I can say from experience, though, not every scene that's in your rough draft belongs in your final book... especially if you're finding your word count running over, or your waters getting muddied. Which is why it's important to sit down, take a hard look at each scene, and really ask if it needs to be on the team. Because some of them probably don't.
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| Just make the cut. |
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Unnecessary Stuff Gets Left on The Cutting Room Floor
For just a moment, let's compare a novel to a movie. These are two very different art forms, but both of them are vehicles for telling a story. And just like how a writer might splash all their ideas onto the page, so a filmmaker might shoot different versions of a scene, or even add in extra scenes. When filming is wrapped, and the rough cut is done, it's time to start making decisions about what scenes stay in, and what scenes get chopped out.
Because sometimes a scene that seemed poignant and interesting at the time just makes later scenes feel redundant. Sometimes a scene is meant to give extra characterization to a member of the cast but instead feels like it's over-explaining them, or it actually runs counter to their behavior in other scenes. Sometimes subplots are removed from the movie because there just isn't enough room for everything, and they just felt too busy.
If you get the chance to watch deleted scenes from movies you know well, ask why they were removed in the first place? What was the logic? How would their inclusion have altered the finished product? How would these elements change the story? Because once you understand that, it can give you a more solid perspective when it comes to your own story, what should stay, and what should go.
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| Some scenes are harder to cut than others, not going to lie. |
As an example, if you're writing a murder mystery that's meant to focus on the gritty side of investigating serial killers, what purpose does the scene where the detective has coffee with their sister serve? Is it meant to act as a come-down after a brutal revelation? Are you trying to show the other side of the detective's life as they struggle not to be consumed by the job? Does it involve a difficult discussion where the detective asks their sibling to be on the lookout, knowing that she might be targeted next?
When I say you need to be sure that the book has a purpose, that doesn't just mean it's a scene that drives the plot forward. There are plenty of scenes that don't have any plot-relevant details in them that still serve your narrative, which show different sides of your characters, or which lay false trails or keep your readers guessing. The key is that you understand the purpose these scenes serve, and that you can take a step back, and say that they are definitely helping your book.
Like I said above, your book is the vehicle for the story you're telling. Each part of that vehicle is working together to achieve the end result. You don't want to strip out the pistons in your engine, or take off the tires... but do you really need that spoiler on the rear? Or the extra spoiler on top of it? The bull bars on the front that are just weighing it down? The rack of lights across the roof that are just shining more light, but not actually helping you see better?
It's important to strip out things that are hurting your story... but more important than that is the ability to recognize when something is serving its purpose, and when you could probably stand to bring down the blade, and leave that particular scene out of things.
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That's all for this week's Craft of Writing! For more of my work, check out my Vocal archive, or at My Amazon Author Page where you can find books like my sci-fi dystopian thriller Old Soldiers, the Hardboiled Cat series about a mystery solving Maine Coon in Marked Territory and Painted Cats, my sword and sorcery novel Crier's Knife, or my most recent short story collection The Rejects!
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