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Kill it in 13 weeks. Image: Vaguely Artistic on Flickr. |
Writing isn't easy. Eat real food. You need the energy to get through that draft.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
Write Your Novel Now! Week 1 Activities: Getting Started
Alright. It's Sunday and we're starting the 13 week novel. Three months and we'll all have a draft. Let's get moving...
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Write Your Novel Draft Now! Are You Ready?
Deadline Looms
I've been working on this damned novel for long enough and I've got the deadline for finishing the rough draft set for the beginning of June.
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Deadlines. Blergh. Image: Bora Bora on Flickr. |
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
What is a Writer's Voice?
It
takes a great deal of experience to become natural.
—Willa
Cather
As
a writer, I want to be able to write anything, from any point of
view, with varying voices. So why do I worry about my
voice if I must immerse myself in my
characters'
voices?
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Speaking loudly doesn't ensure your voice will be heard. (Image courtesy of: Darwin Bell on flickr) |
The
importance of a writer's voice could be explained like this:
You
read a book and can see that it is skillfully written. It has an
interesting plot, strong imagery, likable characters, and all that.
Yet it is still, somehow, unfulfilling.
The
story is probably lacking the writer's voice.
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Are you a messy writer?
How I start a novel: ...or this one, at least.
Some people are planners. They plan out every plot point. They plan all the arcs. They study formulas and beat sheets and structures and I don't know what. Then they get all over me for not knowing every single mark that my characters are supposed to hit.
Other people totally poo-poo the planning process. I've had people on various forums snidely tell me to Have fun planning because the rest of us are writing. (Or making troll-like comments on forums?)
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Nature's model of the process of writing a novel. Image courtesy of Heber Farnsworth on Flickr. |
When I used to write short stories, I also did that. I didn't plan. I just let the
Friday, January 2, 2015
What question is your novel asking?
Story Questions vs. Plot Questions
I
ran across Karyne Norton's blog the other day. Karyne is a young adult fantasy writer. She hasn't tried pitching any of her books to agents and has
not self-published. She wants the book she does that with to be good
and understands that writing a book is a learning process. I respect
this. (It might feel familiar to me.) In one of her posts on
outlining, she asked, "What is the question of your novel?"
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It's easier to answer when you know what the question is. |
This
was exciting because it was something that I had my novel group focus
on when we first started out. When Pigs
in Heaven
first came out, I'd read that Barbara Kingsolver started her book with a
question. The question for Pigs
in Heaven
was something like, “When their needs don't match up, how do you
determine whether the needs of a single person or their community are
more important?” Or something like that. Since I'd heard that,
I'd always tried to ask a question that seemed vital, but
which a person isn't able to answer quickly or simply.
Friday, December 19, 2014
2 things I learned about the novel process while I wasn't writing my blog.
Yeah.
I haven't been posting. I've been involved in novel writing. Too
involved to actually complete a post. I've started several, but never
got around to completing them, or proofreading, or any time consuming
sort of thing like that which requires effort.
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I was busy having writing epiphanies. Too busy for blog posts. (Image: http://www.anna-om-line.com/) |
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