I remember the first time I read Tom Sawyer and how free I felt as the pages turned. Then, in High School, when I cracked Huckleberry Finn and learned so much about life in the South.

Twain's writing is quintessentially American, right down to the problematic parts. But there was one secret thing he did that I think screenwriters can learn a lot from.

Let's dive in.


Mark Twain's Secret About Writing

So, in this fascinating YouTube video, we get a deep dive into Mark Twain's powerful writing secret: Making a list of tasks and tackling them one by one.

If you shrink the tasks down to just things that need to be done in your writing,

That means tackle character backstories at one time, and plot at another, or making these tasks stepping stones to building an outline, and from there just tackle one scene.

I try to set up a format where maybe I write the logline of my idea first. Then I like to build into the characters - who is in this story and why. Next, I try to sort through what I think happens in the first ten pages of this movie, then build toward the first act. Then I like to think of an ending, so I know where we are going the whole time.

If you tackle these tasks one by one, you can build them out over time. Then the idea of writing a longer and cogent story is not as daunting.

Twain Did Many Drafts!

Mark Twain was always rewriting, and he would save ideas that didn't work for other drafts, but he was never afraid of taking them out and starting again.

All writing is refining and reworking. to master the craft, you have to be willing to go back in and rethink ideas and go deeper.

First drafts are for pouring all the ideas onto the page, and each subsequent draft allows you to rework and redesign those ideas. You may even take some away, in order to focus on the core journey of what you've found.

Those journeys and characters, and ideas don't need to go away. Here's something I like to do in addition to these checklists...

Create a Personal Library

Another idea that's not totally in the video is one I like, which is to reuse these tasks over and over again.

This sounds like cheating, but it's actually super smart, especially for screenwriters. If there's a way you describe something or a list of onomatopoeia or something you will use again and again, don't mess around with perfection!

The core idea is to create a personal library of compelling phrases and sentences you craft or encounter. Collect them as valuable building blocks that you can use again and again in future writing projects.

Maybe you have a list of opening scenes you like, or maybe you have a list of dialogue and turns of phrases you want to employ, do keep them ready.

And if you need to add more specificity to your descriptions, you can dip into your collection of stored phrases can provide the perfect solution.

At the end of the day, you're using this stuff to connect with your audience. You want your work to evoke the right feelings. Sometimes, that means using a phrase you've done before that you know hits the right chords.

Of course, doing this takes time and practice.

Writers need to be careful when reusing phrases to avoid repetition or just creating their own cliches.

But at the end of the day, I think it's smart to start your own library that you can go back to in times of trouble or if you have writer's block to get it all out.

After all, a finished product is better than just an idea. And you can always rewrite!

Summing It All Up

So, there you have it. Make a list of smaller tasks to tackle them one by one. if you work at them each, suddenly you

Let me know what you think in the comments.