Villagegirl asks:
(A) Define your audience, is it ex-jws only ? Or the general public?
I have been very careful to write in such a way than the general public will "follow without confusion", but--the message is aimed at JW's in the most Ray-Franz-ish civilized manner I am capable of.
(B) Define the purpose and structure:
Is it primarily biographical ?
Is this your personal biography ?
It is so deeply personal it was horrendous trying to get this stuff out on paper without going back (as I did many times) and DELETING the parts that embarassed me. I've never even told some of this to my closest friends or my children.
The purpose is to lay out as factually and inescapably as possible that the Leadership of Jehovah's Witnesses have been dangerous for the members while, at the same time, comparing the JW brand of Christianity with the other denominations and drawing a sharp distinction.
The cards fall where they may and no thinking person will come away undecided.
Or is it a sort of "Self Help" book or and
"Instruction Manual", or a "History of Religion" ?
The tone of my book, if I do say so, is civilized intelligence. It is no instruction manual. What History there is consists of small snippets quoted directly from newspapers or such. I didn't want a lame, boring blah blah. Real people are busy and don't have time for that.
I deal with the fact that Christianity has always come down to either personal conscience or obeying religous Authority.
Some do it one way and others do it another way. But, Jehovah's Witnesses try to have it both ways and I demonstrate the impact of such duplicity
in the lives of some really wonderful people.
(C) Don't ramble: always keep the audience in mind.
I and three other people have gone over it and over it and I have removed as much as I've left in. I trimmed the fat and then I trimmed the bones.
Plan where you are taking them and why.
I worked on and off on this for the last 9 years. I have a pretty good idea of where it needed to go.
Make the trip interesting with details.
Who, Why, What and Where, logical development.
I've never written with as much care as I have in this book. I wanted to keep it engaging, detailed with facts and easy, quick access to references.
Whatever background needs to be known before a point is made HAS been made.
If it has no characters and no narrative then
it should at least make sense, have a clear, definable path,
a beginning, a middle and and end that satisfies and resolves.
There are many interesting personal stories in my book besides my own story. I tell one story in particular that I had never known about until quite recently that is quite inspiring and puts JW's to shame by comparison. The Watchtower Society pretends it is the only group that is righteous and my book ends that mythology.
(D) Develop interest by good storytelling, by building atticipation,
decribing conflict and resoving conflict. If you introduce characters
make them understandable to the audience, remember the reader
cannot read your mind or guess your motives, you have to show
the reader, and remain objective and fair. Don't preach, don't whine.
Everyone can write, but not everyone can write.
I have endeavored to keep it down to story with beginning, middle and conclusion.
I went to great pains to avoid quoting scriptures unnecessarily. I did NOT want a polemical book that pits one scripture against another.
This is a different approach than I've ever seen or read before. I'm very happy with the result.
You would not believe how many times I erased what I thought was "beautiful writing" so that I could spare the reader all that purple, squishy gunk :)