Monday, October 24, 2016

In Eight Days

National Novel Writing Month begins in eight days, at which time hundreds of thousands of writers all over the planet will start their race toward the 50K finish line. In order to win NaNoWriMo, a writer has to produce at least 1667 words per day, or 12,500 words per week. It's madness, and crazy fun, and the best free writing competition out there.

Why should anyone try to write 50,000 words in thirty days? In the two years since I went freelance as a ghost writer I've averaged writing about 75,000 words per month (and that's not counting free stories or what I wrote here at PBW.) As a pro novelist before that I averaged about 50-60K per month -- and I did that for sixteen years. I am very fast, so I do write more per day than the average writer. That said, if you want either job, you probably should give full-time writing a test-drive first. NaNoWriMo is an excellent way to find out if you can handle writing a great many words under the pressure of a deadline.

For experienced writers, writing a novel in November is a chance to play with new ideas, take a break from your ongoing projects, and/or just write something you've always wanted to. Does it pay off? Depends on what you write and what you decide to do with it after November. I eventually sold the rights to Harry's Charm, the novel I wrote for NaNoWriMo 2009, which was later published as the first book in my AH steampunk Disenchanted & Co. series. I just sold the French rights for those books and two other stories to an overseas publisher this past summer, too. Bottom line: if not for NaNo I probably would never have written any of them.

Work prevents me from joining in this year, but I've got my pom poms ready for all of you who decide to dive in on November 1st. In all the years I've participated what's always delighted me most is how beautifully our community of writers comes together to support each other. The NaNoWriMo forums are wonderful places to chat with other participants, ask questions and find some valuable resources. You can also find local groups in your region that meet up in real life to have write-ins and encourage each other. As promised I'll be posting lots of things here at PBW that I hope will be helpful during November, too.

If you're not thrilled by the ninja can opener official participant badges they have this year, here's one I designed:



The tiger photo is one I took this year, and everyone has my permission to use and distribute it for nonprofit purposes. For supporters like me, here's another:



Also a photo I took, and the same permission as the tiger badge applies.

Finally, to kick off the helpful stuff, here are some NaNo treasures from my archives:

Writer's Knowledge Base -- Elizabeth S. Craig's search engine for writers can find the writing-related online help you need very fast.

OneLook Reverse Dictionary -- for when you have a definition or concept for which you need a word. Describe it in the search box, click and get a related words list.

For links to my Outlining 101 post and thirteen other links to outlining resources and tools, click here.

All ten of these word count meters I listed last year for NaNo are still available online.

So who will be writing a novel in November? Let us know in comments.

7 comments:

  1. I'm still on the fence whether or not I'm going to do it. When I wasn't working at a job outside the house, it was nothing to sit down and knock out page after page. Now, I'm so tired of the idiots on the road and my 2+ hour drive every day, my brain is usually mush by the time I get done with dinner. But I'll be here! Every post along the way and I'm really hoping I can stick with it this time. I won once and it felt really good...

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  2. I'm participating! It'll be the last time I get to do it without a full time job away from home. I hope that I can keep up my current writing habit when I start the job, but I won't know until I start.

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  3. I'll be participating this year. Didn't last year because of a family illness, but did the two years before that ... and was a Winner both times. I have to admit I use NaNo to write each chapter's scenes synopsis/dialogue/outline, so by the end of the month I have a rough first draft finished.

    Love your badges! Will use one at the start of NaNo.

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  4. Good luck to all participants.

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  5. I'm in again this year, yes. I won the last two years, so I'm fairly confident I'll be able to do it again. Full-time job, RP site and NaNo. But I did it last year, so no excuses!

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  6. I think NaNoWriMo is awesome. I started doing it years ago, just to prove to myself that I could write that fast and stick to a deadline, you know, in case I ever needed to. It's good practice. It also worked well for making me just write without worrying about every little thing in the writing. Get the words out and worry about fixing them later.

    I'm not doing it this year. Not officially anyway. I've just committed to getting this book finished by the end of November, however many more words that takes. I'm at about 18K right now, so 50K should get me to the end of the first draft. :fingers crossed:

    Good luck to all the NaNo'ers out there! Go you!

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  7. Anonymous8:09 AM

    Yep, officially in yet again even though my plot is even more vague than last year. Oh well. I do enjoy the fun of the writing but can get down at bit about the whole thing too. I'll check our your links as always. Thanks for the cheering, PB.
    Ron Bruce

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