fontawsome fontawsome fontawsome fontawsome
Subscribe
  • Bio
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Events
  • News & Awards
  • Resources
  • Media Kit
  • Contact

Bad writer. No Scotch for you.

February 1, 2016 Leave a Comment

noscotch1

I publicly (my first mistake) announced a lofty ambition last month, declaring January as JaNoWriMo, my own version of NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month.

Every November, haggard writers attack their keyboards with the goal of writing 50,000 words, a respectable first draft—by the end of the month. I had a Dec. 1 deadline on one book and a Dec. 15 deadline on revisions to another, so November was no time for me to be fooling around with something new. But January, after a nice holiday break, seemed perfect. Because I’d already written 20,000 words toward Book 5, I thought 70,000 seemed like a reasonable goal.

It took almost no time at all for that to fall apart. When working on a first draft, I aim for 1,000 words a day. That’s worked fine for four published (or to-be-published) novels, and a couple that, please God, will never see the light of day. JaNoWriMo would push my daily goal close to 2,000 words.

Turns out, that was easily enough achieved. I just wrote really, really fast, zooming toward the moment when the Scrivener Dominatrix let me know I’d hit my goal. But the faster I wrote, the farther away from me the story seemed to get. I made all sorts of notes—”Go back and delete this.” “Go back and change that to conform with what I’m writing now”—but at some point, I felt as though I was making more notes to myself about needed revisions than actually writing. I’m a big fan of plowing through a first draft without fussing over details, but these were more than details. They were key plot points, character development, etc.

So I stopped. Deleted my word target from the Scrivener Dominatrix. Went back and shored things up so that when I proceeded, it was with a firm foundation. Now I have a new goal—to have a first draft in hand by May, when I’ll spend a month at the Willapa Bay Artist in Residence program on the Washington coast.

The up side of blowing JaNoWriMo? I learned that my own process works pretty well. That’s reassuring.

But there’s a deep, deep down side: I’d promised myself a bottle of Lagavulin if I met my goal. No Scotch for this girl. Maybe in May!

 

Tags: Writing

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archives

Categories

Newsletter

Perché Italiano?

It's like asking, 'Why Write?' With shout-outs to Sicilian pastries and books by Kate Quinn, Elena Varvello and Gerald Brooks. Read article

Frozen feet - and fingers - challenge

Making habits; one-word resolution; cider muffins, and great reads from William Kent Krueger, Marco Missiroli, S.A. Cosby and Elizabeth Strout. Read article

Looking inward

Because it's too dark out there: On fighting the darkness with humor, some Italian treats, and great reads from Viola Ardone, Giuseppe Catozzella and Amy Lin Read article

News & Announcements

Book Launch for 'A Senior Citizen's Guide to Life on the Run

Library guest wrote the book on seniors Read article

Kirkus Reviews'A Senior Citizen's Guide to Life on the Run

Dark doings at a 'planned community' for 'active adults' Read article

Five Takeaways from 5E's Office Hours Session on Small Press Publishing

"Small Presses are not on the sidelines of the book business.
Read article

fontawsome fontawsome fontawsome fontawsome
© Copyright by Gwen Florio. Designed by My House of Design.