Learning from That Writer I Knew

Birthmarked, First Draft, 2.13.2008
I went back to my very first draft of Birthmarked this morning to see how it opened, and I was surprised by how decisive and certain it sounded, especially since I know I was making it up at the time. The draft was in single-space, which also surprised me because I write in double-space now, and this drew my eye to the size of the paragraphs, which were short, and the white space that flowed around them. The prose already had a distinctive cadence that would remain through later revisions. Altogether, I thought it was a pretty good opening, and I really wished I knew how I had pulled it off.
Then I scanned to the opening of my current novel, fearful that this one would be a total dud by comparison. I shifted it into single-space so I could read it at a normal pace, and bam. It works. This one is a novel, too. It’s different from Birthmarked. The voice and the setting and the problems are different, but as a reader, I believe this book will take me somewhere I want to go. As a writer, I’m reassured, even hopeful.
It’s tricky being a reader of your own work. I’m intensely critical of my writing, and I sometimes fear I’m making mistakes by throwing out perfectly useful chunks of scenes that might have been salvaged with the right tweaks. I do, rarely, put bits of deleted scenes back in, sometimes in new places, so I know to keep the cuts in an extra file. But I also feel a certain click inside when I read a section that’s good. I trust it. I want to put my hand in that storyteller’s grasp and go with her. I forget that the book is mine.
I’m not the same writer I was five years ago when I wrote Birthmarked, but I can still learn from what I did then. From a practical standpoint, I’ve already made a paragraph shift in my first page to adjust the visual pace. More fundamentally, I can remember to trust myself. I wrote that book and two more in the series. I ought to be able to do it again.
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