Hi Lindsay. I know it's a lot of reading, but the
Learn Writing with Uncle Jim thread is really worth spending a few days going over. Longer, even, if you want to stop and linger and ask questions. Jim's cool, so ask questions right in that thread if you want.
The most valuable lesson I took away from there was "give yourself permission to write crap." In other words, don't kill yourself trying to be perfect on the first draft. That's what rewrites are for.
Here's a drawing metaphor that made the lesson pop for me. When you're drawing you don't start by creating the most perfect nose you can and then build the rest of the portrait around that, because you'll never get the rest of the picture to fit exactly even if all the other parts are perfectly drawn. Instead, you start with a rough sketch--an oval--then you place your eyes sorta-kinda
there and the mouth maybe
here, and you erase and tighten and make your lines darker and erase again... and then you erase that first eye and move it up a smidgen and redo the nose to make it smaller. You don't start with perfection, you work toward perfection.
Like the needlessly perfect nose, which you'll wind up having to erase and do over anyway, don't insist on perfection for every paragraph right from the start. You grow attached to all that hard work and become unwilling to sacrifice it later. You force everything that comes after to follow that paragraph logically. Instead, just spit that paragraph out your fingers and move on to the next, letting the story flow, not worrying about minor errors in plotting logic. You can fix them in the rewrite.
I've wasted too much good time editing what I'd written when I should have been putting new stuff down and moving the story forward. Editing and rewriting before I was done the first draft, I cemented my scenes in place so strongly that they became immovable. I lost the flexibility to continue.
"Oh no! I already said that Sam Gamgee was an innkeeper. I had a whole chapter about it, polished to perfection! Now how am I going to explain him hanging out in Frodo's garden to overhear Gandalf's revelations through the open window?" Pfft! The heck with that!
Don't polish that earlier chapter until after the book is done. That way you won't feel so forced to keep that gleaming, splendid bit of literary perfection. It'll mess with the rest of the story while you're writing it.
Another one that's working for me (so far) is knowing that each character thinks the book's about him. I'm a bit stuck right now, too, but starting with that little gem of wisdom, what seems to be helping is to
re-outline from each major character's perspective. What's the protaganist doing from day one through day last? Write his outline. What about the antagonist's timeline? Write his outline. What about the innocent victim the hero's trying to save? Write that outline.
When you can follow the major characters from beginning to end, each experiencing the story from their personal POV as though each of their perspectives were a separate novel, then it's time to tweak their timelines so all the major events coincide when they need to. Then go back to the Uncle Jim thread, read what he has to say about
Celtic knotwork, start figuring out whose POV works where, and go!