Chris Higgins
J.K. Rowling’s Plot Spreadsheet
by Chris Higgins - November 11, 2010 - 11:51 AM

Rowling Plot Spreadsheet
(Click to enlarge.)

When you’re writing a book (actually, a series of books) with a bunch of plot lines, you need a way to keep track of what’s going on. How can you structure the book so that everything fits, and moves, and you don’t leave out any of those zillions of characters and subplots? How do you figure out what goes in each chapter? Well, apparently J.K. Rowling made a spreadsheet — the old-school way, using a piece of paper. (Yes, prior to computer spreadsheets, a “spreadsheet” was done on paper.).

One sample sheet popped up on the blog état omnipotent last month, though apparently this page has been floating around for years (I’ve read some comments suggesting that Rowling herself released it on her website for fans something like five years ago — so this is not news, but it was news to me). Anyway, état omnipotent’s author wrote:

A spreadsheet plot written out by J.K. Rowling. Her approach to spreadsheet plotting is to divide the columns by chapter number, story timeline, chapter title, main plots and subplots.

Note the organization by month, as well as the clear distinction between the main plot, the primary subplot (labeled “PROPHECY”), and five other subplots — they’re all a bit sketchy, and often aren’t mentioned in the book’s text, even though they’re still occurring in the world of the book over time.

This one is from Order of the Phoenix, although it’s just one page and it’s an early version (you’ll note “Elvira Umbridge” mentioned rather than Dolores; Grawp is apparently a cousin at this stage; and the D.A. and the Order of the Phoenix appear to have swapped names). My favorite notes are “gory here” spanning chapters 22 & 23 related to the D.A. (actually the Order as it appears in the final book), as well as the treatment of chapter 19, which has the placeholder title “(Xmas),” no main plot development, three totally blank subplots, and a subplot including “big reunion” circled. I guess even plots take a break sometimes.

Spot anything interesting? Share it in the comments! You may also enjoy the comments sections here and here.

Click here to get a Risk-Free issue of mental_floss magazine
Comments (9)
  1. I can confirm that this has been on her website for ages… you have to play a kind of game to get to it, though. There are tons of things on her website if you look.

  2. I nearly crapped my pants when I saw the title to this article. I am so ridiculously excited for the premiere next week that absolutely any mention of Harry Potter sends me into a fit of hysterics! Please keep the Harry Potter tidbits coming! I want MORE!!!

  3. Too bad I can’t read a single word of her chicken scratch

  4. Does that say Cho and Ginny kiss? Haha. I don’t remember this in the books, but I haven’t read them in a long time. I think I would remember this, however.
    Maybe I’m reading it wrong.

  5. I think it says “Cho kiss?” and then something else about Ginny. Sorry to disapoint…

  6. It says “Cho kiss? Ginny worried about father” probably means Harry and Cho kissing? and Ginny worried about her father who was attacked by Nagini

  7. This is really interesting because I actually have my copy of OotP on the desk right next to me. I was looking at the chapter titles – “The Order of the Phoenix” is chapter five (but that was back when the Order was Dumbledore’s Army), and “St. Mungo’s Hospital for Magical Maladies and Injuries” is twenty-two, but nothing else is the same. And you can tell how much she filled the story out – this was obviously very early on.

  8. I really like the j.k rowling plot spreadsheet.

  9. She should write about the adventures of harry’s decendants

Comment

commenting policy