novel revision

Novel Diagnosis–Introduction

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Novel Diagnosis Series

Introduction
Characters
Dialogue
Scenes
Voice
VoiceRevisited
Plot

More on Writing a Novel

More on Writing a Novel

When a writer sets out to revise, perhaps the hardest thing they face is knowing what to revise. This is often because they are Unconsciously Incompetent in one or more areas.

Does that sound insulting? I don’t mean it that way. One way of describing the learning process is in terms of competencies.

Stages of Learning
Unconscious Incompetence
Conscious Incompetence
Conscious Competence
Unconscious Competence

First is the level of unconscious incompetence (you don’t know and you don’t know that you don’t know). A step up is learning that you are incompetent in an area (you don’t know, but you know that you don’t’ know). When you move to a level of competence, it is usually because you’ve been consciously working on the skills and knowledge needed for competence (You know and you know that you know). The final step is unconscious competence (you know, but you don’t know that you know), in which skills and knowledge are internalized and almost automatic.

Often, the most important thing you can learn is that you are incompetent in an area. That means you have moved up one level from not knowing to knowing that you need to work on something. That’s real progress.

Self-Diagnosis: How to Know What to Revise

For the next ten days or so, I’m going to be posting about doing a self-diagnosis of your writing skills, your strengths and weaknesses. Yes, a particular manuscript will need revision, but in a larger sense, writers need to tackle their weak areas and make progress toward general competence. My intent is help you identify areas that need work; I would expect you to seek out resources for any areas that you identify as weak, so that your novel revision will be effective.

You’ll be asked to rate yourself on the scale of competence. I hope that some of you will see that you are unconsciously competent in many areas! But you might also learn that you are unconsciously incompetent in some areas. That would be valuable knowledge, because then you can study and practice and improve. You can’t fix what you don’t know needs fixing!

Competence is a hard-won prize that only comes with lots of study and practice.

Tomorrow: Characters

Related posts:

  1. Novel Diagnosis–Voice
  2. Novel diagnosis–dialogue
  3. Novel Diagnosis–Plot
  4. Novel Diagnosis–Characters
  5. Novel diagnosis–scenes


Revise with confidence.

Discussion

9 comments for “Novel Diagnosis–Introduction”

  1. [...] Character, tips to help you as you write a novel or revise a novel. Also, see the companion series, Novel Diagnosis and 30 Days to a Stronger Novel. Stumble It! Leave a comment Comment RSS Previous: [...]

    Posted by How to Create Whacky, Interesting Characters That Stick With a Reader | January 12, 2009, 8:50 am
  2. [...] Novel Diagnosis [...]

    Posted by Villains Don't Always Wear Black | March 21, 2009, 9:37 pm
  3. [...] Start here with ideas on how to strengthen your characters. Then read the companion series, Novel Diagnosis and 30 Days to a Stronger [...]

    Posted by 30 Days to Stronger Characters | March 24, 2009, 8:08 pm
  4. [...] Character, tips to help you as you write a novel or revise a novel. Also, see the companion series, Novel Diagnosis and 30 Days to a Stronger [...]

    Posted by Unusual Character Roles and Jobs | November 27, 2009, 10:51 am
  5. [...] Character, tips to help you as you write a novel or revise a novel. Also, see the companion series, Novel Diagnosis and 30 Days to a Stronger [...]

    Posted by 5 Questions about First Person POV | November 28, 2009, 9:27 am
  6. [...] Thanks, But This Isn’t For Us: A (Sort of) Compassionate Guide to Why Your Writing is Being Rejected takes you through the usual discussions on plot, character, etc. but with one big difference. After laying out the basics, each chapter includes a discussion of deal-breakers, or how you can go wrong on each element of fiction. This is invaluable! You can finally start to diagnosis the problems of your novel. [...]

    Posted by Not For Us | December 8, 2009, 5:15 am
  7. [...] Novel Diagnosis [...]

    Posted by Who are the Worst Villains? | February 4, 2010, 11:00 am
  8. [...] Novel Diagnosis [...]

    Posted by How to Make Villains More Memorable | February 4, 2010, 11:05 am
  9. [...] Introduction Characters Dialogue Scenes Voice VoiceRevisited Plot [...]

    Posted by Novel diagnosis–dialogue | February 16, 2010, 2:58 pm

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