[B5JMS] Attn jms: Tweaking your writing...
b5jms-admin at cs.columbia.edu
b5jms-admin at cs.columbia.edu
Sat Mar 24 04:23:00 EST 2001
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From: kevin kenney <kpkca at pacbell.net>
Date: 23 Mar 2001 17:28:29 -0700
Lines: 16
Knowing from your previous posts that you have what you write fairly
firmly in mind when you do so, but realizing what is gained by writing
via computer, I wonder how often you come up with a better idea, line,
or (gasp) correction on something you wrote mere pages ago, and end up
going back to tweak it. (Your latest multitasking post brings up the
possibility.) If this does occur, for smaller stuff, do you do wait to
finish the draft, and leave such changes for the next one?
OT: Spiderman ended up getting a rather demonic cat recently.
Remembering your feisty cat, that previously led to one's inclusion in
Crusade, was this something you set up with the previous writer on the
comic, to use for your own purposes?
Thanks for it all,
KpK
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From: jmsatb5 at aol.com (Jms at B5)
Date: 23 Mar 2001 22:08:49 -0700
Lines: 29
>Knowing from your previous posts that you have what you write fairly
>firmly in mind when you do so, but realizing what is gained by writing
>via computer, I wonder how often you come up with a better idea, line,
>or (gasp) correction on something you wrote mere pages ago, and end up
>going back to tweak it. (Your latest multitasking post brings up the
>possibility.) If this does occur, for smaller stuff, do you do wait to
>finish the draft, and leave such changes for the next one?
I cannot imagine anything more boring for anyone else than a prolonged
discussion of How I Write, but....
When I sit down to write, I go over and revise the previous day's work. This
lets me catch up mentally with where I left off, and condenses the revision
period so that by the time I'm done...I'm done. So I'm constantly tweaking,
trimming, revising, and otherwise mucking with the words. Once it's done, it's
pretty much done. This is especially vital in TV which doesn't leave much time
for going back and revising; you finish it, slit your wrists, and go on to the
next script.
jms
(jmsatb5 at aol.com)
(all message content (c) 2001 by synthetic worlds, ltd.,
permission to reprint specifically denied to SFX Magazine
and don't send me story ideas)
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