So 6 months or so back I invested in the Scrivener writing program for Mac. I was seduced playing with the demo by the deep level of functionality, customization, the ability to easily save and restore prior incarnations of your work, the corkboard/index card/storyboarding function and the thought of finally being able to get myself organized without billions of papers, index cards and assorted stuff all over my room and walls. Scrivener is supposed to be excellent for screenwriting too, though that's not my particular forte.
Anyway, I bought it. As I started the tutorial I realized it had a steeper learning curve than I thought to become fairly fluent. I got lazy to learn it (I don't wanna do no stinking tutorial!) and went back to using another program I had as a Beta tester, Jer's Novel Writer (excellent program that I still find conducive for my creative writing and has the best EULA I've ever read.) I would poke at my Scrivener program every now and again, but really I just wasn't ready to dig into the tutorial (I generally learn by doing but in certain areas I do better when I read the instructions. I'm learning.)
Recently, I was introduced to two other powerful writing programs that have virtues definitely worth sharing with others. Storyist (for Macs) which I think is amazing, very user friendly and pleasing aesthetic may quite possibly be the ideal tool for screenwriters and comic/graphic novel writers. It also handles novel writing quite well. Storyist is still fairly new and evolving and I'm excited to see what further updates and changes bring to it's strong functionality. I also checked out WriteItNow (for Windows AND Macs) which frankly has some features that blow my socks off. When I have more money to spend idly I may end up buying that one if for nothing else it's graphical and charting functions which keep track of your character's inter-relationships for you. The add-ons they offer are outstanding too. Though I tend to create my own, the one for character naming and creation can provide ENFP type and a description of traits for that personality. If you plunk in your character's age, it will tell you the major world events that happened during their lifetime up to their current year for various time periods. And there's way more than this - it is very sexy. Both of these programs are really very awesome tools.
But how could I advocate wishlisting either of them when Scrivener just stared at me accusingly on my App bar? Called me a flake when it thought I wasn't listening. Well. I'm not going to stand for that.
So yesterday, instead of working on my new semester of college homework, I dug deep into Scrivener and fell in love with it. By the time I went to bed my current WIP was plugged in and for the first time I've got an outline that I can work with and I'm excited about. I know where I'm going and how it ends, but I don't have to be locked into it. I can be whimsy and Scrivener will adapt with me. I'm very hyped about it.
All of these excellent writing programs in my experience are well worth checking the demos to see what suits your style, if you don't already have something that works for you. I'm just happy that I found one that is working for me. I even discovered Scrivener has some features that I didn't think it offered (printing and visual flow of manuscript related functions as well as full screen functionality). It just makes me very happy to have less steps to do things that ought to be uncomplicated. Now I'm editing (I know, I know I shouldn't yet! I'm stopping once I'm caught up) and I'm writing making appreciable progress in both areas. The index card function gives me the flexibility I desire to create a visual outline (that I can print into a paper one) yet still update it on the fly. It's great.
Do you already use this? Does it work for you? Does it suck? Know something better? Lemme know either way! If it works for me, it might work for you. And if it doesn't work, well no harm done (hopefully).
2 comments:
I've been using Writers' Cafe (http://www.writerscafe.co.uk), mainly because it's the only program I've found that works on Linux as well as Windows and Mac. But even then I don't use it very often. I've taken to just using the various programs in my OpenOffice.org suite. :P I've always wanted to use Jer's, but it just doesn't work on my OS. Sigh.
I hadn't seen Writer's Cafe before but it is really cool. That and Write ItNow seem to have some comparable features as it also shares a few with Scrivener too.
I find I write more in full screen mode and the flexibility of it in Scrivener is pretty cool. I was using word and Jer before Scrivener. I intend to use Scrivener a lot more often.
Post a Comment