I did it!! I've written 50,000 words (so far) during the month of November...by November 23, in fact! This means I've "won" NaNoWriMo... along with the thousands of other busy writers who will start validating their word counts today. See the very cool winners' badge I get to display over to the right there. I also got a nice certificate that I'll hang on my bulletin board.
I really didn't know if I'd manage it. November was shaping up to be a very busy month, even without the added burden of trying to write a minimum of 1,700 words every single day. I've never done anything like that before. I find it quite astonishing that, there I was, with 50,000 words of a brand new novel under my belt after 23 straight days of writing, when I've only managed about 35,000 words on my other novel, "The Bog," that I've been working on for around four YEARs now! Incredible!
At the risk of sounding vain, I've gotta say I'm pretty pleased with myself. For me, this is a major accomplishment. Not only that, but I've learned a great deal about the craft of novel-writing...or at least about what works for me as a novel-writer.
I've learned about The Snowflake Method, which I worked with during the month of October to plan and plot my story and characters before I started to write. I've learned that Butt + Chair = Book really DOES work! I've learned that I can make the time to write every day if I really want to (or, at least, if I'm really scared to disappoint the almost two dozen people who've been reading along as I've been writing all month!).
And speaking of those people, my esteemed "First Readers" ... Thank you all so much for being part of this. I literally couldn't have done it without you. Or perhaps I should be honest and say "wouldn't" have done it without you. Knowing you're all out there expecting a new chapter every day (whether you read it or not) kept me from slacking off or procrastinating, which is a major weakness of mine when it comes to work that doesn't need to get done *right now*. My refusal to disappoint you was my main motivation in just sitting down and getting this done every day for the past month. You have my eternal gratitude... you will be the reason I finish my very first completed novel. As a small token of my gratitude, there will be a little surprise for you all in your inboxes soon after the final chapter of the first draft is finished :-)
The place where I write when I'm too chickenshit to work on my REAL projects! Which is most of the time.
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
One down, 29 to go
Yesterday was Day One of NaNoWriMo month. I've been looking forward to it since deciding to take the challenge on October 2. Spent the month of October planning and plotting, and yesterday was the first opportunity to actually do some writing!
And I am stoked, let me tell you! Chapter One is written and I'm anxious to get on to Chapter Two today. Day One was a busy day. Between doing the first draft of the bi-weekly newspaper I build, plus sundry other little jobs that came up during the day, I had started to worry that I'd be forcing myself to sit down and write chapter one late in the evening, pooped and drained (forgive the imagery) after having already spent too many hours in front of the computer.
But around 4:30 things quieted down and I figured it was as good a time as any to get started. I assumed I'd have to stop frequently to work on something else, but the email didn't beep at me and I was able to work for about four hours without interruption. Incidentally, the fact that it took me four hours to write 1,916 words is a bit troubling. I'd assumed 90 minutes to two hours for that kind of output. But I did read over it several times and clean it up a lot, which is what extended the output time. I'll have to get that under control. I simply won't be able to devote four hours a day to writing this month.
From having only a nebulous idea of what the opening chapter would be about, I wound up with a really solid alien civilization (which I promptly destroyed). Even as I wrote, I was thinking to myself "where is this coming from? Who are these characters I'd never even conceived of until this very moment?" I hadn't even planned to HAVE characters in this chapter, let alone ones with names and nictitating eyelids, who lived in a four-caste class system made up of religious, science, enforcement and common classes named after the four elements. Where did that COME from??
I almost hated killing them all off!
Oh, but it was spectacular! Having discarded the idea of a supernova destroying their planet, I settled on a "planet-killer" asteroid hitting Endemeron and destroying every trace of life. The asteroid idea worked better than a supernova because of the time frame involved. While a supernova might destroy a planet within eight minutes of occurring (according to my friend the space geek), it can actually take hundreds of thousands of years before the final event. A huge asteroid, on the other hand, can be seen coming, has no physical impact until its arrival (pardon the pun), and its arrival time can be calculated fairly accurately...within a space of months in this case ...leaving enough time for the locals to come up with a way to save themselves (or at least their genes) from complete annihilation.
So, now we have thousands of pods floating randomly through space for half a million years, each one loaded with a living soup of DNA-laden Endemen virus. Where one particular pod winds up and what it does when it gets there is the rest of the story!
And I am stoked, let me tell you! Chapter One is written and I'm anxious to get on to Chapter Two today. Day One was a busy day. Between doing the first draft of the bi-weekly newspaper I build, plus sundry other little jobs that came up during the day, I had started to worry that I'd be forcing myself to sit down and write chapter one late in the evening, pooped and drained (forgive the imagery) after having already spent too many hours in front of the computer.
But around 4:30 things quieted down and I figured it was as good a time as any to get started. I assumed I'd have to stop frequently to work on something else, but the email didn't beep at me and I was able to work for about four hours without interruption. Incidentally, the fact that it took me four hours to write 1,916 words is a bit troubling. I'd assumed 90 minutes to two hours for that kind of output. But I did read over it several times and clean it up a lot, which is what extended the output time. I'll have to get that under control. I simply won't be able to devote four hours a day to writing this month.
From having only a nebulous idea of what the opening chapter would be about, I wound up with a really solid alien civilization (which I promptly destroyed). Even as I wrote, I was thinking to myself "where is this coming from? Who are these characters I'd never even conceived of until this very moment?" I hadn't even planned to HAVE characters in this chapter, let alone ones with names and nictitating eyelids, who lived in a four-caste class system made up of religious, science, enforcement and common classes named after the four elements. Where did that COME from??
I almost hated killing them all off!
Oh, but it was spectacular! Having discarded the idea of a supernova destroying their planet, I settled on a "planet-killer" asteroid hitting Endemeron and destroying every trace of life. The asteroid idea worked better than a supernova because of the time frame involved. While a supernova might destroy a planet within eight minutes of occurring (according to my friend the space geek), it can actually take hundreds of thousands of years before the final event. A huge asteroid, on the other hand, can be seen coming, has no physical impact until its arrival (pardon the pun), and its arrival time can be calculated fairly accurately...within a space of months in this case ...leaving enough time for the locals to come up with a way to save themselves (or at least their genes) from complete annihilation.
So, now we have thousands of pods floating randomly through space for half a million years, each one loaded with a living soup of DNA-laden Endemen virus. Where one particular pod winds up and what it does when it gets there is the rest of the story!
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