The old chicken-and-egg debate has a writerly version. Should you start from plot, or from character?
My usual answer would be that it doesn't matter as long as you start. Don’t delay. Don’t
think, mull, or pray. Do it.
At least that’s what I tell reluctant self when, once
again, reluctant self professes that it doesn’t know where to start.
I've read variations of this discussion on writers’
blogs, How-to books, and in interviews with great writers. I was aware that
most literary writing is firmly anchored in character, and in some cases barely
has a plot. I noted that many bestsellers (“commercial fiction”) are impressively
plotted while the characters seem more stock. Not everyone can write like
Dickens and excel in both. (And speaking of Dickens, I don't think there was a consistently
better writer of first paragraphs, but I digress.)
But when I reflected on my own process, I realized
that with a few exceptions, most of my stories began stewing with neither. They
began with theme.
I didn't know what*
happened, and I didn't know who** was
there. What I knew was that I wanted to find a way to think about something***, and that the way was
through conjuring a story.
*=Plot
**=Character
***=Theme
Oh, dear. I just complicated the chicken-and-egg
thing. I added the nutritional information bar. Maybe this is a good place to
stop mulling about, and start.