Friday, October 17, 2008

I'm revising right now. As I type this. Way to go, multitasking (read "procrastinating") me!

For those who are keeping up with my struggles (bless you few brave souls!) I feel like I've conquered the first chapter. I'm pretty sure that it was around draft five, but I could be wrong. And, there is always the possibility of more fine-tuning, but I finally feel like it is working the way it should be. Now, for the next 17 chapters...

Which brings me to a question: how does a writer (any writer...but I'm YA, so let's focus on that) decide on chapter length? I realize each chapter needs a plot, a purpose, but do you strive for even length chapters or do you let one behemoth stretch out to tell the story? If any of y'all are writers out there, I'd be intrigued to hear your answers. For me, I'm trying to make them similar lengths, with some of the later chapters a bit longer than the initial ones. 

Based on the news lately, it seems I've picked the worst time ever to try and sell anything--including a manuscript. On that note, I was reading literary agent Jennifer Jackson's blog the other day, and she posted (here) on the odds of getting an agent. She questioned, why an author would decide to brave such odds. I think, for me anyway, the answer is both complicated and simple. The complicated part is all about how I view my work and hanging on to childhood dreams, probably has something to do with my id or ego and perhaps my mother--isn't that what it usually is? But the simple part is that I think I'm the exception. Really. You know all the scary statistics? breast cancer, car accidents, identity theft...it doesn't matter, I always assume the odds are going in my favor. Funny though, this doesn't extend to random stuff like winning McDonald's Monopoly game. But, it does extend to my book. Because, let's face it--I think it's great. 

2 comments:

Lucas Darr said...

Bah! Odds! Pisht!

Anyway, to answer your other question, I feel a chapter should say what you want to say and not a single word more! Dramatic scene changes, point of view changes, etc., are logical places for the chapter to end.

This advice is brought to you by the Hack Writer, so take it what you will.

Michelle said...

Well Miss Janine? It has been a while since you have updated this and I am sure that you have been working on it since the last post. Whatcha been up to girl?