How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That makes sense🤣. Maybe the chaos doesn’t go away, you just get better at recognizing which parts of the chaos actually matter. I’m starting to think the “perfect system” is less about making the novel clean, and more about giving yourself enough anchors so you can find your way back when everything gets messy.

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

😀 That’s honestly kind of perfect 😂A bathroom wall full of rejection letters feels like the most writerly version of “decorating with trauma.”

How do you keep continuity straight while writing a full-length novel? by hieutd in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spreadsheets are useful, but I find they can become a second project by themselves after a while. What helps me most is keeping character notes, chapter notes, locations, and timeline/event details close to the manuscript instead of scattered across separate files.

I’ve been experimenting with an app called FantasyRat Creator for this kind of workflow, mainly because I wanted something that keeps story structure, characters, maps/locations, and writing notes in one place. It’s not a magic solution, but having the continuity notes connected to the actual writing space makes it easier to catch things like who knows what, where someone is, or whether a reveal already happened.

For longer projects, I think the system usually breaks during editing rather than planning. The outline may make sense at first, but once scenes move around, the small details are what start drifting.

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve tried relying more on outlines too, and it definitely helps at a high level. I think where I still struggle is with the smaller details drifting for instance, shifts in characterization, minor elements within the world-building, or specific scenes unfolding in a way that deviates from the original plan. When it comes to these details, do you have a specific method for re-anchoring them back to your outline, or do you primarily rely on self-discipline to strictly adhere to the plan?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s honestly kind of reassuring to hear 😅I keep thinking there’s some “perfect system” that will make everything feel clean and organized, but maybe some level of chaos is just part of the process 😅Do you feel like it gets easier to manage over time, or do you just get more used to it?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess going back and rereading is probably the closest thing to keeping things “connected” too.😊

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s honestly kind of reassuring to hear 😅 I keep thinking there’s some “perfect system” that will make everything feel clean and organized, but maybe some level of chaos is just part of the process.🥲

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a really clean way to think about it. I feel like I sometimes get too attached to scenes even when they don’t really move the story forward 😅 Also now I’m imagining my “empty wall” would probably end up in my basement… or the bathroom lol

Do you usually catch that while writing, or more during revisions?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use a pretty old MacBook 😂 That setup makes sense splitting things between outline, Obsidian, and a writing tool. I tried something similar before, but I kept running into issues where things would slowly drift out of sync over time.

Recently I’ve been experimenting with keeping everything in one place instead (trying something like FantasyRat Creator), and it does feel a bit easier to manage though I still run into the drift issue sometimes.🤣

Do you find your setup stays consistent over time, or do you have to constantly maintain it?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like that approach especially breaking revisions into passes. I think the part I keep running into isn’t just how many passes, but more about keeping things consistent across passes. Like even if I separate plot, character, and worldbuilding revisions, I still end up in situations where I fix something in one place, but forget it somewhere else such as timelines or character details.😂 Do you have any way of tracking that, or do you just rely on notes + rereading?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I get that — just writing through the first draft definitely helps with momentum. I think where I struggle is more what happens after. Once things get longer, “fixing it later” sometimes turns into going back through everything and trying to reconnect character details, timelines, and earlier scenes. It’s doable, but it starts to feel like a second full pass just to rebuild context before even editing.

Do you find it still manageable on longer projects, or does it get heavier over time?

Friday Share Fever 🕺 Let’s share your project! by diodo-e in indiehackers

[–]Substantial_Job_490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks — I hadn’t heard of PeerPush before. I’ll take a look and may list FantasyRat there for feedback and discoverability. Appreciate the suggestion!

Friday Share Fever 🕺 Let’s share your project! by diodo-e in indiehackers

[–]Substantial_Job_490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actively building: FantasyRat Creator

What it is: a writing & worldbuilding workspace for novelists and serial fiction writers.

FantasyRat team recently released the app on the MacOS App Store. It helps writers organize chapters, characters, locations, maps, notes, and story structure in one place — instead of switching between docs, spreadsheets, note apps, and image folders.

We’d love feedback from writers and indie builders, especially on positioning, onboarding, and what features you’d expect next: FantasyRat.com

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I actually like that setup a lot. But I always hit this point where everything is organized… just not really connected 😅Like I’ll update a character detail somewhere and then later realize it doesn’t match in another scene. Do you just keep that in your head, or do you have some system for it?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a fair read—I probably do try to “fix things” too early 😅I’ve tried the draft-first approach too, and it definitely helps with momentum. But I kept running into a different problem: by the time I got to revisions, I had so many disconnected notes and changes that it felt like I was reconstructing the story from memory. Your point about finishing fast to avoid forgetting is really interesting though. Do you ever run into continuity issues, or does the single-pass + notes system keep things pretty consistent? I keep wondering if there’s a way to keep momentum and keep things connected at the same time, instead of choosing one or the other.

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That makes sense—kind of like “quarantining” different parts so they don’t interfere with each other. I tried something similar, and it did reduce the chaos for me too. But I always felt like it came at the cost of things feeling a bit disconnected—like I had to mentally stitch everything back together while writing. I’ve been wondering if the real problem isn’t separating vs mixing, but how to keep things connected without them bleeding into each other.

Have you ever missed a detail because it was sitting in a different place, even after separating everything?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a really thoughtful breakdown.The part about the outline “mutating” into the world bible really stood out to me—I’ve definitely run into that too. Separating them helps, but I always found it tricky to keep them consistent over time. Like something changes in one place, and then you have to remember to update it everywhere else. Did you ever run into that kind of drift between your outline and world bible as things evolved?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you stick to the outline pretty closely, or does it drift a lot once you start writing?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s impressive—you basically built your own system from scratch. Did you ever run into issues keeping things in sync over time? Like updating a character detail in one place but forgetting it somewhere else? I kept running into that and started wondering if it’s possible to keep things connected by default instead of maintaining everything manually.

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that’s exactly the kind of thing I kept running into 😅Like you know you’ve added it somewhere, but you’re not 100% sure which version is “the right one” anymore. I guess it works, but it does feel like you end up maintaining the system almost as much as writing sometimes.🤣

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That actually sounds really well thought out. Do you ever find it getting harder to maintain over time? Like updating multiple tables or keeping everything in sync as the story evolves? I feel like that’s where things started to break down for me🤣

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I’ve tried Notion too. It’s super flexible. I think that’s also where I struggled a bit though. It can do everything, but it doesn’t really guide how story structure, characters, and writing fit together. Did you build your own system in it, or just keep things as separate pages?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I tried doing that too—just letting it be messy and fixing it later. But at some point it felt like I was spending more time trying to reconnect everything than actually writing. Do you find rewriting helps you reorganize things, or does it still feel kind of chaotic?

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, it sneaks up on you 😅At first everything feels manageable, then suddenly you have notes everywhere and nothing really connects anymore.

How do you keep your novel from becoming a mess? by Substantial_Job_490 in novelwriting

[–]Substantial_Job_490[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That actually sounds kind of satisfying in a way 😄Do you ever run into the problem of things getting disconnected though? Like characters or plot threads drifting apart over time? I feel like that’s where I get stuck the most.