Tuesday 29 November 2016

The Plot Board

I posted a picture of one the most vital tools in my writing life on Twitter yesterday and was surprised by how much interest it got. I'm talking about my plot board. This is it, bare and ready for a new story:

Nothing too special. Just a A1-sized cork board with added bits of string, pins and headings on cut-up index cards. However, I've found I'd struggle to write a book without it!

I can’t claim to have invented the idea – far from it – but I’ve been tweaking my own approach for about ten years now. I don't always use the board the same way twice - it really depends on the story, but I'm fascinated about plotting and story structure and I wondered if blogging about my process as I write the next book might a) be useful to someone else who loves this kind of stuff and b) actually help me work out exactly why this helps me so much!

I think part of it is that I’m quite a visual thinker and it helps me to ‘see’ the structure of my book this way.  It also provides a place to put all those ‘lightning bolt’ ideas I get about my book before, during and after the first draft.  You  know the kind of ideas I mean: the ones you get when you’re minding your own business, not even really thinking about the book and – BAM! – suddenly you know why your heroine is acting that way, or the perfect setting for a scene comes to mind, or just a line of dialogue pops into your head and triggers something off.

When I get those kind of ideas – and they are generally my best ones – I scribble them down and pin them to my board. My board follows a chronological timeline of my work-in-progress, and when I think about where to pin that scrap of paper it often becomes instantly obvious where and when it should go. Do things move and change as I work on the book? Absolutely. That’s why God gave us coloured pins! That’s the beauty of a plot board: nothing is set in stone.

My first plot board looked a little different. My whole approach to plotting was much less sophisticated (and probably much less neurosis-inducing) back then. I’d read that a good way to plot was to think of 20 things that needed to happen in your book. That’s what the pink index cards are: 20 plot points for the story. Then, as other ideas came to me, or notions of how I could develop those plot points floated to the surface of my consciousness, I tacked them onto the board next to the relevant plot point.

I then switched to trying to divide the board into acts. I particularly liked Michael Hauge's way of breaking down a story, I tried dividing my board into six stages with five turning points, on the right, but found I couldn't quite fit everything on there so it was easy to see the flow of the story. Then I read Save The Cat by Blake Snyder.  Great book, and I loved his idea of storyboarding too.  He divided his story board into four horizontal strips: Act 1, Act 2a, Act 2b and Act 3.  I immediately decided to try the same thing, and discovered I now had room to use my plot point cards in chronological order, but I still had room to pin all the little flashes of ideas around them too.  So this is what the plot board of my recently finished book, The Other Us, looks like:


So that's the introduction to my plot board, next time... the different stages of a story and where they go on the plot board.

8 comments:

Unknown said...

What a great idea! I'm off to have a look on Amazon for the stationery...

SusanD said...

I use Blake's screenwriting setup, too.Easy to remember.He suggests 40 scenes. Do you use that many? I try to give each sequence (out of 8) two chapters, and make them as long as I need to to get the symmetry. So in Act I there are 2 sequences (4 chapters - or 3). Etc. I can't remember if Blake breaks down according to sequences. I learned about sequences from Alex Sokoloff.

A.S. Akkalon said...

I use index cards too, though I'm sure my method isn't nearly as sophisticated as yours. Plus I lay them out on the floor (yay, bed for the cat!), which involves certain risks. I find it really helpful to see how all the bits of my story fit together, find stretches where the tension is too low for too long, and figure out where to make changes I know need to happen.

I look forward to reading more about how you use yours!

Fiona Harper said...

Kendra, uh-oh, it looks as if I'm enabling someone else's stationery addiction! Have fun shopping. :-)

Fiona Harper said...

Susan, I don't tend to limit myself to a number of scenes. Even if I try, I always think of extra ones, as there are things I need to add in that I couldn't have known when I started writing. I ended up with about 70 chapters in this book, but many of them were quite short - 1000k to 2000k. I don't have a fixed chapter length I work to, just whatever works for the story.

I haven't come across sequences, so that is a fun new thing to research!

Fiona Harper said...

A.S., that's exactly how I use mine too. I have a little card for each chapter/scene and I pin a new one on after I've written it, so it's easy to see where I am in terms of progress. I use small Post-its and scraps of paper for the unwritten scenes and ideas.

The book in the last picture had three different timelines in it, hence the different colours. It helped to see if I was spending too much time on one story thread, and helped me to find the plot elements for each more easily.

Guernsey Girl said...

As a disorganised 'panster' I am fascinated by this! It's so visual and aspects of it would definitely help! Good to meet you on here, Fiona.

Fiona Harper said...

Glad to meet you too, Guernsey Girl! I must admit, I started out as a plotter, but now I tend to know just enough to write the next section of the book, with a hazy idea of how it might finish, so having something to literally pin my ideas on really helps me not to forget the ideas I've already had and may or may not end up using! The joy of a board like this is that everything is changeable. If I decide to go another way with the story - easy! Just take out a pin and write a new note. :-D