Write on!

Apr. 7th, 2008 12:01 am
katster: (nano04)
So I went to a writer's retreat this weekend. In a dome house. It was fun.

If any of you is still following along on the 2005 Nano project, aka Sorrow of Memory or Last Hope, you'll be glad to discover that I am a scene and a half from the climactic scene of the novel, and more importantly, I know everything that happens up to the end of the climactic point. It means that if I get some time and smooth sails, I may actually *finally* be typing THE END on a project as opposed to just letting it hang, possibly as soon as the end of this month.

And then begins the task of revision. A writer's work is never done.

(Also, if any of you want a copy of the first draft of the novel, let me know. I'm happy to see what people think of it, as long as they're cognizant that this is a first draft and will get hacked to pieces once I let it sit for a bit.)
katster: (awww)
I'm glad I got a good jump on Nano this year.

Because this cold/whatever the hell it's turned into is kicking my ass. I pretty much took an almost zero day (I got a couple hundred words down today) but I'm okay about that because I'm ahead of the game.

I finally managed to wrangle a doctor's appointment for tomorrow. That's good, because I was going to put "going to the ER" on my agenda for tomorrow if that hadn't happened. It's also good because I'm tired of coughing. And not being able to hear.

It's also nice to go to bed on election night being moderately happy at the results. (I'd be happier if I heard how Tester's doing in MT, but hey, that can wait until morning. I care about Tester not only for the senate control thing, but also because I've only given money to three candidates -- Dean for prez, Durston for Congress in my congressional district, and Tester for Senate in MT. Of those, two didn't win. I'm hoping to break my losing streak.)

I think I'll go to sleep now.
katster: (bloodsport)
Zokutou is down, and that's where I've been getting my word meters, so I'll go with this one for today.



Yeah. I kinda just blew the day away. I dunno how I got ten thousand words in three days, it just kinda ... uh, well, happened.

So, with this in mind, I open the betting pool. There are two questions.

(1) When is katster going to hit 50k words? Date and time, in Pacific time, because that's the timezone I work in.
(2) By the time November is over, how many words will katster have?

Unfortunately, there are no prizes, but I will honor the two winners (or one, if somebody nails both) at the end of the month.
katster: (wisdom)
Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
4,409 / 50,000
(8.8%)


Well, two scenes done. I've got to contemplate where the third scene goes, but I've got a pretty good idea. And the fourth scene (well, maybe fifth) involves one of my favorite characters in this year's Nano novel -- Finnegan Scholar. (And yes, how a just graduated from mage college wizard ended up with an epithet is a story I plan to tell when he shows up.)

But this is enough for one day.

I had an accounting midterm today, and then I goofed off at the write-in because of said test, but I got back on the writing bandwagon tonight and got nearly another 2k out today. At this rate, I'll be done before my birthday, but I know that it'll slog soon enough, and I'm just trying to build up momentum before I get to the slog point.

But at the moment, I'm content to be making good time.

As a friendly reminder, you can read this year's Nano novel at [livejournal.com profile] katsterwrites. Comment here or there and I'll friend you so you can. (If you asked me to add you last year, I've not taken you off, so go ahead and knock yourself out.) As an added bonus, if you missed last year's Nanoing, you can read what I have on the 2005 Nano novel at that same place. It's two two two Nanos in one!

*run*
katster: (nano05)
Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
2,170 / 50,000
(4.3%)


It's a start.

This year is not going to be as good as last year, but that's okay. Embrace the suck.

Now I leave Dixon, drive home, go to bed. For I have accounting midterm tomorrow.
katster: (bloodsport)
This is in response to my offer to [livejournal.com profile] fairoriana to offer tips on how to make it through. [livejournal.com profile] rolypolypony took me up on it. And then I figured it's probably general interest, so I decided to post it here.

katster's tips for succeeding and staying (mostly) sane during Nano

They're pretty basic.

The first and most important is that "It's Nano. Embrace the suck." (This is actual advice I gave to the Sacramento Nanoers last night.) Authors are not the most objective when it comes to their work, and will go on and on about how much the book sucks. Granted. It's Nano; you're writing 50k words in one month. Of course it's going to suck. If you embrace the suck, it makes it that much easier to get through it.

Two, it really does help to write a bit each day. Nano suggests 2k a day so that you can have slack for days when you absolutely cannot write. But try to get a few words down every day. If it's three or three thousand, every word is one step closer to that magical 50k.

Three, do not go back and edit. If you can avoid it, do not go back at all. Because seeing text on the screen seems to draw what Chris Baty calls "the internal editor." You do not want the internal editor to show up! It makes it that much harder to make it through 50k. This ties into my first point about embracing the suck, because the internal editor is the guy mumbling that your work sucks, and well, if you just change this word to that word, and delete that sentence...the internal editor wants you to get *rid* of words, and that's fatal when you're trying to make word count. Lock the internal editor in a box, and don't let him out until May at the earliest.

Four, get started. Write as much as you can while you're still bright-eyed and raring to work. Because it will slog later in the month, as the rest of the world, who doesn't understand this whole Nano thing, will start making demands on your time, and you're also going to hate this writing thing and curse whatever deities you believe in about letting you think you could actually do this. That's natural. Plus, if you get behind on word count early, it's somewhat discouraging. I know this one well because I didn't get started until November 8th last year. I still managed to win, but that's because I'm a fast writer, and the story suddenly just avalanched onto the page. I do not recommend this technique to anyone.

Five, use nasty tricks to get your word count. Is your character baking cookies? List out all the ingredients. Another great one that was given at the Sac Nano meetup last night was "When in doubt, describe." Description eats word count like nothing else. And if all you feel like writing that day is "I hate this; what got into my mind?", go ahead and write it into the file. Yeah, it'll end up a bit disjoint. But that's okay. Your inner editor is locked in a box, and when you let him out in May, he can take stuff like that out. Right now, all you care about is word count, and that sentence is eight words closer to it. If you write it a dozen times, suddenly, you're 96 words closer to your word count. Plus, it's a good frustration reliever. Also, RaBiChi, from the Sactown Nano group reminds me: Eschew compound words! Don't shove words together! For example, it's word count, not wordcount! Another suggestion to think about would be to get rid of all your contractions. But do not take this to extremes...

Six, you don't have to write in chronological order. There's a neat invention on the computer called "cut and paste", which you can use to move chunks of your novel around later. (Don't do it in November. That's dangerously close to editing.) If you have to write chronologically, but you can't think of a scene, write "And then something happens" and go to a scene you know about. Remember, style doesn't count for much in Nano.

Seven, it isn't Nano until you kill somebody in your novel. Last year, I killed a minor character, but it lead to wonderful things happening. Also, I found out I can get in the mind-set of a sociopath. It's not a good place to be, but it makes the character that much more believable. And folks at the meetup last night suggested being even more drastic, like killing your main character. Yeah, it seems insane, but death scenes take up lots of word count. And if you have to kill a few kittens along the way, well, at least you're just doing it on paper.

Eight, if you haven't grasped it from everything else I've said, your mantra is "Word count. Word count. Word count." Whatever you do, just keep putting words on paper, and trust that your brain knows what it's doing when it comes to this writing thing. I once saw a sticker on a friend's laptop that read, "You have 213 bones in your body. Surely one of them must be creative." Trust that creative bone, and keep trudging.

Nine, ignore those punks who write their entire Nano in a week. They're overachievers. Or they have *way* too much time on their hands. You're not in competition with anybody unless you want to be. (That said, competition is sometimes a good way to get your creative juices flowing.)

Ten, if you have the time, find a local Nano group and hang with them. Sometimes, just knowing there are other actual people out there suffering under the same delusion that they could write 50k words in a month makes it that much easier to go from delusion to reality. Plus, there'll be folks who have done it before, and they'll offer you nasty tricks on making word count and support when you cry that 50k is just too much! (Seriously, the Sactown gang is what got me through Nano last year.)

Eleven, you've won just by attempting this thing. The word count is immaterial. So what if you only get 15k or 30k down before you run out of steam? Yeah, it's not 50k, but it's still an accomplishment. 15k is 30%. 30k is 60%, which is more than half. It's an awfully big commitment to write a novel in November, and if you manage anything towards it, that in itself is an accomplishment. That said, it feels nice when Nano declares that you've written 50k, even if bells and whistles and confetti are only going off in your mind.

And that's pretty much all of my Nano tips. If you know any others, feel free to share in comments.

[Edit: Changed all of my wordcount to word count, because of RaBiChi's comment. See the end of the dirty tricks tip.]
katster: (writing)
If any of you are up to doing NaNoWriMo this year, I'm here to tell you that the forums are open for business! Woo!

One month, 30 days, 720 hours, 43200 minutes, 2,592,000 seconds! And in that time you write 50k words! it's a whole heck of a lot of fun. :)

And I managed to win last year, and I aim to do it again this year! And as usual, the updates will be posted to [livejournal.com profile] katsterwrites. (I'm hoping to finish last year's novel before I start this one...)

[I need a Nano icon. I wonder how I suggest to the Nano webgurus that a 100x100 icon would be cool for all the LJers]
katster: (writing)
Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
8,364 / 50,000
(16.7%)


Another day, another ~4k. I'm approaching a crucial scene, though, and i have to explain how a character is in a position to push another character away from the original goal, and why he does so, and yeah. I think I'm about to have a character die, though, which just makes the story more interesting. Besides, you have to kill people in your Nano novel, it's one of the rules, I think. Or at least, that's the way folks made it sound at the write-in tonight. ;)

Anyway, I posted about half of today's writing in [livejournal.com profile] katsterwrites and I'm about to post the other half now, but I figured I'd update the word count first.

G'night, LJ world. Gonna try to get up before noon tomorrow and get some more writing done before I go vote.

Note

My main blog is kept at retstak.org. I mirror posts to this Dreamwidth account, so feel free to read and comment either here or there.

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