Re-writing? Make Sure Every Draft Has a Purpose

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Image by Mihai Surdu from Pixabay

When we write, it’s easy to imagine we can get everything down in one draft. Our characters will be consistent but surprising, our plot will never sag or go off-course, and the ending will be explosive yet graceful. It rarely works out that way. It’s time for a second draft. Surely, this one will be better?

Not always. We dive into our next draft, but find that we still have a lot of the same problems at the end. In a post on Writer Unboxed, Yuvi Zalkow says you can avoid this by making sure every draft has a purpose.

“The purpose is sometimes vague, like for a first draft, it might be: ‘what the hell is this thing about?'” Zalkow explains. “But for some of the middle drafts, it can be very specific: ‘Nail down the POV for Kitty’ or ‘Fix that crappy dialogue’ or ‘Follow through with that pocket watch I introduce in Chapter 1.’ When I discover issues unrelated to the current purpose, I add it to a running list and get back to the current agenda.”

Sometimes Zalkow will cheat and work on a small fix, but he says this approach keeps him focused on individual challenges and calm enough to fix them.