: Re: Storyboard a Novel? Sometimes I'm a contrarian and like to think things through backward. What about thinking first of a movie and then writing a novel about it? Would it make sense to storyboard
I don't know about first writing, and then adapting a script or a storyboard, but I've seen some novelisations of movies - person A creates a successful movie; person B writes a book that 'legally plagiarizes' the movie plot (with proper license to do so).
Example: book Platoon by Dale A. Dye, based on movie Platoon by Oliver Stone.
More posts by @Deb2945533
: Seems like step 2 of the 3-step method of coming up with the title. First step: you compress the story into a half-page summary, that catches the essentials, piques interests, and so on.
: In my case the answer is: you write it all the time. You write it down in the little breaks but you create in between. I tend to write while on the bus, or at work in between tasks.
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