Fast Drafting Tips! | What is a Zero Draft?

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024

Комментарии • 262

  • @AlexaDonne
    @AlexaDonne  4 года назад +104

    First part of the video is defining zero drafts, and then fast drafting section is: 05:26 Why you might want to fast draft 07:33 Fast drafting tips

    • @yasman2008
      @yasman2008 3 года назад +2

      This video was very helpful for useful tips! Just great content!

    • @gargigolhar2886
      @gargigolhar2886 2 года назад +1

      So does messy story notes count as Zero drafts?

    • @v.r.hodgdon
      @v.r.hodgdon 2 года назад +1

      I did a quick write yesterday just to see if a new idea I have has enough steam (I can usually tell by how many words I can get in a single scene before I run out of juice and how hard I had to work that scene to get there), and OML... The idea is great; the scene, however, makes my head hurt, and normally I'd get stuck for weeks trying to fix the white room syndrome, the context issues, the places where there are info dumps or not enough information, etc, until I burn myself out before I've even gotten started yet, but then I found this video and it's like it gave me permission to write however horribly I need to in order to get the story on the page - it's not like that first draft is going straight from the computer to the publisher, nobody but you is going to see it, so why should it matter? Perfectionism is for later, when you plan for other people to see the pages. Thank you so, so much for this freedom. I've been so obsessed with listening to my inner editor recently that, over the years, I forgot what my inner writer even sounded like, and I feel so much better.

    • @velvetbees
      @velvetbees Год назад +1

      I write short stories for fun. Sometimes my zero draft is brilliant, and I can't refine it without losing the magic. Then I read Pulp by Bukowski and it helps me fly again. That is the power of having a muse.

  • @SuzeTalks
    @SuzeTalks 4 года назад +250

    I'm a zero drafter. I usually define it for other people as a glorified outline with dialogue and action tags. LOL. I'm a discovery writer, so it's basically just jumping in and swimming until it's done. And it usually changes a LOT when I get into revisions/rewrites.
    Not sure I can recommend this process for anyone, though. I curse myself every time I get into revisions. Haha.

  • @user-qv2qf1jk5o
    @user-qv2qf1jk5o 4 года назад +221

    I just tell myself "use as many hyphens as you want" and the rest comes naturally... Very badly, but quickly!

    • @iferawhite7661
      @iferawhite7661 3 года назад +11

      Oh my god, YES. I thought I was the only one. I've been told so many times that using a hyphen as a sentence break should be a rare occurrence, once a paragraph at most but I'm just constantly writing hyphens. I would always have to go back, and rewrite the same sentence over and over again trying to get it right--but things go much faster with hyphens for me, and then I just remove them later.

    • @mackfarlainethebarenakedau5113
      @mackfarlainethebarenakedau5113 Год назад +7

      When I began the first draft of my debut novel a couple months ago, I told myself to just let it be bad; I wasn't gonna be able to get all my research into all at once (which I'm still doing), and it's all gonna be revised anyway. All in all, I'm just glad to have a pile of pages stacking up on my desk. Can't wait to have it done, but I'm enjoying the process.

  • @xhellocoldworldx
    @xhellocoldworldx 4 года назад +175

    Here I was thinking I was just a really bad writer/drafter (I'm currently writing my first novel). It's so encouraging to know that what I'm doing is ok. Thanks for the confidence boost and extra tips!

  • @jazmingalloway3172
    @jazmingalloway3172 4 года назад +85

    I normally write my book within a month. And write anywhere between 1-3k a day as my "goal count." Sometimes write 5k a day. Or have 10k days. But as an online college student with no part-time or full-time makes it easier for me to reach these goals. I am also a pantser so I never plot unless I am writing fantasy or a novella. But with all that being said, this was still helpful. I write "one to three sentences for each chapter as well. " I work in 10-25 minute sprints and use tea and candles to set the writer mood. This was a cool video!

    • @sleepyllama9776
      @sleepyllama9776 3 года назад +8

      Wow 10k days?! How do you manage that?! Awesome

    • @jazmingalloway3172
      @jazmingalloway3172 3 года назад +10

      @@sleepyllama9776 normally it's an all day thing. It can happen anywhere in the book and it takes a lot of focus most of the time. Think about the days you are most excited to write, and try your hardest not to let the feeling go. Also during my 10k days I like to take a half an hour break every 1k to stretch, talk over the next few scenes, (I use a voice recorder, or speak with a friend) and refill my tea if I need to. Then put on music and grind out the words. Hope you find success. Have a glorious day ☺️

  • @runswithpencil
    @runswithpencil 4 года назад +33

    Dirty drafting is my favourite part of the process, I think of it as if I’m producing thumbnail sketches when I’m planning a painting, lots of messy ideas, tons of crossings out, but in the end I have a complete idea of the image I am trying to present to the world.

  • @juniperwoodbury1404
    @juniperwoodbury1404 4 года назад +55

    Me going into this video: "this doesn't apply to me, but I guess I'll watch it anyway."
    Me at everything you said: "it me, it me!"
    Turns out I write zero drafts! Who knew?

  • @ajm8471
    @ajm8471 4 года назад +39

    I love sprint writing. Sometimes I’ll just sit on my bed and type super duper fast and later just look at it and laugh, but I find things I love within it, ideas and strings that can lead to major twists in the book. It’s super satisfying and relaxing!

  • @AsheJunius
    @AsheJunius 4 года назад +66

    I'm a hybrid of an outliner and a discovery writer. In the beginning, I'll outline a chapter. Then as I write, if something interesting sparks, I'll jot it down somewhere, hoping it'll build an interesting trait that I never knew my character had-- sort of like letting out a breath that I didn't know I was holding ... except, I'm not sure how I would feel if I typed that last statement in my manuscript.
    Anyway, writing sprints can be awesome! It's amazing how much I can get done in a short amount of time. It really doesn't take a lot of effort. In fact, sometimes, I'll just turn off my brain and slap words down, hoping that it'll make sense. If it doesn't make sense, I'm sure I'll remove it or edit in a way so that it does make sense.

    • @anveshasachan2260
      @anveshasachan2260 3 года назад +1

      Same, that's exactly how i write. I'm currently writing my first draft ❤❤

  • @arlissbunny
    @arlissbunny 4 года назад +49

    Most recently, I have done a detailed outline, a deep character sketch for each main character and an "available names" list for side characters. I did a family tree for my main characters so that I could understand generational history. This helped me with what I think of as place history too. For this project I drew a map of the neighborhood and city where the story is taking place. All this prep took six weeks. After that, I wrote like I was possessed, coming in at about 90,000 words in a month-then I walked away and didn't look at any of it for six months. I'm revising now. The distance helped tremendously. Given that I do so much preparation, I don't think of myself as writing a book in a month so no unicorn here.

    • @saadsiraj3554
      @saadsiraj3554 2 года назад +6

      Hey! That's utterly relatable. I m right now involved in the process of outlining. I am pretty much doing same stuff 👍

    • @skywa7183
      @skywa7183 2 года назад

      @@saadsiraj3554 90000 a month? Good lord. I thought 40000 a month was big deal

    • @saadsiraj3554
      @saadsiraj3554 2 года назад

      @@skywa7183 I know it's a big deal, I was talking about the way he/she does the character and plot creation.

    • @skywa7183
      @skywa7183 2 года назад

      @@saadsiraj3554 shoot I was replying to the original comment.😅

  • @roberthoople
    @roberthoople 4 года назад +52

    I was feeling guilty about dirty drafting until you first mentioned it in another one of your videos.
    Within days of realizing a 'dirty draft' was alright, thanks to your video, I finished writing it through to the end.

    • @roberthoople
      @roberthoople 4 года назад +6

      This comment is a dirty draft

    • @victoriacobb2370
      @victoriacobb2370 3 года назад +5

      There's nothing wrong with drity drafting. Whatever it takes to get the framework onto the page, do it, just remember to edit later.

  • @ajm8471
    @ajm8471 4 года назад +45

    Omg this is so helpful. I honestly learn more from your videos than I do in English class😂 I’m currently working on a YA fantasy novel and so far only around 13,000 words into it. Wish me luck fellow writers!!!😇😁

    • @cadencev5572
      @cadencev5572 3 года назад +2

      how did it go? did u finish

    • @ajm8471
      @ajm8471 3 года назад +5

      @@cadencev5572 It went...decent. I have a habit of writing something pretty long and then hating it when I reread. I think I’m around 20-25,000 on it now, but haven’t worked on it in a bit.😂👍🏻

  • @TheAngelOfDeath01
    @TheAngelOfDeath01 4 года назад +41

    What I typically do, Is, even though my writing may end up in third person omniscient in the end, my "zero draft" (Where I just jot down notes of what I want, finding my 'voice' so to speak and finding heads and tails on life, the "what's the meaning of life" kind-of-moment as far as the story goes), is in first person where I kind of place myself in the shoes of my main character and try to figure out what the situation is even all about. Is it even an idea that is viable? Once that is out of the way and out of my head and I have a sort of understanding of what the heck I'm trying to do, then I start to tell the story in my first comprehensive draft. Why do I start by telling? Because it's concise, it's to the point. It's a matter of breaking "storytelling" up into smaller tasks. Lord knows my zero draft is anything at all but comprehensive and most people would shiver in fear if they saw it!
    I am a programmer and software developer by trade, and focusing on what "you know" is so ingrained in me. Focusing on what you know, getting that out of the way, and then developing things as you move along. Focusing on EVERYTHING all at once is simply the road to complete failure in my world. I've loooong ago learned that it's impossible to.
    For me, writing is like a mosaic... there are the really big headlines, the characters, places, key events, and writing for me is about gluing all those pieces, those mini stories, together so that it actually makes a whole and larger picture that carries a complete meaning other than just being scattered ideas.

    • @IsabelA-hp9yt
      @IsabelA-hp9yt 4 года назад +2

      This is somehow exactly how I feel about writing, with the difference being that I‘m still trying to figure out the process. The fastest draft I‘ve ever written was in first person, so I will absolutely try it just for the purpose of drafting now. Thank you!

  • @lauramccullagh980
    @lauramccullagh980 4 года назад +20

    It helps me sometimes when im stuck to actively write badly, then go back and edit it to be better. I think it actually strengthens my writing because i end up writing directly what I'm thinking, and then more of the emotion gets through.
    Eg:
    Step 1: Whoever the hell Banksy is, i wish they'd stop painting stuff on my street. Idiot tourists clog up the sidewalk and make me late for my stupid job.
    Step 2: (I literally copy and paste step one and go through and change it.) Whoever the hell Banksy is, it would be nice of them to paint some walls on a different street for a change. Every morning, I have to fight my way through crowds of sneakers-and-cargo-shorts tourists who make me late for my stupid job.
    I always discover words or turns of phrase that i would not have otherwise liked or thought to include, and it has made my writing much stronger.

    • @maureenp2248
      @maureenp2248 2 года назад +6

      I actually like the "bad" example better! It sounds more natural to me and it really sounds like how an annoyed person would describe the situation.

  • @Nemo37K
    @Nemo37K 4 года назад +18

    For NaNoWriMo last year, I decided to write one million words in the month (not my wisest idea), and functionally I vomited words on the page and then a story happened. For me, Zero Drafting is the tangible experience of the story where I'm there as a stenographer to my ideas and the world, and then subsequent drafts are when the craft gets involved.
    I did hit the million words, and since, writing fast and dirty drafts of stories has gotten significantly easier, cause I'm writing a normal volume.
    I also recommend a freewrite, alphasmart, or any dedicated digital typewriter for anyone who gets distracted by their computers. It's how I write the instinctual draft.
    Great video, as usual.

    • @ferrin6326
      @ferrin6326 4 года назад +7

      _How._ How did you do that?

    • @Nemo37K
      @Nemo37K 4 года назад +5

      @@ferrin6326 Willpower, patience, a willingness for spelling errors and total freedom to write whatever came to mind. I also planned my days around 33k word goals. I had been writing 4k-12k a day for months prior because I was zero drafting a series I started a decade ago (I finished it on January 10th this year at 2.4 million words). I also had days where I exceeded the goal (at a max of 73k), and some where I was way below (

    • @kaylajames9334
      @kaylajames9334 3 года назад +2

      @@Nemo37K wow. I am surprised your brain is still forming sentences. Did you take a lot of naps after all of that?

    • @Nemo37K
      @Nemo37K 3 года назад +2

      @@kaylajames9334 Lots of naps, and a week long break afterward. My brain, mercifully still functions.

    • @kaylajames9334
      @kaylajames9334 3 года назад +2

      @@Nemo37K lol. Glad you have survived.

  • @jenailogan9195
    @jenailogan9195 4 года назад +24

    I’m such a slooooooow zero drafter😅 I cant believe you get yours done in 3 months! Here I am 8 months later still working the same draft (I’m not writing everyday though) I’m going to try some of these tips and see if I can cut my time down!

    • @nikkireigns
      @nikkireigns 4 года назад +7

      Try 10 years! 😂 This year though I've decided the idea needs to get out of my head and onto paper. If it's stuck with me this long then it deserves a chance! Good luck on your journey!

  • @SethRingWrites
    @SethRingWrites 4 года назад +28

    Can I just say that word sprints (13:00) have revolutionized my writing? It has been the single most helpful way I've found to get actual progress.
    Great video!

    • @HolziWolziWooo
      @HolziWolziWooo 4 года назад +1

      Same here :)

    • @SethRingWrites
      @SethRingWrites 4 года назад

      @@HolziWolziWooo Do you sprint with a group or just solo?

    • @HolziWolziWooo
      @HolziWolziWooo 4 года назад

      @@SethRingWrites With a writing buddy, sometimes solo. Usually go for 15 mins at a time. You?

    • @SethRingWrites
      @SethRingWrites 4 года назад

      ​@@HolziWolziWooo I really like 30 min, because I feel like I can get in a groove.
      Recently I've been sprinting solo, but that is getting harder so I need to get back into a group.

    • @jacquig1939
      @jacquig1939 4 года назад +1

      Never heard of it before Natnowrimo a few years ago. It's amazingly helpful.

  • @caceymalone4566
    @caceymalone4566 4 года назад +3

    I am such a dirty drafter!! LOL I did not realize this until I had my first draft printed and handed to my closest writing friend. It has sooo many holes in it but I have particular scenes in my head. Those scenes are why I'm so motivated to write. When I see those on the page it inspires me to write more so that other can fully feel the emotions of those scenes like I do. Thanks for posting about the writing process!

  • @theatheistpaladin
    @theatheistpaladin 4 года назад +64

    Yes, I call it a 0th draft or a bare-bones draft. I just write the components of the scene with little detail and description. Like an overly verbose outline with some dialog. Just get it on the page and then go back and rearrange and flesh out the story.

    • @dreamingofmagic
      @dreamingofmagic 3 года назад +2

      That actually sounds so helpful, I might try that!

    • @omegaminoseer4539
      @omegaminoseer4539 5 месяцев назад

      This tip is going to save me so much heartache when I finish my manuscripts. I keep forgetting that knowledge is cross-disciplinary. This is JUST like a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) in tech, where you use 5% of the resources to test if something is worth creating in your ideal form.

  • @aquariotutu
    @aquariotutu 4 года назад +11

    The whole concept of dirty drafting is new to me... I used to show my chapters to my little sister (she writes exceptional fanfics) as I wrote them but it kinda stuck me on writing, because I couldn't dirty draft... Really thank you for the video, I didn't even heard about the concept of zero draft and writing sprints before see it xD

  • @jackiemorrison2706
    @jackiemorrison2706 4 года назад +13

    Thanks Alexa! I now realise that I've been zero drafting and this makes so much sense! I had "told myself the story" but then went back to write it in a different way (different POV/tense etc). I'm going forward now feeling much more confident that I didn't make a "mistake" with that zero draft, but that it was simply my process. I'm likely to fast draft a zero draft with my current WIP too - it's just how I get it all down! Thanks again for a great video!

  • @LeahRummel
    @LeahRummel 3 года назад +4

    "use the word 'just' 150 times" I actually laughed out loud because of how called out I feel hahaha

  • @ginnykemerer2708
    @ginnykemerer2708 2 года назад +2

    Wow! Okay, I have been hitting that 80-90% wall and abandoning the work because I guess I was convinced that I had to write the entire first draft, do or die, and if I didn't the story wasn't going to work. This is a game-changer for me. Whole frame of reference for this just flipped. Thank you!

  • @buckle9733
    @buckle9733 4 года назад +3

    This gives me more confidence on just writing and worrying later

  • @Hannah-lt4cp
    @Hannah-lt4cp 4 года назад +4

    Alexa, you are just churning video after video out right now and I am living for it 👌

  • @tappkalina
    @tappkalina 4 года назад +14

    I love you so much, this is what I needed the most right now.

  • @ChaoticVampire
    @ChaoticVampire 4 года назад +9

    How did you know I needed this right now!? I wrote 5k words in about 3 hours yesterday and I'm excited to keep that going since I've been putting this off for 5 years.
    Edit: Lol that didn't last. Here I am yet again.

  • @kayleighthedreamer3800
    @kayleighthedreamer3800 4 года назад +2

    I used to rely a lot on my friends approval to whom I sent my first chapters and then I would spend months ignoring the story and not writing anything. Even if they liked it I just neglected the story. I think this bad habit, at least for me, comes from writing fanfiction and getting attention and validation from readers right away. Fortunately I've been able to stop doing this, mostly because one of your advice. As an aspiring author, no one cares about your book as much as you do. You may be really happy that you achieved a certain goal and you can share with someone and they don't care. I used to get really sad because no one got happy with me. But I just embraced it and I'm now halfway through my first draft.
    Thank you so much for your honesty and good advice and sorry for any English mistakes, I'm a not a native speaker.

  • @writenowdream3882
    @writenowdream3882 3 года назад +2

    I was skeptical of the zero draft idea, but then realized I go back to chapters and rework and rework without any forward momentum. I decided to just give the zero draft thing a go, and it’s been amazing. I am a zero drafter and I really recommend it!

  • @gegyte
    @gegyte 4 года назад +16

    Expanding the outline as much as I can. Messy, needs a lot of work, but most of the ideas are down on paper (procesor). That is a 0 draft for me.

  • @JB-ui6tm
    @JB-ui6tm 4 года назад +1

    I'm not a fast drafter but I did take the fast draft workshop for Candace Havens earlier this year and it improved my momentum significantly. Aside from that, I'm a pantser, but I use vague scene checklists, placeholders (heaven sent), an accountability partner, comic sans hack, writing scenes by hand when I get stuck (then typing/editing it) and writing sprints. 20-min comic sans writing sprints are *chefs kiss*

  • @iosyntropy
    @iosyntropy Год назад +1

    been drafting over five weeks. this tip speaks to my blood. a zero draft. absolutely genius

  • @alex_danceskpop
    @alex_danceskpop 4 года назад +2

    Need to submit a book that isn't written yet to a publisher who requested it and currently freaking out so this was much needed!

  • @beautye5909
    @beautye5909 4 года назад +14

    oh gosh! That moment when you realize your 5th draft is still technically a zero draft :P

  • @crisaguiar4285
    @crisaguiar4285 Год назад

    I stopped writing for 2 days because i was stressed that it wasn´t perfect, i would stop to correct the repetitive words and i just felt like i couldnt write, and after watching this video i feel so relaxed and so inspired. Thank u!

  • @writenowdream3882
    @writenowdream3882 4 года назад +1

    The zero draft is perfect for work. I pull up a word document and in between tasks at my job I can type out conversations and very basic details of a scene--then go home and layer on style and clean up.

  • @thefriqueisin
    @thefriqueisin 3 года назад +2

    I was learning how to plot adn realised that I plot pretty badly since I can't stick to the plan. But it turns out that I am a natural zero drafter...that was fun to discover. That helped me feel like less of an imposter and I got my zero draft completed! whoohoo! On to self edits!

  • @JustBearSonoc
    @JustBearSonoc 4 года назад +6

    I love your videos! I always feel like I've learned something by the end and can apply it to what I'm doing! Keep it up! No one teaches, explains, or clears writing confusion like you do!

  • @alexperry8561
    @alexperry8561 3 года назад +2

    This has been invaluable to me this month. I'm writing my first ever first draft, and as a perfectionist with an anxiety problem, I quickly learned that I had to jus let go of it being any good on the first go, or I would never finish. So I know that everything I have right now - even if the plot elements are decent - the prose is just terrible, but I needed to have it down first or I would obsess. Thank you so much Alexa!

  • @ClefairyFairySnowflake
    @ClefairyFairySnowflake 4 года назад +3

    Zero drafting is my specialty! I'm hoping to get my story developed eventually. I kinda suffer from overwhelm if i try to take on too much at once. Hopefully i'll figure it out somehow! Have a great day!

  • @TheNovelNana
    @TheNovelNana 4 года назад +1

    I made a video on zero drafts...but your definition is a little different than mine, but That is what is amazing about writers...we are all different! We all have different steps and drafting processes. Great video.

  • @KiX-K4T13
    @KiX-K4T13 4 года назад +8

    This is very useful on an issue to issue basis, such as a comic/graphic novel!
    Thanks, Alexa! 💜

  • @danendesign
    @danendesign 4 года назад +4

    Great video! It's so true that sometimes you just need to use those crutches and get the words on the page. My zero draft was a lean 30K, and now I've doubled that.

  • @marcusmcmahon9650
    @marcusmcmahon9650 6 месяцев назад

    This was incredibly helpful as a first time novelist! I intend to write my zero draft almost as a screenplay: very stripped down and bare bones, then fill in all the details on my first draft. Thanks so much!

  • @nannasskrivehjrne9494
    @nannasskrivehjrne9494 4 года назад +4

    I write most of my books in about 1 month to 1½ months, and 2 things changed the game for me:
    1: rewarding myself with star stickers every 500 words
    2: outlining like my life depends on it
    I'm a very reward-oriented person. I want to be rewarded for my accomplishments no matter how small they are, and writing a whole book can take a long time which means it'll take a long time for me to get a reward. But 500 words? On a good day where I'm really in the flow, I can dish out 500 words in 15 minutes. Maybe I actually wrote 600 words, that means I only have 400 words until the next star! and BOOM! suddenly I have written 5-7000 words in a day.
    Outlining I do to save myself from getting stuck during the drafting stage. There are still some gaps in my outline, but nothing major. I used to hate outlining, but I realised that I hate getting stuck more and now, honestly, outlining is one of my favourite parts of the process.

    • @candacetaylor27
      @candacetaylor27 4 года назад

      That star reward thing is super smart. I'm gonna do that!

  • @elizabethkwilks8641
    @elizabethkwilks8641 4 года назад +3

    Thank you for this video! I've been interested in fast drafting for awhile now but wasn't sure where to start. It's hard not to be page perfect writer. This really helped me realize how beneficial a "dirty" draft can be. I feel liberated!!!! 💜💜💜

  • @MadailinBurnhope
    @MadailinBurnhope 3 года назад +1

    thank you for this!! it turns out I've written a zero draft!! I'm very proud of what I've done but I've been frustrated that I can't write the ending because of my "list of things I want to fix" from the beginning; I have a more specific title, theme, arc(s) than I did when I started but was beating myself up for not being able to "finish"
    this encourages me that I don't have to, I can go back and rewrite with more intention, and reach the end next time!! :)

  • @havvaalexander9520
    @havvaalexander9520 4 года назад +2

    Great post! First novel was a very dirty fast draft. Second novel was a very clean zero draft. Both are in the revision and editing phases 😄

  • @PZLovell
    @PZLovell 4 года назад +2

    I discovered something about this on accident. When I started, it would take me 1-2 hours to get 200 words down. Then I took my laptop to work and sometimes would have just a half hour or so and get down a lot more words. I started setting a timer on my phone in 30 minute increments even when I had more time, then one hour increments.
    .
    I went from spending 6 hours or so of my Saturday writing to get 500-700 total words on a *good* day to getting about 1000 in an hour, sometimes for multiple hours. I'm in the middle between pantser and plotter, I'll have like a paragraph of notes on chapters in something resembling an outline, then I deviate from it a lot. External pressure helps A LOT for me.

    • @el4242
      @el4242 4 года назад +1

      This is me. I'll spend like six hours on a Sunday and get maybe 1000 words. 😓 I'm gonna try your idea. 🤔 Thanks for the tip. 👍

    • @PZLovell
      @PZLovell 4 года назад

      @@el4242 Hope it works well for you. :)

  • @laracollins8213
    @laracollins8213 4 года назад +1

    This video could not be more timely for where I am in my drafting process and gave me the perspective to say that I... may have actually finished my zero draft! And, as I start to go back through and do my first pass of revisions/editing, I will absolutely be applying some of these fast-drafting tips to fill in the gaps.
    Definitely one of my favorite of your videos, thank you, Alexa!

  • @MissHolliday3110
    @MissHolliday3110 4 года назад +2

    I'm zero drafting my first novel. I am literally putting a string of scenes together so that I can show it to my CP/alpha readers to help me find the story and write more well rounded characters. Then, I'll do the rewrite for my rough draft and really get down to business.

  • @annabelho5004
    @annabelho5004 4 года назад +1

    I have done both discovery writing and outlining before. I find that 10% discovery writing and 90% outlining works for me: get most of the heavy lifting done first but allowing myself room to input something that comes to mind that works for a scene. I'm attempting to be a zero drafter but honestly, I'm a 0.5 drafter because I have a tendency to condense multiple steps into one lol, which makes writing h a r d for me. The one true tip I have for anyone zero drafting is to write down everything. This can be ideas for the story or the worldbuilding, plot points, character traits, wants and needs, the actual story etc. It's better to get it all out before you forget and so you can maintain momentum.

  • @islab7160
    @islab7160 4 года назад +1

    I have you to thank for completing my first ever zero draft (a bit below 90000 words atm) so thank you! 😊

  • @sassyblondewriter8239
    @sassyblondewriter8239 4 года назад +1

    Yes! Scheduling breaks is so important! You cannot pour from an empty cup

  • @erichitchens6749
    @erichitchens6749 Год назад

    I really like this concept. I've been trying to push through drafting by adding comments or putting stage directions in brackets where I don't feel like doing scene descriptions, which are really boring for me to write. Now I know there's a term for this.

  • @acurrie1221
    @acurrie1221 4 года назад +2

    I love your channel so much!

  • @fatimaa-q6f
    @fatimaa-q6f 4 года назад +3

    EYE OPENING!

  • @LittleCornerBookNook
    @LittleCornerBookNook 4 года назад +2

    I just completed my first fast draft over camp nano last month. I did most of these things just to get it done. I found that writing third person and telling myself the story was the only way to get it all out. I also gave myself Saturdays off from writing. I had only planned on writing 20k, and ended up with a finished fast draft at 50k. I am taking this week and next week off to recharge before I go in and write the nice draft.

  • @emilyestelle7471
    @emilyestelle7471 4 года назад +1

    I'm working on this for my second book. It's not actually fast because I'm working full time and attending college, but it helps me make the most of what little free time I do have.

  • @hannarose166
    @hannarose166 4 года назад +1

    Omg I needed this!!! 👏👏👏 my zero draft is totally my own personal thing, I don’t show anyone, I just didn’t have a name for it, I love the idea of calling it a zero draft, thank you for this I love your videos! X

  • @MariaWarrenWrites
    @MariaWarrenWrites 4 года назад +1

    My word sprints are all through 4thewords its changed how I write and my productivity overall I even love it shows me how many words I need daily to hit my year end goal.
    I'll fast draft before I start which is close to those couple of sentences per chapter i was surprised to see someone else uses that method. But now I'm going to try save the cat!

  • @tappkalina
    @tappkalina 3 года назад

    It's been 6 months and I still watch this video religiously.

  • @amy-suewisniewski6451
    @amy-suewisniewski6451 4 года назад

    I used to do the "bullet points for what has to happen in each chapter". And then I found that when it came to writing, it just wasn't enough. I finished the book with it, but it felt like I was pulling my hair out, spending a lot of time staring at a blank page. Now I'm bullet pointing for each scene. It's been really interesting because I can make changes and fix some things before I even write them.

  • @guilatrixx4442
    @guilatrixx4442 4 года назад +1

    This video made me exhale a deep breath I never had. Gonna keep these tips in mind! Thank you!

  • @solarsailer4166
    @solarsailer4166 4 года назад +15

    I can draft a book in 4 weeks but it takes 6 months + to do all the revising and then editing. I'm slow at revising and that's the part that scares me.
    How do I write the draft in a month? Once I get an idea, I'll write a narrative account of what happens. It's typically 8-12 pages long. All telling with the odd line of dialogue that seems to fit. Then I leave the idea alone for months and work on something completely different. When I come back to the idea, I'll break it up into chapters, mark off stuff from John Truby's book "The 22 Steps of Storytelling" to make sure the importnat stuff is there. I'll go through the major character(s) and sort out who they are and what their conflicts are. Then, while the iron is hot and my enthusiasm is high, I strike and tackle the damn thing, with my printed summary taped over my desk.
    Then comes the revision. Yeah, this is where I suck big time. I've followed Susan Dennard's process and it has been immensely helpful, but despite all the above, I still find my 1st draft to be messy and in need of much revising. I figured my brain is just super chaotic. Finding videos like this and others really help because I walk away thinking, "I may have a messy process, but it's okay. I'm not alone."

  • @lordofthicc9572
    @lordofthicc9572 4 года назад +1

    Can I just say thank you. your channel has been the best help with your tips and tricks and how you explain important topics about writing just clicked with me.❤
    I'm forever grateful for the advice I never known I needed 😅

  • @Itslexreads
    @Itslexreads 3 года назад +2

    I'm a zero drafter because I'm an underwriter. There is so much less story the first iteration that it always feels unfair to call it a first draft.

  • @WeAreTheTwintails
    @WeAreTheTwintails 3 года назад

    Amen! Plan it out! Draft lean! Track daily word counts! Reward with sugar! I agree with this whole video. It sounds like everything I'm already doing.

  • @KetchupCanvas
    @KetchupCanvas 10 месяцев назад

    Something I do when writing is if I can't think of what to write, I have two documents open, one for the draft and one for randomness, and if I can't think of what to write I type phrases or whatnot in the randomness document because the act of typing keeps my brain moving for some reason and I don't lose the desire to write as fast as if i just stopped altogether 😊❤ love your videos btw!

  • @michellesommerville8544
    @michellesommerville8544 Год назад

    I am a plotter so I use beat sheets a lot. I put my main points into the sections and then expand and expand and expand until I have what I call a 'chunky outline'. Occasionally it will have dot points in a scene, but it is usually more fleshed out. I've been writing for many years now and am still figuring out 'my process'.

  • @akossiwak
    @akossiwak 4 года назад +4

    Yes! I zero draft too! Only one CP reads my zero draft. Even they have a limit of how often I can subject them to it. 😂

  • @adele2312
    @adele2312 4 года назад +2

    So helpful!

  • @amouramarie
    @amouramarie 2 года назад +1

    One tip I've heard a lot is to draft at first in Comic Sans. Presumably because you _expect_ something written in Comic Sans to be bad lol.

  • @annmurry8589
    @annmurry8589 4 года назад +2

    I like the idea of jumping around between the most emotionally and visually compelling or consistently recurring imagery or scenes first and then connecting them up with logical minimal transitions. I fear it will turn out very "slide show" in draft 0 especially and maybe also even draft 1 (if I get there). I will go for the sufficient description and anti-passive language edits as part of draft1. I plan to use the excuse of "illustrating" when I hit writer's block ...
    Or who knows, maybe I will be too stressed out with the tumultuous times and resort to self-soothing gaming ...

  • @VinnyTheory
    @VinnyTheory 2 месяца назад

    If you’re going to do a zero draft you might as well just write a super-outline with bullet points of every action and piece of dialogue in the scene. Without having to write elaborate descriptions and flowy sentences, you can just flesh the idea out in order (and fix plot holes/make the structure cohesive)

  • @riokelathi1528
    @riokelathi1528 3 года назад

    I just wanted to say thank you! I have been talking about writing a novel since forever, I am now 26, and whilst I write regularly I have only just started writing my novel and getting it down- thanks to you! Your video on harsh writing advice really kicked me into gear, saying 'just write!' and explaining how just talking about writing doesn't make you a writer, really resonated with me! I still struggle to write every day but now I have a goal and a deadline, and I now also know I was making the mistake of thinking I needed to wait for inspiration to strike, to write. So... thank you!

  • @breemlew
    @breemlew 4 года назад +3

    Really glad you talked about this. 😊

  • @pani8966
    @pani8966 4 года назад +3

    Thank you so much for your videos, your tips are so useful! 💜

  • @frankiesscifiobsession3660
    @frankiesscifiobsession3660 4 года назад +1

    I zero draft often. I consider it like outlining I. Draft form. There are times when I write the same scene from several points of view just to get a feel for it, or I take time to just interview a character to figure out motivation or how a particular event changed them. I never figure out my ending until second draft.

  • @socman002
    @socman002 3 года назад +2

    My advice is write awkward and fun first drafts. Get the story out in its most creative form, and this is usually found on a sentence by sentence format, a certain creativity plotting may struggle to materialise. Once you have the dirty first draft rewrite the entre thing, sentence by sentence. Now you are plotting a novel, or writing to a plot, because you are rewriting your first draft without the bad stuff and filling it with good stuff. Then what? Rewrite the entire thing again a third time. No need to refer to notes or stick to a plan, no need to feel nervous; you know this story by now. Once you finish this, contemplate if it is ready for line editing. If so, proceed. If not, do a forth draft. Once a draft has been completed that conveys your original idea and as been boosted by subsequent drafting, proceed with line edit. What does that involve? Rewrite each sentence of your story, sentence by sentence, so that each sentence is absolutely beautiful. Rule: rewrite each sentence once only or you'll forever be thinking you can do better. Do better in other books. Get this book done. Once you have rewritten each sentence, edit it for grammar, syntax, spelling ect, but cut cut cut at this stage. Rewriting each sentence prob caused word count to rise, but now you will lower it again. Done? Proced with copy edit. Done? Popceed with manuscript assessmebt, sit back, and wait to be torn apart. That's horrible, you say. That's beauty, I say. Thanks for vid 😉

  • @mischiefmakerstudios9900
    @mischiefmakerstudios9900 4 года назад +2

    Do you ever take requests? If you do, could you please give us a tour of what type of books you read, that’s on your bookcase? I mainly ask because I am always curious as to the books I can not see.

  • @BethanyMacmanusBooks
    @BethanyMacmanusBooks 3 года назад +1

    My struggle is always against my inner editor when trying to draft fast. The best way I combat her is to either write wordsprints on my AlphaSmart neo in "timed typing" mode, which prevents the use of the backspace, or on my computer in either Wingdings/Webdings font or plain white. The objective, of course, is not to see what I'm typing so I resist the urge to correct it.

  • @singingsanja167
    @singingsanja167 4 года назад +1

    I don't rely on my alpha-reader, but if I know we will meet to read the story furtherm it always gives me an extra push. ^_^ And I need to write it all out wordy - if I try to reduce it while draftingI don't write anything at all, LOL! I've come to see it as first creating the abundance from which I can later pick the best. ;-)

  • @DeeBlaregold
    @DeeBlaregold 4 года назад +1

    These concepts are interesting. I completely understand. My first time participating in Nanowrimo, I believe I produced a zero draft. That thing is a mess, and I'm still trying to figure it out.😆 Thanks.

  • @writingavalanche8132
    @writingavalanche8132 3 года назад

    Alexa... I have news for you... "zero drafts" are your version of outlines HAHAHAHA. It does take the pressure off for sure. Love it. Thank you!

  • @ramonarobot
    @ramonarobot 4 года назад +3

    Dirty drafting? Hmm...filter words, adjectives, crutch words, info dump, jumbled tenses - let’s go!

  • @bestieboots
    @bestieboots 3 года назад

    This might just be my favorite of the ones you've made. Thank you! VERY helpful.

  • @milomazli
    @milomazli 4 года назад +1

    I really loved this insight!! it also is like discovering that up until now I have been speaking in "prose" if that make sense :)
    I love getting to know how other writers conceptualize and go about the writing process. Also, I love your hair, makeup, and outfit. You are super beautiful and you express yourself so clearly so well!! Thank you for your insights!

  • @arcadelinkauthor
    @arcadelinkauthor 2 года назад

    I'd been dwelling on the way that I draft. Then I watched a video that offhand mentioned Zero Drafting, and it turns out thats exactly what I do, and theres a word for it. lmao
    I 100% just write to get the story on the page. I can dwell on a sentence for days, so I push myself until the story is over, then I can make everything prettier.
    It does pose a problem when some of this is submitted for school. lmao

  • @slavkajanastasukovova667
    @slavkajanastasukovova667 4 года назад +1

    I watch some of your videos before writing and it motivates me. You are the best!❤

  • @annabelho7607
    @annabelho7607 4 года назад +1

    Really needed this video. Thank you!

  • @saltwater8705
    @saltwater8705 4 года назад +1

    I needed this!! Thank you for the helpful advice and ideas!

  • @teresagrabs488
    @teresagrabs488 4 года назад +1

    My zero draft is usually just a chapter outline that summarizes each chapter in 1-3 lines. My first drafts are usually really clean and ready for beta readers.

    • @maverikfamily
      @maverikfamily 4 года назад +1

      That's a good option! Do you usually make a lot of changes based on beta readers feedback?

    • @teresagrabs488
      @teresagrabs488 4 года назад

      @@maverikfamily I combine all beta feedback and list them in order of "most commented on" to "reader preference" then look closely at whatever most said was a problem area. I will look at reader preferences but don't always make a lot of changes. My outline keeps plot holes to a minimum and most comments are on finer details.

  • @Quietcloud
    @Quietcloud 4 года назад +1

    I hate writing sprints. I need thinking time to visualize my scene before I write it. I find I start with stronger verb choices if I avoid sprints just to get word counts.

  • @luj763
    @luj763 4 года назад +1

    This was really good advice!! Currently fast drafting so this video was perfect timing.

  • @smallworld_sims
    @smallworld_sims 10 месяцев назад

    This is how I write in general, I think. I am trying to work toward working out an outline at least, but I write out of order, sometimes just putting a few lines for a scene, just to get everything out and down on paper. I never knew how to describe this to other people.

  • @samuelewrites7249
    @samuelewrites7249 4 года назад +3

    I zero draft using dictation :) It helps get the structure down -- and stops me from getting too fancy (and screwing things up) my first time around.

    • @macybautista9719
      @macybautista9719 3 года назад

      What program or app do you use? Would really appreciate a suggestion!

    • @samuelewrites7249
      @samuelewrites7249 3 года назад

      @@macybautista9719 Dragon Professional Individual 15! :) It's pricey but by far the best!

  • @In.Gy.
    @In.Gy. 3 года назад

    Super helpful! Thanks for this, it really changed my perspective on my terribad 1st- I mean, my terribad 0 draft!

  • @TheEmanuelaG
    @TheEmanuelaG 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much Alexa! Your videos are such an inspiration.

  • @SharkBagel
    @SharkBagel 2 месяца назад

    I'll recommend Abbie Emmon's immersive writing sessions all day for getting your writing done.