Many novelists mull over story ideas, letting them ripen and develop over time. When the story is ready to be told, instead of just sitting down and starting to type, try the Snowflake Method. This step-by-step way to write a novel begins with essential elements and becomes more detailed with each step.
Essential Elements for Novel Structure
Snowflakes have a structure which begins with a simple form and adds more elements to create complex patterns. Novelist and physicist Randy Ingermanson created the Snowflake Method to break novel-writing into steps that build on each other in the same way. Here's a summary, with comments, of the steps:
1. Write a one sentence summary of the story. This requires novelists to distill a possibly rambling story into a single statement. It’s not as easy as it sounds.
2. Expand that summary sentence into a paragraph describing the basic plotline, each major conflict, and the final resolution. This summary paragraph can also be used in query letters.
3. Write a one page summary for each character, including motivation, immediate goal, conflict, resolution, and a summary of the character’s story line.
The time-saving factor for novelists here is that at this point, a writer knows whether or not the story has problems. If so, they can be finessed or changed completely to fix the story, without spending weeks and months writing a novel that won’t hold together.
Expand on the Beginning Novel-Writing Steps
4. Take the plot summary paragraph from Step 2 and expand it into a page by giving each main conflict its own paragraph. This clarifies it in the writer’s mind, and can also be used in a novel proposal.
5. Write a one-page story summary for each main character, re-telling the plotlines through that character’s eyes. Write a half-page story summary for each minor character.
6. Take the one page plot summary from Step 4 and turn it into a four-page synopsis. Expand on each idea by working out the details and logic of the plot.
Plot problems will arise and new insights and ideas will appear through these steps. That’s all right - go back to the earlier steps and rework them until things are smooth.
Revise and Expand into Scenes
7. Expand the character summaries from Step 3 into detailed descriptions, including appearance, hobbies and profession, and motivation. Time spent here is what will give the writer a character-driven story.
8. Break the plot synopsis into scenes. Ingermanson recommends a spreadsheet for this, which lets writers see all the storylines and how they relate, with the ability to change it easily. It could also be done as a storyboard with index cards.
9. Take each scene and write several paragraphs of narration. If the writing evolves into dialogue, that’s fine. This is, in essence, a miniature rough draft.
10. The first draft is half-written already, so the last step is to transform it into a complete draft of the novel.
Ingermanson stresses that the Snowflake Method is not to be hurried. Each step may take from an hour to a few weeks, but the time invested is crucial in developing a smooth story.
Not for All Writers
Ingermanson's Snowflake Method will result in a well-planned, smoothly-plotted story for writers who prefer a plan. However, writers who like to create a story by getting to know their characters and then throwing them together in stressful situations are likely to be frustrated by the Snowflake Method, and may be better off creating a messy, character-driven first draft, even if it requires more revision later.
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