Brainstorm ideas for the rest of the chapter into a draft outline
Part two on writing a nonfiction chapter:
Now that you’ve done some free writing and brainstorming, it’s time to organize and brainstorm a bit more within a rough chapter structure. Think about the progression of ideas, how you will connect them, and how you want to wrap up the chapter.
Is there something you can lead off with and then reference at the end of the chapter? Are there controlling themes or metaphors that you can place throughout the chapter? Where will you need additional research and facts?
This is the time to identify the holes in your chapter while also providing an overarching structure. I generally write out the section headings separately so I have a bird’s eye view of the chapter without having to read through it. You can expand on this outline draft as you continue writing.
Posts in this series:
- Start writing what you know.
- Brainstorm ideas for the rest of the chapter into a draft outline.
- Continue writing based on this outline
- Integrate quotes and research into the chapter
- Read through the chapter to sharpen the outline and fill in gaps.
- Revise your chapter draft.
My Other Web Sites
Ed’s E-Newsletter
Special Offers
-
Recent Posts
Essential Writing Posts
Categories
- Blog (17)
- Books (19)
- Humor (11)
- Marketing (24)
- Publishing (56)
- Web (19)
- Writing (General) (169)
From Twitter…
- RT @JamieTheVWM: received an email with "A letter to the Very Worst Missionary...from the Very Best" in the subject line. http://j.mp/caVwsr 15 hours ago
- Follow these brilliant folks or the rabbits don't get dinner: @CarolHoward @emergingmummy @elizabethesther @alexmarestaing @JamieTheVWM. 15 hours ago
- Walls are painted. Shelves are up. 3 boxes of books remain. Hmph. 15 hours ago
- When God shakes us so that we can stand on the unshakable: http://bit.ly/9yHRsM. 18 hours ago
- Sheesh Connecticut. You can't even get a good hurricane! ;) 21 hours ago




Place your comment