Thirteen Thoughts About My Month Trying To Write A Novel

Thursday Thirteen
Thirteen Thoughts About My Month Trying To Write A Novel



  1. It's harder than I thought it would be. Writing a column for this blog is often as easy as talking for me. I just choose a topic and start recording my thoughts. I'm often left with hundereds of words in excess. But writing a novel is slower and more detailed. I find myself constantly stopping to contemplate the various elements of novels from character motivation to setting and pacing. I trust in time, however, I will find my voice and the process will improve.
  2. I don't know my story as well as I thought I did.
  3. I was so worried that I'd spend my strength and lose the passion before I was ready to write that I never allowed myself to get too specific about plot elements in my mind. Character profiles and settings, yes. Overall plot, yes. Chapter by chapter plot? Nope.
  4. My brain recoils from boring tasks. I knew that already, but I didn't realize how it related to writing. Now I do. Ooh so intimately...
  5. I've mistakenly conditioned myself to believe that good writing only comes when I'm besotten with my muse. When she leaves me I have to plod through things. This is work, hence not fun, and it fails to entertain and inspire. I tend to think at those times that there is something wrong with my writing. That I've messed something up. But the simple fact is that this is the hard part of writing. I need to learn to work through it.
  6. If I want to seriously finish this blasted thing I'm going to have to kick my news habit.
  7. I still fail to account for the amount of time I need to spend on being a full time Dad with disabilities who homeschools his kids. I absolutely NEVER account for that time. It's like I still think I'm a single guy with hours of time to kill.
  8. I make terribly ambitious and thoroughly unrealistic goals for myself. It's a wonder I don't have an inferiority complex. Oh, wait a minute...
  9. I am torn between getting the story done and getting the story done right. That NaNoWriMo deadline is not helping me in the slightest.
  10. I don't like long passages of description. I am as bored writing them as I am reading them.
  11. I like writing dialogue. Unfortunately for the task at hand, this requires me knowing my characters inside and out. I know some of them that intensely, but not all of them.
  12. It's not looking like I'll have this novel completed before I turn 40. I may have to rethink my goals.
  13. I'm really glad I undertook this challenge. I may not be meeting the goal (I'm far too careful to bang out 50,000 words in one month without having a clear idea in my mind where I'm going), but NaNoWriMo has helped me see what aspects of my novel and life need more organizing before I can realistically begin in earnest. This has been a good experience for me. It's all downhill from here.







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Comments

Anonymous said…
Writing is, by far, the toughest career I've had....but if your passion is writing, you'll keep plodding ahead. Sounds like you're on the right tract and here's wishing you lots of inspiration and success.
My Thursday Thirteen #2 is up.
Anonymous said…
Happy Thanksgiving and Happy TT!
Anonymous said…
Very interesting list!
Have a save and happy Thanksgiving!
Happy TT from Germany,
Sonny

http://sweetlikekitty.blogspot.com
Anonymous said…
Thanks for your insights. I've felt some of these same things. I've done better on NaNoWriMo than I thought I would, but I'm still a good bit behind. I hope I can catch up and finish successfully.

Happy Thanksgiving!
Heidi the Hick said…
Douglas, I'm currently working on novel #4 and shopping novel #2 to agents. Let me tell you, writing a novel is hard; the first one took SEVEN YEARS.

I have advice!
1)Yeah, it's hard, and you will improve. keep doing it.

2)You'll learn the story as you go.

3) I've never written an outline, but one agent requested an outline to go with the query. When I start a new one, I'll be doing an outline first- I think that'll be more helpful than doing it at the end.

4) Slog through the boring parts, because you'll get back to something good soon.

5) You're totally correct- to keep going when your muse leaves is the hard part, and yes you need to learn to work through it.

6) You'll have to kick your news habit. (I might have to cut down my blog habit!!!)

7) it takes huge amounts of time! Time management is hard for us, eh?

8) Ease up, buddy!

9)Ignore the deadline, ignore your need to do it "right" and just write.

10) Then don't write them. Get creative with your descriptions so you don't get bored.

11) You'll get to know your characters the more you make them talk to each other!

12) You might surprise yourself! Put time in every day (I know, I don't follow my own advice) and don't be hard on yourself if you don't get it done by age 40. Go for 40 1/2.

13) If it's for NaNo, don't think so much! I did it last year and my novel's a mess, but I did it. And there's some good stuff in there. Let your imagination go and make your fingers do the typing.

I have all the answers, but no published books yet, so take that with a grain of salt!

Back to work for me, and Douglas, you're brilliant, so just get it down. And have a wonderful Thanksgiving!!!!
Soozcat said…
NaNoWriMo is like writers' boot camp. I haven't completed one yet. (Doesn't mean I won't, just that I haven't yet.) You are to be congratulated on giving it a shot in the first place.

The toughest thing seems to be avoiding the urge to make it perfect. It's how I got bogged down last time--I couldn't just say "eh, screw it" and keep typing, I had to go back and try to fix things. Doesn't work very well.
Anonymous said…
I'm doing NaNo for the first time this year. I'm not even trying for 50,000, though-I set myself a more realistic goal of 30,000, but what with all the sickness making the rounds through my household this month either knocking me flat on my back or requiring me to spend all my spare time playing nursemaid to others, I'm not even going to make that. But my real goals were to get myself back into the habit of writing consistently and to build a good foundation for finishing my novel, and I accomplished those, so I'm calling it a success.

Here's what helps me cope with my ADD and keep writing. Maybe you'll find some of it helpful.

- Remember that consistency is key. Stephen King once pointed out that if you only write one page a day, in just a year you'll have written a pretty thick novel. Writing every day isn't realistic for me, but I aim to write 1,000 words five days a week. Some days I do good to write half that, and some weeks I do good to put in a couple of days, but the point is as long as I keep doing it, I know I'll get there eventually. When I get there isn't important, as long as I just get there.

- Headphones to drown out distraction, natch. Mine typically play non-distracting trance music.

- I approach my daily quota in small chunks, challenging myself to write about a hundred words at a time. This doesn't just fit my attention span, it fits my daily schedule. I can rarely find hours at a time to devote solely to writing. This way I know that even if I only have fifteen minutes to spare between other tasks that need to get done, I can sit down and bang out a hundred words in those fifteen minutes.

- When I do find long stretches of time to write, I allow myself internet breaks. I use my blog habit as motivation, e.g., "If I write two hundred more words I can stop and read 5 blogs, then I have to get back to work."

- I have a devoted blog for posting my rough draft. I only have a couple of readers (who comment, at any rate), but even knowing those two people are reading and care what happens next gives me a sense of obligation to keep going. And their encouraging feedback is pretty motivating.

Now I should stop yammering and go use these last few days to at least get somewhere in the ballpark of my NaNo goal.
D.R. Cootey said…
Thank you one and all for your comments. I hadn't realized you would care so much about my struggles to give me advice.

I wasn't interested in finishing NaNoWriMo as much as I was interested in finishing my novel. So when I found that my schedule didn't allow for 1667 words a day I realized rather quickly that the 50,000 word goal was not going to happen. I wasn't sad, though. I banged up against an AD/HD wall and got a chance to see what obstacles would need to be mowed down to make this novel a reality. It was excellent practice, especially since I had home schooling and graphic design projects to keep me truly busy. The novel was just one thing too much for November. Remember what I always say about pruning your to do lists and not working on more than you're able to at any one time.

So don't worry. I'm not discouraged. I have a really good idea now of what I'll need to address when the novel is the only project I'm working on besides my art. I'm looking forward to January, let me tell you.

So thanks again for your comments. It was a pleasure to read them all.

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