Linda Nagata: the blog at Hahví.net


The Coin

September 20th, 2011

In a comment to a recent blog post, J. Daniel Sawyer suggested flipping a coin to make plot decisions and thus keep things moving. Today I’ve been attempting to firm up a short story idea, coming up with a list of characters and deciding on the specific setting. At first I was having a hard time making decisions–should the story be in setting A or setting B? should the antagonist be male or female? etc., etc. At this point in story development, when everything’s still wide open, it’s hard for me to make firm decisions on which way to go, because each decision narrows future possibilities, and if it’s the “wrong” decision, I’m writing myself into a hole.

So to keep things moving I fetched a coin from my purse. It’s sitting on the table next to my laptop, but I haven’t used it yet. Evidently my muse doesn’t like the idea of deciding things on a coin flip, because ever since that coin showed up, I’ve been able to make decisions that eluded me before.

But the coin continues to sit there, just in case. Writing is so often a series of head games.

Posted on: Tuesday, September 20th, 2011 at 6:30 pm
Categories: Writing.
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3 Responses to “The Coin”

  1. Ted Lemon Says:

    Andrea swears by the technique of flipping a coin when you can’t decide, and then when you see the result of the coin toss, if you’re disappointed, you know what the right decision is, and if you’re relieved, you also know. I don’t know if this would work for plotting, but she’s found it effective in daily life.

    Well, not daily… 🙂

  2. Glen Says:

    The Coin!!! Reading this BLOG title took me off on an entirely different tangent; I’m sure that I’m not even on the same planet.

    I’m going to suggest three quite short stories from Jose Luis Borges; the first of course sprang into my mind from “The Coin”, but the other two are so intertwined. And the last should probably be read last:

    The Zahir — http://southerncrossreview.org/66/borges-zahir.htm (the least story-like of the bunch, keep reading)
    Funes the Memorious — http://evans-experientialism.freewebspace.com/borges.htm
    The Temptation of Saint Anthony: The Zehir — http://www.sccs.swarthmore.edu/users/00/pwillen1/lit/zahir.htm

    If you’ve never been down this particular rabbit-hole, then I wish you all the enjoyment. If you have…, then you already know.

  3. Linda Says:

    Nope, never been there! Thanks for the links.