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Outlining Your Novel: Map Your Way to Success by K.M. Weiland (book review)

December 23, 2019 by Karin Beery Leave a Comment

Writers often look upon outlines with fear and trembling. But when properly understood and correctly wielded, the outline is one of the most powerful weapons in a writer’s arsenal. Outlining Your Novel: Map Your Way to Success will:

Help you choose the right type of outline for you
Guide you in brainstorming plot ideas
Aid you in discovering your characters
Show you how to structure your scenes
Explain how to format your finished outline
Instruct you in how to use your outline
Reveal the benefits:
Ensures cohesion and balance
Prevents dead-end ideas
Provides foreshadowing
Offers assurance and motivation
Dispel misconceptions:
Requires formal formatting
Limits creativity
Robs the joy of discovery
Takes too much time

Even if you’re certain outlining isn’t for you, the book offers all kinds of important tips on plot, structure, and character. Includes exclusive interviews with Larry Brooks, Elizabeth Spann Craig, Lisa Grace, Dan L. Hays, Jody Hedlund, Carolyn Kaufman, Becky Levine, Roz Morris, John Robinson, and Aggie Villanueva, answering important questions:

Can you describe your outlining process?
What is the greatest benefit of outlining?
What is the biggest potential pitfall of outlining?
Do you recommend “pantsing” for certain situations and outlining for others?
What’s the most important contributing factor to a successful outline?


Let me start by saying I am NOT an outliner. I’ve done it before, and I found it to be a complete waste of time — I spent weeks working on it, but after the first third of the novel I had abandoned the outline to follow a better story. Since then, I’ve worked from character sketches. I spend days (weeks) getting to know my characters. I know where they’re going to start and I know where I want them to end up. Using what I know about their personalities, I throw situations at them in order to guide them to the ending I want. That technique works for me.

Because of my previous bad experience with outlining (and my success with character building), I wasn’t really excited about reading this book. I’m not an outliner. After reading this book, however, I don’t think K.M. Weiland or any of the above mentioned authors are either.

The title of this book really should be Researching Your Novel or Before You Start Writing, Do This. By Weiland’s definition of outlining (which is essentially creating pages and pages of story notes and ideas before you start writing your book), anyone who preps before they start writing could essentially be considered an outliner.

The real emphasis here isn’t to outline your book, but to take time before you write to jot down some ideas and figure out plot holes and characters first so you don’t have to go back and fix things later. For that reason, I enjoyed this book because I believe in the power of prep work.

I would recommend this book to anyone either early in their writing career or struggling to put together new story ideas. There are some great tips and suggestions in this book that will help strengthen your characters and their stories.

Filed Under: writing Tagged With: book review, fiction, fiction writing, K.M. Weiland, outlines, writing a book, writing tips

How to Outline Your Novel

September 28, 2015 by Karin Beery Leave a Comment

Red SlippersIt would be fun to just jump in the car and take off cross country on a great American road trip, especially if you don’t have a deadline or budget. Who wouldn’t enjoy taking as much time and money as you want on an unplanned adventure?

The problem with that, however, is that very few of us have that freedom. We have a schedule to keep and bills to pay – we can’t afford to waste time on whatever may come. The same is true for writers. We have responsibilities – families and jobs. We can’t afford to waste time writing and re-writing (and re-writing) the same story. There are dinners to make and tea parties to enjoy. By outlining your story, you can make the best use of all of your time and get more stories written faster.

So how do you write a traditional outline? You want to start with the broadest details and work your way toward specifics. Here’s an example of what an outline might look like for The Wizard of Oz:

I. Beginning: Dorothy is Kansas
II. Middle: Dorothy is in Oz
III. End: Dorothy is back in Kansas

Very broad. Very basic. Now we fill in with details. Let’s look at the middle:

II. Middle: Dorothy is in Oz
A. Dorothy meets the Glenda and the Wicked Witch
B. Dorothy meets the Scarecrow
C. Dorothy meets the Tin Man
D. Dorothy meets the Lion
E. Dorothy meets the Wizard

So now we have more details about what’s happening. We can still go deeper:

II. Middle: Dorothy is in Oz
A. Dorothy meets Glenda and the Wicked Witch
1. Dorothy meets Glenda
a. The house stops moving
b. Dorothy enters Munchkin land
c. Glenda appears and thanks Dorothy
2. Dorothy meets the Wicked Witch
a. The Wicked Witch appears to get the ruby slippers
b. Glenda gives the slippers to Dorothy
c. The Wicked Witch threatens to get Dorothy

By adding just nine lines you can already get an idea of what’s going to happen in the story. The nice thing about an outline is that you can add as many or as few details as you’d like. You can use simple, short sentences (like the ones I wrote), or long, detailed descriptions.

The more details you include, the better idea you’ll have as to your plot strengths and weaknesses. That should help you work your way through your novel faster, and the faster you finish your novel, the faster you can move on to the next one.

Photo credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/fotorita/.

Filed Under: writing Tagged With: outlines, outlining

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