Showing posts with label Shannon Hale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shannon Hale. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Perfectly set up for Na-No-Wri-Mo

It occurred to me the other day that I've got not one, but two projects ideally set up for a Na-No-Wri-Mo style writing blitz.

On the eve of the event itself, no less! If ever there were a year when I was perfectly set to participate, this is it.

What is "Na-No-Wri-Mo"? you may ask. That is short for "National Novel-Writing Month." It's an annual event, held November 1-30 of each year. Participants attempt to write 50,000 words or more in a month (50,000 words is the minimum length for a novel, according to some definitions and in some genres).

Many participants look upon it as a competition (for well or ill) and for many it provides motivation. I think whatever helps a writer make progress on his or her work of passion is a positive thing.

It's true that a rare few people actually can write a real novel in a month. For most of us, 50,000 even-semi-coherent words in a month is a stretch, and that's the point. Na-No-Wri-Mo is designed to push writers beyond their comfort zones and help them achieve more than they thought they could. It's a creative challenge that is a high bar, but not unreachable.

That's extremely beneficial for a writer, whether you end up with a novel at the end of the month, or (more likely) with a steaming pile of first draft.

I know I've posted this quote from Shannon Hale before, but I thought it was appropriate here.


I have never personally participated in Na-No-Wri-Mo, although I've been "Na-No adjacent" for years because I hang out with other writers. Why don't I participate? 

Mostly it's because I'm a competition-averse person, and I write slowly. I'm persistent, but not fast. Also, I know myself. Trying to write 50,000 words straight through with no stopping or second thoughts . . . not gonna happen. It would make me nuts.

Also, it's in November. That might be a time of miserable weather in San Francisco (the original reason for timing it then), but November is the month before Christmas, contains no fewer than three family birthdays for my clan, and it has Thanksgiving in it. NO WAY am I going through November with the minimum of distractions needed to produce 50,000 words!

In November, San Francisco looks like this a lot. No wonder the Na-No-Wri-Mo founders wanted to stay inside!


So, no. I'll flirt with the idea, but I won't sign up for Na-No-Wri-Mo this year, either. But I'll think of the participants often, as I regularly take chunks of time to work on my projects throughout the month, and I'll be wishing them well!

IMAGES: Many thanks to Wikipedia for the Na-No-Wri-Mo logo file, to Ali Stegert's "Spilling Ink" blog, for the quote from Shannon Hale, and to Free Tours by Foot, for the photo of San Francisco in November.

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!