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Write Now with Scrivener, Episode no. 41: Natasha Bell, Thriller Author and Creative Writing Teacher | Literature and Latte
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Write Now with Scrivener, Episode no. 41: Natasha Bell, Thriller Author and Creative Writing Teacher

Natasha Bell writes psychological thrillers and teaches creative writing.

Show notes:

Learn more about Scrivener, and check out the ebook Take Control of Scrivener.

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Natasha Bell has written two novels, and is a creative writing teacher with a PhD in Autofiction. It took her eight years to finish her first novel, after having started writing it then putting it aside. When she started a Master’s course in Creative and Life Writing, “it was still kind of bugging me. So I ended up working on that a little bit. I submitted the first book for the anthology that we sent out to agents and editors. I got quite a bit of response from agents, and that kicked me back into gear. I signed with an agent and got an editor for that.”

This shows how starting a piece of fiction, then setting it aside for a while, can help grow that story. “If you put a novel aside and you’re never thinking about it again, then it probably needs to stay there. But if those characters are really bugging you, tapping you on your shoulder, then you need to return to them.”

Natasha works teaching creative writing, and I pointed out that there is a trope that creative writing cannot be taught, though that has changed in recent decades. Natasha said, “my attitude as a tutor is that we’re all in this together; writing is a set of problems to be solved. You’re always faced with problems, however experienced you are, you’re still having to figure out these things and do a lot of creative problem-solving.”

Nevertheless, there is no recipe to teaching creative writing. So many elements in writing are interrelated, and it’s hard to grasp them all. Natasha said, “There’s good advice when it comes to teaching writing, but you sometimes need to hear those at specific moments. Someone can tell you until they’re blue in the face that you should try and show not tell, which obviously, we can critique that as a piece of advice anyway. But until you’re faced with a particular kind of challenge within your own narrative, applying that to fixes, you’re not going to really learn that on a deep level. We can read dozens of books telling us exactly how to structure our novels or how to kind of polish our sentences, but you can’t take it all in at once. You can only take one thing at a time when it reaches you at the right moment.”

Natasha has long used Scrivener, and said, “What I find Scrivener amazing for is the earliest stages, starting to write, vomiting out all of your ideas, collating the research, moving things around, changing point of view. Because you can have everything in one place, it’s such a good place to experiment with and to move structure around.”

Natasha also said, “The Corkboard is amazing, because that’s what I do on my floor anyway with note cards, so it’s nice to be able to visualize it like that. Being able to label chapters, use the icons, move them into folders, move them around. The different functionality of comments, being able to change the colors or label them as different types. But then also being able to turn all of that off and then just look in Composition Mode. So being able to react to where you are in the writing process and what you need on a particular day is really useful.”

Natasha does a lot of revision, and Scrivener helps with that. “There’s something for me about the labor of moving things, compiling things, rewriting even for both my published novels at quite a late stage. I have rewritten them word for word, because it’s part of the editing process. I quite like the analog versions of moving things back and forth.”

I asked if she meant that she retyped the entire manuscript, and she said, “Yeah, it really forces you to think, ‘okay, does this word need to be here?’ You’re asking a reader to read every single word you’ve written. Once you get to kind of that almost final draft, you’re so numb to everything, you’re not even reading your whole sentences because you know them so well. So I think forcing yourself to engage with your work again on the sentence level and think about, ‘what am I asking the reader to spend their time engaging with? And is it? Is it worth it? Is this sentence really earning its weight?’”

Finally, I asked how Natasha separated her writing time from her teaching time. “With difficulty. But the pleasure of teaching is that I get to spend my days talking to people about writing, and craft, and narrative. So all of that feeds into my own writing.”

Kirk McElhearn is a writer, podcaster, and photographer. He is the author of Take Control of Scrivener, and host of the podcast Write Now with Scrivener.

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