Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Working on a first draft?

Why would anyone try to write a novel? It's an appropriate question for Na-No-Wri-Mo (National Novel Writing Month). Personally, I'm in great sympathy with Toni's reason:


In my experience, writing the first draft of any project, especially a novel, is an exercise in faith. Faith that you'll work out the problems, that you have something interesting to say, that you'll find good, better, and even-better-than-that ways to say it. Everything is possible at the beginning--especially in my chosen field of science fiction.


But then you start to create your world. Rules begin to appear. Now if you want to break those rules, you have to change the world. Sometimes it's worth it. But if you do, it's okay. It's the first draft.



If that's a little too free-form for you, this thought may capture your creative process better:



However you manage to create your first draft--and whatever it looks like at the end, I have just one more thought for you:



IMAGES: Many thanks to Laugh.Love.Live, for the Toni Morrison quote; to Chasing the Turtle and Alice Walker for the quote about flying; to Writingeekery and Shannon Hale, for the "shoveling sand" quote; and to P.S. Bartlett, Authors Publish, and the late Terry Pratchett, for the "telling yourself the story" quote. Finally, many thanks to Novel Kicks, for the unattributed "best and worst" quote. So True!

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