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When I’m not working on art, I’m usually researching and writing books… mostly fiction, but some true-life stories, as well.
So, I was excited when I saw someone talk about journaling as a way to plot a book.
(This concept was sparked by an article – now gone – called RJ’s Guide on Creating a Story Bible. You can read a similar piece at Jane Friedman’s site, “The Story Bible: What It Is…“)
What’s a story bible? Well, it’s a notebook (or some other system) where you keep your ideas for your book:
- Locations
- Characters
- Background information, like history (real or imagined)
- Plot ideas
- Plot twists
- Sequel ideas, if you might make this into a book series
There’s something rich and juicy about using pen-and-paper as much as possible, when writing.
Often, by using a journal as a story bible – mixing writing & graphics – my books seem to write themselves.
Oh, I’m still writing my books in Scrivener. For me, that’s the easiest way to create Kindle books and printed manuscripts. (I also use voice recognition software, so I don’t have to type anything, if I don’t want to. That’s a time-saver and avoids carpal tunnel issues.)
But the idea of using a journal – written and visual (art journaling) – plan a short story or novel… I really like this.
Let me know if you try it, and any tips you have for fellow artsy writers. Leave a comment – or question – below.
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I would very much appreciate info on the voice recognition software that you use, and like the best. I also thank you for the wordpress “sites that soar” ebook that I purchased from you a long time back.
I’m using the free voice recognition software that comes with Windows 7. (It’s been part of Windows for awhile now, so if you’re on a PC, you probably have it.) I like it better than Via Voice… the accuracy was vastly higher, right out of the box, as compared with Via Voice that I’d “trained” for about five years.