I am wondering if such a project will help me loosen up and worry less about the exact words I put on the page. Or, if it will be a less than worthy distraction.
If I decide to do it I am debating on whether I should tackle it with the serious intent that what I write may become a novel one day or whether I should start with an outrageous premise so that I may work as loosely as possible.
Your thoughts?
quote:
Keep inventing until you get so excited you have to write your idea.
So if NaNoWriMo ever coincides with that moment when I've got the story all built up in my head and I'm ready for it to just spill out on the page, then great! But if not, then I'm not going to force myself to write just for the sake of writing. IMO that's okay at short story length, or to generate story ideas, but at novel length that can be deadly. After all, if I come up with some cool idea halfway into my story (because I hadn't thought everything through enough beforehand) but it contradicts everything I've already written, I'll just have to throw everything I've written out and start over again. At 6K, okay fine whatever. But at 60K??? Eeps!
I could use a few more short stories to circulate in my quest to get published.
If you take a look at the Midsummer Madness section at Writing Challenges from 60 days ago, there is some structure in that program to get an outline, if that would be useful.
After completing Midsummer Madness, I was able to write the first draft of a novel in two weeks (about 55,000 words.) I spent a lot of long nights at it, but having the outline in hand gave me the kind of direction that let me zoom through.
Back in the bad old days of typewriters, I did write a fifty-thousand-word Harlequin Romance...of course it wasn't any damned good...and, also of course, I've never been able to replicate the pace of the writing with an SF novel...
1) It creates a daily writing habit
2) It's a tangible goal - 50k words, 30 days
3) The goal is attainable. 1667 words/day ...I type fast, this is nothing to me. LOL
4) Because it's goal-directed and limited in time, it's kind of easy to prioritize writing for once in my life.
5) There are a lot of other people doing the same thing at the same time so you can commiserate/they can harass you about your progress.
6) There are some really awesome "pep talks" by well-known authors throughout the weeks that give great insights into the hows and whys of writing.
7) You MUST turn off your inner editor if you want to finish, and turning it off is so incredibly liberating you might find that you can just periodically lose that editor and write more freely at other times.
8) When you are done you have a book. Even if it's a messy and awful pile of cliches and paper-thin characters, it's still a book. How many other people you know (this group notwithstanding) can say they've written a book in their lives? Much less several?? LOL
Even if you don't have time to do a lot of prep work, use your "thinking out loud" about characters, plot, setting as part of your novel work. One of my projects was more well-planned than the other. For the less-well-planned project, I would at the end of each writing session try to come up with 3-4 scenes I wanted to focus on for the next time. Then when I started up I had something to start from and wasn't just staring into space (I'm an at-home mom and work part-time, so I don't have any time to be staring into space!) Even though that novel is much messier than the other one, it's still a novel, and it's something I did. It's an accomplishment even if it never sees the light of day, know what I mean?
So - hop on the bandwagon and have a screaming good time doing it! Check out what Nano events are going on in your area, might be a good way to meet local writers.
There was a summary of Hatrackers' impressions of Nano last year here.
I'll be sure to harrass you about your progress throughout the month. If I have time to be online that is!
Never done NaNoWriMo before, although I have slogged through drafts of a couple novel-length creations.
We'll see, I guess
I've started creating some characters and an outline. It's a great thing to do while I'm at work.
I'd love to think I could do all mt NaNo writing at work but October is when we start to get really busy.
I'm sure it's going to be a wild ride.