Advice needed for tackling old WIPs
Jun. 21st, 2014 03:44 amHiya fellow writers! I'm looking for some thoughts / advice / suggestions regarding something I feel rather conflicted about (in that I keep swaying back and forth between what to do), and I'd really appreciate any opinion you may have on this.
Basically, I'm digging up a WIP from about 10 years ago as it's my intention to go back and hopefully finish the darn thing. In terms of where it was left off story-wise, I'd say it's roughly around midpoint. But what I have so far was also written so long ago that it not only has large areas that need major fixing, a character I'm likely taking out, another character I might insert, and several scenes I know are missing... but the tone and style has also evolved. Some of these changes require complete rewrites of certain chapters, others not as drastic.
So... the question I keep bouncing back and forth in my head is this:
Since it's been so long, would it be better for me to just start fresh and write the entire thing from the beginning again? Or would I be better off continuing the story and then coming back and heavily comb through and fix the first half?
I feel like the second option would be the "smarter" choice (however hard it might be for me psychologically because I know myself and I'd keep thinking about all those things I wanted/needed to do about the first half). I'd have to try to find a way for it to not distract me. On the other hand, while the first option of starting the whole draft fresh from the beginning sounds very appealing, I'm almost afraid that that way is a rabbit hole where I end up having a WIP that will never finish. What do you all do when you return to work on very old unfinished drafts?
Help? :\
Basically, I'm digging up a WIP from about 10 years ago as it's my intention to go back and hopefully finish the darn thing. In terms of where it was left off story-wise, I'd say it's roughly around midpoint. But what I have so far was also written so long ago that it not only has large areas that need major fixing, a character I'm likely taking out, another character I might insert, and several scenes I know are missing... but the tone and style has also evolved. Some of these changes require complete rewrites of certain chapters, others not as drastic.
So... the question I keep bouncing back and forth in my head is this:
Since it's been so long, would it be better for me to just start fresh and write the entire thing from the beginning again? Or would I be better off continuing the story and then coming back and heavily comb through and fix the first half?
I feel like the second option would be the "smarter" choice (however hard it might be for me psychologically because I know myself and I'd keep thinking about all those things I wanted/needed to do about the first half). I'd have to try to find a way for it to not distract me. On the other hand, while the first option of starting the whole draft fresh from the beginning sounds very appealing, I'm almost afraid that that way is a rabbit hole where I end up having a WIP that will never finish. What do you all do when you return to work on very old unfinished drafts?
Help? :\
no subject
Date: 2014-06-24 04:02 am (UTC)Okay, see, what happened was this. First draft when I was...15 was about this one character primarily. I ended up hating the draft but being quite fond of the characters in it, so I kept them around in my head. Then a few years back I dusted off the idea for NaNo and redrafted it, and the original main character showed up but I was /rapidly/ distracted by an entirely new character, and so original main sort of fucked off in the woods for 15k, and didn't actually do anything interesting.
I like them both, so I want them both to have equal billing, I just need to figure out how much I want their story lines to interact. I feel like I should have them bounce off of each other, but that exponentially increases the amount of changes I'll have to make.
....I think I might just have to redraft huge chunks of it... ah well.
Good luck! I hope your editing is helping~
no subject
Date: 2014-06-24 02:51 pm (UTC)Do you work with outlines and in-depth plotting? If you do, perhaps you'd benefit from taking time away from the draft to do some of this first - just so you can figure out where their stories cross and how they affect each other. That way, it might be easier to figure out where you need to change stuff and so on.
Redrafting is no fun. I feel your pain. D: