Writing Magazine

CATALYST FOR CHANGES

I’ve come to realise that it’s only when I arrive at the end of a first draft, that I can ever really know how the story needs to start. Achieving some kind of circularity in a novel where the finale mirrors the beginning, even in a tiny, nuanced way, is a satisfying form of closure both to a writer and reader – but for me, writing as a pantser, it’s impossible for me to plan this sort of thing in advance. I tend to finish a draft, think ‘Ahh! So that’s what the story is!’ – and then return to the beginning in order to retrofit a completely new opening that best suits the narrative. And so it proved with my latest novel, The Best Days of Our Lives: the elevenpage prologue that starts the novel wasn’t written until after I’d clocked up 110,000 other words, including everyone’s favourite two ‘The End’. Only then was my story in place.

The first line

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writing Magazine

Writing Magazine1 min read
Part-time Benefits
Confession: I have never earned enough to be a full-time writer. Of course, most writers would love to be bestsellers, win awards and be offered six-figure advances, but most do not achieve this. It is an achievement to find a mix of activities that
Writing Magazine4 min read
L. M. Nathan
I didn’t grow up surrounded by books. It was music that first gave me a love of language. My Grandad had an enormous record player, and it was a communal event to curate a playlist. The lyrics fascinated me – the way writers put them together in unus
Writing Magazine4 min read
Sleuth Truths
When I began writing my novel about the Victorian era’s funniest lady detective, Violet Hamilton, I hit a wall. I wanted Violet to be bold, daring, ground-breaking and free, but it went against all I was reading about women’s real lives at the time.

Related