Quick Tip: Save Your Outlines

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

Here’s a quick tip for those of you who already like to outline: save your outlines for your older books.

I’m now over 30 books in and I’ve found my memory seriously failing when it comes to remembering non-recurring characters and plots.  The problem is most-evident with books published 8-10 years ago, but I may also struggle with details from books I wrote last year.  There are just too many books.  Or maybe it’s just that my memory completely stinks.  :)

Once I had to re-read an entire book of mine before speaking to a local book club about it. I was happy to do it because I would have felt awful if they’d known the book better than I did, but I didn’t really have the time to do it.

In the past, when I’d finished and published a book, I ditched the outline as just another unnecessary file taking up space in Word.  Then I realized…these outlines were the perfect cheat-sheets.  I could pull them out and they’d jog my memory.

This has helped me not only with book club appearances, but with emails received from readers on particular books, and on Wattpad where sometimes I’m receiving a lot of comments about a book I’m uploading that I’ve written long ago.

An important point: if you decide to use your old outlines this way, be sure to note deviations from the outline on your document or else you’re not going to do yourself any favors. I do frequently diverge from the outline and I’ll make a short note with Word’s comments feature in track changes.

Do you keep your outlines? Any other uses for them that I haven’t thought of?

Why Outlining Writers Should Keep Their Old Outlines: Click To Tweet

Photo credit: h.koppdelaney on Visualhunt.com / CC BY-ND

Outlining a Cozy Mystery

A black cat sits to the left side of a dark background while the post title, 'Outlining a Cozy Mystery' is superimposed on the side.

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

I realized recently that the most common question I’m asked in podcast interviews, during writer’s conferences, and via email is: “What does your cozy mystery outline look like?”

I’ve always kind of blown my answer to this question, I think, because I’m surprised to get it. I never even thought of myself as an outliner until six years ago (I was a pantster until that point).

My outline has been a work in progress.  But I’ve tweaked it a lot over the years until now it’s the basic tool that I need to jump quickly into a new story.

I’m posting a link to it in this post so that now I can actually have an answer to the question I’ve never answered well before.  :)   Hopefully, someone will find it useful.  You can find the template here on Google Docs and can copy it or download it there.

A few notes about the outline:

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