Subject: That's pretty much what I do, too. {= )
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Posted on: 2014-04-27 17:27:00 UTC

Except I do it all on my laptop, highlighting misspellings, funny bits, and other things I definitely need to include; leaving comments for myself if I think of particularly good jokes or gags; making note of any outside information I've looked up; etc. I also choose the point where I want to kill it ahead of time—it helps a LOT to know where the story is going to end. Then, with all the highlighted stuff, you end up with a pretty good road map of the story, and you just have to get the characters from start to finish in a fun way. {= )

One important thing to note is that I don't include EVERYTHING I mark up in the document. You have to pick and choose the things that are vital to the story—things that demonstrate particularly well what the fic is doing and why it doesn't work—and not be afraid to leave out redundancies and distractions, even funny ones.

Also, some advice I gave someone else recently: beware of Talking-Heads Syndrome. Agents in a mission ought to be actively doing things and reacting to the terrible things being done to them. If all your agents are doing is standing around in undescribed space, in undescribed spatial relation to each other, merely inserting snarky comments between chunks of fic, that's a drag, and you might as well just write an MST.

A tip I learned for getting started on a story is to just write some kind of introduction, even if it sucks. It's allowed to suck, because once you get going, you can chop it off. Think of it as an on-ramp or runway: you need it to get going, but once you're off, you leave it behind.

Hope that helps!

~Neshomeh

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