And so on. This is a great way to see if you're escalating the romance at the proper pace, if you have too much/too little of one character's introspection and if you have enough scenes where your hero/heroine are together. It's also a neat way to see if you're escalating the plot smoothly and foreshadowing important details. And as you click on those scene headings, you can quickly check if you have enough pages per chapter (my editor asks for no more than 20 pages per chapter, so with DM I can see at a glance if my scene break should actually be a chapter break instead.)
So how do I get started?
First, you have to ensure your headings are classed as a "Heading 1" style so they will appear in this list. To do this, you simply highlight the heading in your ms (for e.g. 'first meeting'), click on the drop-down arrow in your Style box and select "heading 1" (fig. 2).
As you can see, Word has standard styles associated with these headings, but they are fully customisable so if you don't like the default settings (I never do!) you can change them. To do this, click the down arrow and scroll down to select "More..." at the bottom of the listing. A new box pops up ("Styles and Formatting"), roll your mouse over the style you want to change (in our case, Heading 1) then click on the down arrow key, select Modify then alter the settings: I make them standard with my ms - 12pt Courier New, double spaced, indent first line .5cm.
Now we're ready to turn on Document Map
Which is as simple as View > Document Map (fig. 4). The Document Map command is also a toggle button (click once to turn on, click again to turn off), so by adding a button to my menu bar Document Map is only a click away from on to off (this is easy to add - right mouse click on your menu bar, then Customize > Commands, then choose "view" from the left hand side, click and hold on Document Map, then drag it onto your tool bar (fig. 5).
Document Map is free and built into MS Word, so it's a brilliant little option that will save you heaps in stress and pin board space. And while there isn't a feature to print out these headings, a hardcopy is just a matter of doing a screen dump: simply click your Prt Scr button on the top right hand side of your keyboard. This takes a screen snapshot and copies it to your clipboard, which you can then paste into a document and print it out from there.
First published in the November 2008 issue of Hearts Talk, Romance Writers of Australia's monthly magazine.