I think I've converged on four phases of #writing large projects like a #nonfiction book. I'm curious to compare notes with others. Mine are:

1) Exploration research -> Outline / book proposal

2) Detailed research -> Chapter outlines

3) Writing -> First draft. All the content is there. And I've made a first attempt at making it readable (but it's not there yet). Here I begin to get some feedback.

I iterate between 2 and 3, chapter by chapter, and push through a draft of the entire book.

4) Refining -> New draft. This round is about readability and storytelling.

How does this compare with your process? @PessoaBrain, @WiringtheBrain,
@markdhumphries, @tdverstynen,
@thomasinselmd, @summerfieldlab, @JamesGleick, @gershbrain, @Iris, @cyrilpedia, @alexh
(Anyone?)

@NicoleCRust For me the toughest part, where you have to be ruthless, is in step 4: cutting the things that you really liked at the outset that don't work for the finished piece.

All the early drafts of the piece below had a long section on the Long Island farmer who brings a sick hen to Peyton Rous at Rockefeller. It was my favorite bit. But in the end, it broke the flow of the story, and so I cut it.

ft.com/content/cda27366-7de5-4

@cyrilpedia
Excellent point. 💔​ That can be heartbreaking, for sure. To soften the blow, I like to move it to a new home, "extracted_Text".

Maybe some of the sections like the one you describe can be shared in other ways? Over here on neuromatch.social, we have 10K characters that I believe should be used restrictively, but something like this would be a good exception (I'd love to hear that story about Peyton Rous!).

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@NicoleCRust That's an interesting thought, thanks. This is a much better space for storytelling - there were some epic threads on the Other Site, but they were the exception.

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