Feature Friday: Save the Cat! Writes a Novel by Jessica Brody

Welcome to the second Feature Friday – the last Friday of the month, when I chat about books on the craft of writing. This month I am working through the chapters of Save the Cat! Writes a Novel by Jessica Brody. I have many other books on the craft that I’m excited to share with you, but I thought it would interesting to put this book to use in real-time; therefore, this probably won’t be the last time I talk about it on Feature Friday.

If you aren’t familiar with Blake Snyder and the beat sheet, let me briefly explain. Blake set out to help screenwriters learn how to write their screenplays using a fifteen (15) beat structure. These beats are basically plot points. Blake claims that every great Hollywood movie ever made was structured around these same fifteen beats. The goal of the beat sheet is to help writers produce tighter and more engaging stories for the screen. Fast-forward to Jessica Brody. Jessica was a struggling novelist who was failing at selling her book. A friend gave her the book, Save the Cat!, and she started applying the beat methodology to many novels, including the great classics. It proved successful! Since then, Jessica set out to help novelists use the screenwriting beat methodology for their stories because it helped her writing career tremendously, like 15+ novels sold to major publishing houses. Impressed? I know I am.

I am in awe about the book and I am only 1/4 way into the Act 1. Each chapter is packed with practical knowledge, exercises, and check list to “Check Yourself!” It’s a slower process than other writing craft books, but I am seeing why character wasn’t where I need her to be to make it through an entire novel. Figuring out your character’s arc up front is important. It’s allowing you to see if (s)he can withstand all that will be thrown at them as the trials become a true test.

I haven’t gotten to the catalyst or the inciting incident yet. I know what I want it to be, but I will have to see if it can stand the test of the beat methodology or not. Jessica does mention how these beat sheets, aka novel roadmaps, can be sparse or detailed. I personally, am aiming for detailed, hence why I am really digging deep into the exercises. I tried the James Patterson method of creating a 6-8 sentence chapter by chapter outline to keep you writing fast, but sparse outlines don’t work for me. So I’m holding out hope for this new method.

If you are leery of purchasing craft books to help you along the way, I get it. I was able to check this book out at my public library which gave me a month-long preview to really start working through the exercises. Since I loved it, I bought it. I do this with a lot of books so I don’t have buyers remorse 😉 There are a ton of free resources on the Save the Cat! website. Once school is out for the summer, I will be treating myself to one of the many workshops they offer and who knows, maybe I’ll start incorporating the beat methodology in my classroom next year.

If you have tried the Save the Cat! Writes a Novel, please let me know your thoughts. I strongly believe that writing is a journey meant to be shared. What works for one will not always work for another, but it can help others who maybe struggling with their writing. All I know is that writing doesn’t have to be done alone. Let’s share and learn from each other.

If you need a writing companion to help keep you on track, I highly recommend, Writers on Task. A journal to help you stay focused and keep you moving closer to those writing goals..

For the Love of books

It’s February, and we’re talking all things love. And what’s not to love about books? Even the bad ones! Yes, even the bad ones hold a special place in my memory. So when does our love for books start? Some may say it begins with childhood memories of sitting on a lap looking at picture books. Others say it happens the moment you see yourself in a character. My love of books was always there, but the love of reading didn’t happen until much later in life. 

Some of my earliest memories of books and reading were with my grandmother. She was a voracious reader. I remember the days when she would take me to our small-town public library. She stayed in the adult section on the main level while I ran downstairs to the children section. But I didn’t appreciate the library or the books until I checked out my first Judy Blume book (on the main level). I remember reading those Judy Blume books in my grandmother’s “den” or what we now call a TV room. The sun would light up her brown and gold striped couch while I was curled up and tangled in the world of puberty with Margaret Simon, or the bully, Jill Brenner, or Fudge Hatcher, the annoying little brother. Though I loved these books and so many more, I struggled with reading.

I was and still am a slow reader. I struggled in school with reading, writing, math, and science. I was not a great student. But, despite my grandmother’s efforts at having a private library containing the entire series of Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys, and volumes of Nat Geo magazines to encourage us to read, my love for books didn’t happen until college. There, I found myself getting lost in the stacks at WVU’s Wise Library (cue image of Belle in the Beast’s library). Meanwhile, my grandmother was still going to the library as often as she could; however, she was also losing her eyesight to macular degeneration.

As reading became a part of daily life for me, it became a struggle for my grandmother. It was heartbreaking knowing she would never again see words on the page. My grandmother is gone, but when I look at my mom and my aunts, I realize they too are voracious readers, like their mother. It’s a beautiful cycle in our family. Though my son struggles with reading for pleasure, I still hold out hope that he will come to love it one day as I did. I need to remain patient, make sure books are available to him at all times, and model like my grandmother did – have a book within reach all over the house.

As a teacher, I explain to reluctant readers that it’s a love for getting lost in the richness of words and being emotionally invested in characters. There are times when a book disappoints us, yet it stills holds a place in our memory. Characters break our hearts. At times we laugh out loud or are wrought with fear. We become detectives. We become the young woman in a war-torn world searching for a lost child or her lover. We can be heroes. And that’s just with fiction! There is so much to love about books, and I’m sure you are here reading this because you love books.

If you want to be a writer, you must first be a reader. There is no way around it. As I continue on this journey of writing, I am still absorbing books every week. And as I create characters and worlds, I can only hope a young reader will find their love for books in my words.

So I want to know, when did you genuinely fall in love with books?
Was it the first time you saw yourself in a book? Was it the first time a book made you cry? Was it a book that you stayed up late to read? Was it a book that left your heart and mind so occupied it felt like a hangover?

I’d love to hear where you are on your writing journey. If there is a way for me to support you, please let me know!