Novel Manuscript Format
How To Write Your First Novel
Author: Laura Stamps
I began my writing career as a poet, and I’m still a poet. So my journey into fiction was never a planned career move. In fact, my first short story arrived as a complete shock. No kidding.
Because I have written and published poetry in books and magazines for years, I’ve developed a writing schedule that provides time to write every day, always a half hour after breakfast each morning and again after dinner every evening. I also keep a notepad and pen next to the bed to capture any lines of poetry if they float through my mind while I drift off to sleep. This means I’ve not only learned how to write pages of notes in the dark but also how to decipher those scribbles in the morning.
About eleven years ago, as I fell asleep one night, several lines suddenly appeared. Before I could decide to wake up and write them down, a startling thought flared in my mind like a wild firecracker: “This isn’t a poem…it’s the first paragraph of a short story, and I’ve never written fiction before!”
My eyes popped open, I grabbed the notepad, and followed the thread of those lines until I’d written three paragraphs of a short story in the dark. That was my first experience seeing an imaginary character in my mind and following her around, writing down her words and actions.
Throughout the next year different characters and their stories peopled my mind, and I began writing and publishing short fiction in magazines. I had never taken a writing class, so when I began writing poetry in my early thirties, I studied the books of contemporary poets, and eventually developed my own form of free verse poetry. I approached fiction in the same manner. I read and studied all the short story collections I could find, and ultimately created an experimental format for my short fiction, which resembled a prose poem composed of segments, each signaling a scene change or a change in a character’s thought process. Editors loved it, and almost all of my short stories appeared in magazines and literary journals. Those stories were eventually collected in a book that sold well for many years.
But two years later, short fiction no longer satisfied me, and I began to crave a longer form of creative expression, like a novel or novella. I could feel a novel percolating within me, but I knew nothing about the characters or plot. With no revelations emerging from my subconscious, I sensed this novel needed time to develop, so I began writing poetry again and published several poetry books.
Five years passed, and then one afternoon the title of the novel suddenly sizzled through my mind. The next day the main character appeared and announced her name. And on the third day she began telling her story, and a plot emerged. At the time, I had just started a new collection of poetry, but that hardly mattered. I’d been waiting for this novel for years, and once it arrived I dropped everything, grabbed my notebook (all my first drafts are handwritten), and four months later I had completed a short novel. Years later, I would add more material to this novel and republish it as the first in my series of Occult novels for women.
After the main character in that first novel began speaking, the entire writing experience flowed quickly in the white heat of a creative blaze. I always say I’m lucky I remembered to breathe during those amazing months! But don’t let this throw you. That was the first and last time I had to wait for a novel idea. Now new characters and plot ideas arrive frequently, and the day after I finish one novel I usually begin the next.
So, how did I write my first novel? First, I let the main character tell me who she was and what the primary plot of the novel would be. Next, several subplots emerged. And that was all I needed to start writing. For short stories I never used a structured outline. Instead, I patched those stories together organically, as if they were fabric swatches in a quilt, jumping back and forth between the past and present, allowing the characters to tell me what comes next. If you work this way too, you’ll feel comfortable arranging the scene and the characters in your mind, grabbing your notebook, and then following the characters around, writing down their words, thoughts, and actions. However, I found the prose poetry format I created for my short stories wouldn’t work for a novel. It just didn’t feel right. So I tweaked and tweaked and developed another experimental format that I still use today.
As I mentioned before, I do not use an outline for my novels, but I do edit each chapter completely before I continue. I work like this for two reasons. First, I submit each chapter as a short story to magazines and literary journals when I finish it, so the novel will gain publication credits, the kind of acknowledgements publishers and agents love to see. Second, polishing each chapter gives me the time to submerge myself in the characters and to intuit how the story should progress into the next chapter. Best of all, when I finish the last chapter I have a polished novel manuscript. Then it’s just a matter of going back and adding details to earlier chapters, important data that emerged during the process of writing the novel. Finally, I conduct one last punctuation and grammar check, and that’s it. I’ve written another novel ready to be published by one of my publishers.
If you follow this formula, relax, and allow the story to develop organically, you’ll end up with a polished first novel manuscript sitting on your computer desk before you know it. And you’ll enjoy every step of the process!
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/writing-articles/how-to-write-your-first-novel-108303.html
About the Author
Laura Stamps is an award-winning poet and novelist, as well as a Wiccan and feral cat rescuer. The recipient of a Pulitzer Prize nomination and seven Pushcart Award nominations, she is the author of a popular series of Occult Novels for Women found at http://www.kittyfeatherpress.blogspot.com.
Tagged with: first • novel • occult • women • write
Filed under: Uncategorized
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Double spacing and good margins (2 inches) left and right.
Use a common font that is easy to read, in size 12. Make sure your work is justified (layout wise, so it fills the entire line) and double spaced.
Those are the general rules of manuscripts, but it depends on the publisher that you intend to send it to. Some like thick margins down the left too, but some don’t. I’d go onto the website of some publishers you wish to send it too, on there they often specify how they expect it to be formatted.
Indented paragraphs.
12 point courier font.
1 inch margins.
You can contact the publisher directly to ask for their submission guidelines. I recommend this, as there are always variations from publisher to publisher, based on what their editors’ preferences are.
Always follow the submission guidelines of whatever agent, magazine, or publisher you’re submitting to, including not sending a manuscript unless it’s requested (which you get them to do by sending a query letter). When the guidelines are not specific about format details, stick with:
Courier 12
One-inch margins on all four sides, producing 25 lines per page
Double spacing
Indent paragraphs 1/2 inch using the tab, not spaces
No extra blank lines between paragraphs
Ragged right margin (not justified)
Turn off hyphenation
Turn off widow and orphan protection
Slugline, upper right corner: Surname/ONEWORDTITLE/# (example: Dickens/CITIES/75)
Start chapters 1/3 of the way down the page
There are a number of good websites which explain it in detail, especially the first page of a story or novel, which has its own required information and layout. Here’s one for short stories http://www.shunn.net/format/story.html and one for longer works http://www.writerswrite.com/journal/dec98/shunn.htm .
The margin is the white space around the page. The indent is where a new paragraph starts.
If you’re using Word, you want to go to File, Page Setup, and that will give you the place to set your margins.
Courier New is the font for Standard Manuscript Format, yes. You don’t need a cover.
All that being said, when I’m writing, I don’t use Standard Manuscript Format because it annoys the snot out of me and is distracting. Only after I’m done (and that means “done with all the edits too”) do I go back in and format it properly for submission. It just takes a couple of mouse-clicks to do that, after all.
How to properly format a novel manuscript?
A lot of questions have been asked about double spacing etc., but could some one paint the whole picture and tell me all the specifications for a UK novel manuscript format? Thanks
What is the general format for a novel manuscript?
What is the generally accepted format for a novel manuscript for UK publishers? I ask this because I have heard so many conflicting opinions. For instance, some say you must convert your manscript into PDF format before submitting to a publisher; others say keep it in Word format and indent paragraphs (DON’T separate them by a line space). I need to know all this so that I can get my manuscript right before submitting to a publisher.
How do I properly format a novel manuscript? Could I find a manuscript template online?
I have an idea for a novel and I want to write it in proper manuscript format. However, I’m not sure how to adjust my word processor to do this. I was wondering if there is a downloadable manuscript template online? I only found one, and it wasn’t very good.
How to format a manuscript novel?
Ok I am gonna start writing my novel but obviously while I’m writing I need to know everything about formatting it. What the hell is a margin and an indent. How do I adjust it. I think I’m supposed to use Courier New as my font, right? Oh and how do I write the cover of it? Just tell me everything. Don’t leave anything out. I looked online but it was hard to understand them. Maybe you could dumb it down just a little?
Novel Manuscript Format?
Please, I am going crazy over how to format my manuscript. Give me step by step on how to format my novel in Microsoft Word please!