Pinterest, The Write Conversation, and Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference Blog.

15 comments:

  1. I've always heard there were two. But this makes more sense. Because although I tend to write by the seat of my pants I have started with a sketchy outline and some character backstory. So I guess that makes me a planster jr. Not quite a full-grown plantster but trying to remember to write down a few additional details ahead of time so I don't have to go back several chapters to find a name of a secondary character or whether the couch was on the right or left of the room.

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    1. I'm like you and identify with Scarlett. It's so interesting how writers vary in their process, yet we all turn out a finished book in the end.

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    2. What a great post! Thank you, Ane! I would say I identify with Scarlett. Above all, I focus on knowing my characters as well as I can before I start writing. I like the balance of the Scarlett type of writer. It seems as though this type enables me to experience the best of both worlds: knowing where I'm going but having fun discovering how to get there. By the way, I agree with you that chocolate and coffee are two of the four major food groups. :) Love you, sweet friend! :)

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  2. Just call me Indiana Poppins!

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    1. I love it!! I love how we all have a different path but reach the end destination anyway!

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  4. I love these descriptions. I fall in with Indiana Jones.

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  5. I think I am a cross between Indiana Jones and Rocky Balboa. I make plans for my blog and then choose scriptures and them write where my thoughts on the subject leads me.

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    1. That's cool. I love how we all find our own way. Nobody else's is exactly like mine and we can all say that.

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  6. Loved this! I’m a Scarlett for sure!

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