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Fiction Writing Made Easy - #124: Student Spotlight: 5 Lessons Learned from Notes to Novel (Season 3)

#124: Student Spotlight: 5 Lessons Learned from Notes to Novel (Season 3)

Fiction Writing Made Easy

01/09/24 • 29 min

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“That's how much my writing's improved. But not just the writing, it's the ease. It's not a struggle when I sit down in front of the laptop to write. Everything just seems a lot easier.” - Morgan Schrock
In today's episode, I reached out to some of my Notes to Novels Season 3 students and asked them to share the number one thing they learned about writing a first draft. You're going to get to hear from real writers who are in the trenches, actively working on their novels and I think it'll be very fun for you to hear how they did it plus some of their biggest takeaways.
Read the blog post here!Here’s a preview of what’s included:
[01:26] Lindsay Sfara shares her experience where she initially faced challenges with an insufficiently detailed outline, leading to a lack of direction in her superhero fantasy novel.
She highlights her struggles and the transformative impact of the Notes to Novel course.
[07:56] Liya Gray has been working on a YA series since 2015, facing challenges and halting progress. She credits Savannah’s course for unlocking a new understanding of her story's structure, and realizing the difference between scenes and chapters.
[12:43] Ami Blackford talks about her insights into the Notes to Novel course and its impact on her writing journey. Amy, initially felt there were missing pieces in her eighth novel's outline but she highlights four significant takeaways from the course regarding theme, content genre vs. commercial genre, structured scenes, and fast first draft and magical edits.
[18:46] Tanja Fabsits shares her experience with her first novel, and a significant realization during the course was related to scene structure, but her favorite takeaway was the overall feeling of relaxing into the outlining process.
[20:56] Morgan Schrock, with a background in scientific writing for journals, decided to write a fiction novel. Her most significant realization was that the middle of her story felt boring, and she identified the problem as a lack of agency for her main character. The course's outlining technique proved to be a game-changer for her.
Links mentioned in this episode:

👉 Click here to get access to the FREE limited-episode podcast series "Write Your Book In 2025." Learn the 3 things you need to write your book in 2025, how to silence your inner critic so you can write confidently, practical strategies for finding time to write (even when life's busy), and my clear roadmap from idea to finished draft.

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👉 Looking for a transcript? If you’re listening on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, scroll down below the episode player until you see the transcript.

01/09/24 • 29 min

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Fiction Writing Made Easy - #124: Student Spotlight: 5 Lessons Learned from Notes to Novel (Season 3)

Transcript

Speaker 1

The plan is a plan and you should be going back to it and constantly kind of revising it and reassessing it and fixing it . And that was also mind-blowing to me because it meant that I could erase the deadlines like they were a line in the sand that I couldn't move .

Speaker 2

Welcome to the Fiction Writing Made Easy podcast . My name is Sa

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