Episode 8: The Drift Zone Problem: When Manuscripts Lose Their Way
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About this listen
Chapter Forty Seven.
That is where I was when I realised something had gone terribly wrong.
The manuscript was seventy three thousand words. I had been writing steadily for months. The scenes were coming. The prose felt good. Anna was doing things, going places, having conversations.
But I could not tell you what the novel was about anymore.
The drift zone is what happens when the act of writing overtakes the act of building. You are generating pages, hitting word counts, moving through scenes, but you have lost contact with the underlying structure. The skeleton is still there, somewhere, but you cannot feel it anymore.
In this episode, I show you how to recognise drift, why it happens, and how to find your way back.
We cover:→ The five symptoms of drift: unclear scene purpose, subplot addiction, circular writing, forgotten architecture, dreading sessions→ The four causes: vague skeletons, tangent love affairs, bloated Act Twos, scene avoidance→ The five step recovery process: stop, return, mark, triage, bridge→ Prevention strategies for future projects→ How to interpret drift as information about what your novel needs
I share the real diagnostic I ran at Chapter Forty Seven, when twenty thousand words of drift material had to be triaged. And I show you how cutting that material led to a manuscript that finally knew what it was.
Drift is not failure. It is a phase. The path is still there. You can find it again.
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Resources:
- Custom GPT and Companion Workbook: rondanini.com/architect-method
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Questions? Reach out at rondanini.com