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First Draft Complete: Now What? Andy Zach Will Tell You!

Happy Mother's Day

First Draft Complete: Now What? Andy Zach Will Tell You!

Andy Zach here to tell you what to do when you achieve your book’s First Draft Complete stage. First of all, celebrate!

First Draft Complete
Chipmunks celebrating. They’re key characters in ‘My Undead Mother-in-law’. Click to learn more.

Take a day or two off! Go hunting zombie turkeys!

First Draft Complete
Zombie Turkeys fly to escape to Zombie Turkey hunters

But you say, “Andy! I want to publish my book! Can I just ship my first draft to a publisher or editor or agent?”

Of course you can do that! They’ll be happy to take your money! But on the off chance you want to sell your book, you need to do more work. That’s what this blog is about.

First Draft Complete: My Editing Steps

First, these are my steps I’ve borrowed from articles I’ve read. You’re different and may need to/want to do this differently. But these are my starting points for my second draft.

These are the actual steps I followed for my latest novel Paranormal Privateers.

First Draft Complete
Andy Zach’s ‘Paranormal Privateers’ cover. Click to order

Paranormal Privateer Edits: The First Three Steps

Don’t worry: I’ve deleted spoilers out of these notes. I plan my editing before I even start writing.

  1. Read through, noting problems – For me, these’ll be comments inserted in my Word document.
  2. Add missing scenes, if necessary – This step, well as the next two, depend upon having a scene chart, as documented in my earlier blog post.
  3. Delete/combine scenes, paragraphs – The goal here is to simplify and clarify for the reader what is happening and eliminate unnecessary words. I had 98,000 words after the first draft.

Paranormal Privateer Edits: The Next Three Steps

4.  Rewrite 1st POV into 3rd. – If you write only in 3rd person point of view “he said, she said”, you won’t need this step. But I wrote several characters from a first-person point of view.  I had too many first-person POVs, in fact, so I had to trim this down.  The narrative becomes too confusing and the reader’s focus can be diluted.

5. Review character arcs: Paranormal Privateers has eight protagonists, five antagonists, and minor characters:  You need to check character arcs, their entries and exits. Are they introduced properly? What happens to them during their scenes and afterward? Do they teleport between scenes? What happens to them?

6. Update timeline and scene chart, detailed scene flow. See here for more information on this important chart.  Ask yourself,  Is this scene really necessary? Do the scenes fit together on the overall timeline?

The Final Set of Edits

  1. Read the book out loud. I’ve found this is the best way to find awkwardly worded sentences. I also find logic errors and wrong words that I’ve used.
  2. Look for passive words: is, were, was, am, be, been. Combine this check with Grammarly Free Version to find spelling and grammar errors.
  3. Review adverb use. Search for “ly”. Adverbs should be used sparingly, like salt.
  4. Read aloud again
  5. Finally, send the manuscript to my editor, Dori Harrell

What’s Next?

Do you think this is all that’s necessary for the next great American novel?  Nope! The first half of the editing process is complete. Now you must work with your editor to perfect your novel.

That’s it for now!  Andy Zach, signing out!

First Draft Complete
Get Your Ridiculous On! Andy Zach
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Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing – What’s That Like?

Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing – What’s That?

Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing
Chapter 1 Icon of Paranormal Privateers – click to buy now!

Where does one begin Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing?  With the hook!

Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing
A pirate hook for Writing Paranormal Privateers First Draft

Here is my actual first line hook and the rest of the first paragraph:

Dirac sighed with relief when the US flag came down and the surrender flag went up on the mast of the titanic luxury yacht. He didn’t mind firing rounds from his AK-47 over their heads, but he hated killing people. He knew they were only infidels, but they were still people.

The reader learns: 1) a US yacht is surrendering; 2) the pirate’s name is Dirac; 3) He’s ready to use his AK-47 on them; 4) The pirate considers the US citizens infidels.

More questions leap to mind immediately. Don’t you want to read the next paragraph? This whole scene is here:

So I wrote the whole chapter pretty quickly. It’s a lot like performing magic: you lead the reader to expect one thing and then you make the opposite happen. I begin with the readers learning about zombie invincibility–and then put them in a seemingly impossible situation to escape.

Sometimes I lead you to expect a big fight and then all the villains escape. Sometimes I lead the reader to expect another adventure just like the last one–and have the heroes rescued by someone else.

Then just as you think you have the pattern of the chapter adventures established, I change all the rules of the game and add completely new and different villains.

Oh, I love writing!

The Work of  Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing

It’s not all lollipops and roses.

By writing 4700 words on November 30th, I met my NaNoMo goal of 50,000 words by November 30th. But I had only completed five or six chapters!  My outline said I was only half done!

Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing
The Chapter 5 London chapter icon – what could it mean? Click and find out!

I assumed I would finish it in December, despite the Christmas holidays. But I was wrong. I only wrote about 15-20,000 words.

I gritted my teeth and set my will to finish the first draft in January 2018. And I did. But I had to work at it.

This is what no one tells you about writing. Even writing a fun book like Paranormal Privateers and knowing exactly what I was writing in each chapter, it is still hard work to write.

Another thing: no one tells you that after six hours of writing you’re wasted. Your brain can only handle television or Youtube cartoon videos.

What comes next after Writing Paranormal Privateers First Draft?

The second draft! But I’ll cover that in the next post.

Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing
Chapter 16 icon – London – Click to find out what happens!

For now, here are some of my best finds from the internet.

The Best of the Andy’s Internet

Let’s start with some science fiction story fuel in the following article:

Continue reading Paranormal Privateers First Draft Writing – What’s That Like?

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Starting Paranormal Privateers, a comic zombie novel

New Zombie Book Review

Starting Paranormal Privateers, a comic zombie novel

So, how does one begin Starting Paranormal Privateers? I gave the germ of the idea at the end of My Undead Mother-in-law:

My Undead Mother-in-law
Get your print copy of My Undead Mother-in-law by clicking here!

Slight spoiler follows:

Continue reading Starting Paranormal Privateers, a comic zombie novel