From talking to colleagues and students, there seem to be basically two approaches to tackling a large piece of historical writing, like a book, doctorate or thesis. Adherents of Plan A diligently complete all the research, sit back, analyse everything, and then take a deep breath and place themselves in front of the keyboard, in order to write up the learned work in question, from start to finish. This is what I did for my doctorate (because, innocently, I couldn’t think of any other way of doing it), and if seemed to work well enough.
Followers of Plan B, by contrast, break
down the research into manageable chunks, and write up each section or chapter
as they go along, before moving onto the next research segment. Some of my
doctoral peer-group adopted this approach, and I had simply no idea how they
did it – how could you mould your material into a coherent shape, bit by
sequential bit, if you didn’t yet know what the overarching frame or story
holding it all together would be? With Elusive Church ,
however, I’ve finally been seduced by Plan B. Perhaps it’s because I’ve been
mulling over the central ideas for a while, so I do have a pretty clear sense
of what the main argument is going to be (whether it will survive the writing
up process remains to be seen!). Maybe it’s changing context too – perhaps a university post with lots of teaching and admin, interspersed
with irregular research leave and vacations, simply forces you into a more
bitty pattern of book production. Let’s see how Plan B works out...