WEBVTT 00:00:03.559 --> 00:00:09.200 No, there is nothing wrong with your mobile  device or your computer. This was how my world   00:00:09.200 --> 00:00:15.040 was when my kid was born 11 years ago. 00:00:15.040 --> 00:00:29.280 Hello, I am Bala Ramadurai, author, professor  and consultant. 11 years ago in Bangalore,   00:00:29.280 --> 00:00:41.120 my son was born. My wife and I had hardly slept  through those days. That's when my grandma   00:00:41.120 --> 00:00:48.560 visited us to take a look at her great grandson.  As joyous as that sounded, it came with a peril.   00:00:48.560 --> 00:00:55.840 My grandma was a Scrabble addict. She hardly  spent any time at all with her great grandson,   00:00:55.840 --> 00:01:02.720 but she spent most of her time playing Scrabble.  She insisted that my wife and I join her.   00:01:02.720 --> 00:01:07.840 That's when an idea dawned on me to write about  my Scrabble obsessed grandma. What if I could   00:01:07.840 --> 00:01:13.760 make it into a novel. Not many people have  Scrabble obsessed grandmothers, after all. 00:01:13.760 --> 00:01:19.280 I wanted to expand this to a novel, but did  not know how. I bumped into Dan Wells' video   00:01:19.280 --> 00:01:28.960 on 7-point story structure. I was now convinced  that a seed idea could indeed be converted into   00:01:28.960 --> 00:01:34.480 a novel, so I tried out many tools at the  time - million dollar tools like MS Word,   00:01:34.480 --> 00:01:37.991 Excel, Scrivener and the lot. In my research of  tools, I found that George RR Martin famously   00:01:37.991 --> 00:01:40.320 had used Wordstar for typing out Game of  Thrones. At that point, I remembered about   00:01:40.320 --> 00:01:43.840 an old editor - Emacs. I knew about Emacs from  my undergrad days and my earlier software days.   00:01:43.840 --> 00:01:49.040 Thanks to the emacs community and particularly  the orgmode community, I had what I wanted. 00:01:49.040 --> 00:01:55.680 Now, it was time to put the idea into action.  I used another method called snowflake and also   00:01:55.680 --> 00:02:05.360 Tony Ballantyne's emacs writing template. The main  features from org-mode that I used - fold, unfold,   00:02:05.360 --> 00:02:17.920 columnview, tags, distraction-free writing  experience, clocking, project tracking and export. 00:02:17.920 --> 00:02:33.317 Now, the demo. We start with the plotline (a one  line summary of the story). Then we write out the   00:02:33.317 --> 00:02:34.160 characters, describing them in detail. Write  the main story arc, followed by the secondary   00:02:34.160 --> 00:02:35.920 character story arcs. Here is where org-mode  really scores. Move the points in the story   00:02:35.920 --> 00:02:43.920 structure to form a coherent story. We  get into location research. Write them   00:02:43.920 --> 00:02:56.800 all out in the columns. Once you are satisfied,  now scene design. Each point in the story   00:02:56.800 --> 00:04:09.040 requires at least one scene. In columnview,  you can see many things - Act, scene,   00:04:09.040 --> 00:05:09.680 story point, location, POV or point of  view. Make sure you finish this and read   00:05:09.680 --> 00:05:10.896 the whole story if it makes sense. Now, create  a project file to track your project and clock   00:05:10.896 --> 00:05:18.880 your project to see how long it takes. I used  a similar structure for my non-fiction book,   00:05:18.880 --> 00:05:25.520 which I published recently, all  written and edited in emacs-org-mode. 00:05:25.520 --> 00:05:30.480 Thanks to you guys at the community, I  am now a published author and I plan to   00:05:30.480 --> 00:05:36.560 publish and help other authors publish using this  wonderful tool called emacs-org-mode. Thank You.