Showing posts with label NaNoWriMo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NaNoWriMo. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Getting Ready for #NaNoWriMo

I might have a chance of succeeding at NaNoWriMo this year. I have successfully cleared my writing plate, so to speak. My next novel, Accomplice, is edited and formatted and sitting in Amazon waiting for the magic go-date. And for once, I don’t have three other projects that are begging my attention. Well, actually I have exactly three other projects, but all of them are prime NaNo candidates and not mostly-done works in progress that I’ve been procrastinating on.

When I logged into my account just now, I reviewed what I have set up the past two years, where I participated but then failed miserably.  2012 I said I was writing The Vegas Affair.  2013 I said I was writing Take Me Down. So now it’s 2014, and those are two of the three contenders for my NaNo book. Because, you know, I never wrote them.

Take Me Down is the prequel (or really, just book 1 of the series) of the sci fi romance I wrote in 2009’s NaNoWriMo called Leap.  I have never sold or published Leap because after querying and revising it for a year or two, I realized that I really needed to introduce the world and some of the side characters in a different spot.  I already have about a chapter of Take Me Down written, but I’ve been dragging my feet about working on the rest of it.

The Vegas Affair is a sequel to The Paris Affair, which was my first published novel.  The Vegas Affair will pick up with the story of Kelsey, the sister of The Paris Affair’s hero Helmut.  Kelsey is the baby of the family and used to being coddled (and rescued) by her two older brothers. She’s also pissed at both of them, who have refused to talk to each other for over a decade.  Fed up, she comes up with a plan to get them into the same room—or at least the same city: she is going to elope to Las Vegas with the one man that both brothers can agree to hate, in the hopes that they will work together to save her from certain disaster. But, of course, things don’t go quite as she plans.

My third option is Steal the Sun, the next installment to Call the Rain, my fantasy novella.  Steal the Sun will also be a novella or short novel (short for the fantasy genre).  Trapped in the equivalent of an ivory tower by a ruthless dictator, my heroine will enlist the help of a criminal to escape the only world she has ever known.  But the hero has reasons of his own for helping the runaway princess. He believes that sacrificing her is the key to saving his own people from certain doom. The fantasy world for this story has been floating around in my head for three or four years now.  I have been reluctant to really start writing on this one, and I’m not sure if it’s because I don’t have the story line solidified yet, or if it’s because I’m having too much fun musing over all of the possible directions I could take it.  Once I start writing, I lock things down and the playground in my head loses some of its adventuresome qualities.


So now, I need to decide what to write. And then strategize my November.  It looks like I will have a week of business travel to work around.  That week should include two travel days where, battery permitting, I can write many words on the plane.  But the rest of the week may be a wash depending on how stressful my days become.  Plus Thanksgiving.  It can be done. I’ve done it before. The travel may end up boosting my writing, because I won’t be bogged down by housework and the distractions of the real world.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Option: Failure

I have declared failure on NaNoWriMo for this year. I didn't even get close, By not even close, I mean I've written less than 16,000 words.

Life in November sucked. Instead of putting in extra hours writing, I had to put in extra hours at the day job. So many hours that I actually bumped into my upper limit (crazy timekeeping system won't let a "part-time" person record more than 40 hours in a week). Funny, but the only "extra" time I got to myself to write was on the days where I came to work late so that I wouldn't accidentally work too long and end up volunteering my time. The job is important for a variety of reasons, but I won't do it for free. There were a couple of other issues around the house that sapped all the creative energy right out of me during much of the time I wasn't at work.

By the time Thanksgiving came around, I was at about 13,000 words. I was off work all week because my oldest gets an entire week off from school every Thanksgiving. I could have made the decision to plop her in front of the computer, the TV, the Wii, or sent her to play Barbies for several hours each day so I could write. Instead, I let my mom-guilt decide for me and not only had a 6-year old home with me, but her (very active and tricksy) 3-year old brother too. We had a great time going to the St. Louis Science Center, and I got the kids to help clean house (honestly, I did...Grandma's visits makes for great motivation). We hosted T-day dinner at our house and I got to spend a day in the kitchen happily cooking with my Mom and baby sister for company (and for extra hands with either the food or the kiddos). The week was really quite nice, as long as I ignored the whining from my characters about why I wasn't spending any quality time with *them*.
 
I haven't yet put my two manuscript pieces together (my NaNo work was in a separate file for record-keeping), but I think I am at around 30-40,000 words total on that book (out of a projected 90-120k words...yep, it's a long one, by design). Not bad for a yearly total, especially as I wrote 25,000 of my contemporary manuscript this year and did a massive editing job on my sci fi. And I have fragments of other stuff in progress (including a "short" story that might end up as a full manuscript at the rate it's going).
2010 won't have been a total failure as far as writing goes. Not by a long shot. It was just November that kicked my butt.

Monday, November 15, 2010

#NaNoWriMo 11/15/2010

11008 / 50000
Not even close to the halfway mark word-wise, even though I"m at the halfway point of the schedule. And I'm full of really good excuses, like work and family and sleep. Maybe this week I'll stay on track better.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

#NaNoWriMo 11/13/2010

10,195 / 50,000

I actually made my quota for the day. Just over 1700 words. Of course, according to my spreadsheet I have to write over 2300 words a day, every day, for the rest of November left to meet my goal. So technically I did not meet my quota. But I still have hope. I have a week of staycation coming, and I have grand plans of pulling double-headers those days.

Quit laughing.

Friday, November 12, 2010

#NaNoWriMo 11/12/2010

8487 / 50000
I'm getting there. But at this rate I have like 2600 words per day to write from now until the finish to meet my goal. My current pace is closer to 1200 words on days where I actually write.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

#NaNoWriMo 11/11/2010

7143 / 50000

I'm almost exactly a week behind in word count. I think I've missed almost a week's worth of writing days. Still, progress is progress.

Monday, November 8, 2010

#NaNoWriMo Update

4674 / 50000.

Still pitiful. And it's a good thing I'm already mostly reclined in bed, because I'm about to fall asleep at the keyboard.

Good night and happy typing!

Sunday, November 7, 2010

#NaNoWriMo Update

4127 Words. That's my total wordcount, not today's total. Sucky, I know.

Statistically, I should be over 10,000 by now. But according to my spreadsheet, I only have about 2000 a day from now till the end to make up for lost time.

This past week was rough, so we'll see how the rest of the month goes. Monday was perfect. Tuesday I wrote nothing as I was preparing for critique group Wednesday night, and Wednesday was out also. Thursday and Friday I managed to lose any hope of writing time due to annoyances with work (and meetings that get scheduled when I'm supposed to have already left for the day, and kids tumbling classes that get cancelled at the last minute and take over my writing time).

I hope I don't whine with every NaNo post, but its a common theme for me lately :) I tend to fit my writing into the crumbs and crusts left behind after my day job and my kids have eaten their fill of me. And it seems that everyone has been hungrier than usual.

I still have hope. If I manage to write every night before bed, and do better about sneaking away on a weekend, and actually get a day off (or at least a few hours) when I'm due one, then I ought to be able to catch up.

Goodness knows I have enough story queued up behind these fingerprints bursting to come out.

And now, off to bed.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Focus and finish

Some of the buzzwords floating around the day job lately have to do with working efficiently. "Focus and finish" has to do with not getting yourself distracted. Switching between different tasks too often can make you a very unproductive worker.  Its true for us as writers, too.

Yes, you heard me. *grumble grumble*. Losing focus and being distracted is not efficient for a writer.  And yes, I'm the queen of the distraction.

What all am I distracted with at the moment?  Well, there's NaNoWriMo, where I am attempting to write 50,000 words in the middle of my longest work in progress. It's a fantasy romance, possibly an epic fantasy romance. Before my NaNo'ing, I had about 15,000 words.  Yesterday I added another 1800. Well, I made a brand new file just for NaNo and it has 1800 words.  Yay me. I chose continuing existing work rather than starting something new. Yay me, again.

Today, not so focused. I'm way off track because of cleanup work for our chapter contest. I was helping to coordinate one division and entered two others.  And after I got done checking for failed emails and forwarding judge thank-you's, I looked at my scores from the other divisions. Talk about distracting.

I entered Leap with a new beginning, my NaNoWriMo WIP Unbreakable, and my contemporary series.  Apparently I made Leap worse with its new start. Joy.  Unbreakable was a bit of a heartbreaker--once I sorted the scoregrid (they send it out with anonymous scores so you can see how you rank), I was fourth. Fourth. This, for the record, is the second contest this year where I've been 4th.  Not even a finalist, but close enough to really annoy me. I don't have my scores on Helmut and Claire's story, but I'm not quite as interested in that one.

The worst distraction is the fact that I'm signed up to read at our chapter crit group tomorrow night. And I don't have anything ready. I have this lovely beginning to a new contemporary romance all started, and I thought I would write it for NaNo, so I should easily have 10-15 pages by now. I've got 5 if I really stretch the margins and I can't get a handle on the hero.  And I've been futzing around for an hour now and managed to write about 50 new words.

So, no NaNo progress tonight, or probably tomorrow either. No NaNo cheating progress either. I'll be lucky to write the basic daily ration on Thursday and Friday, so not counting on catching up. Which means I'm like a week behind by the time week 1 is up.  Joy.

And now, back to focusing and finishing something. For now, I've got to choose 15 good pages of some writing (preferably my own) and print.

Monday, October 25, 2010

@NaNoWriMo

I am probably crazy. No I am definitely crazy. And I better be super nice to my husband (when I have the time). Because I'm going to attempt NaNoWriMo again this year.

Anyone else?

I'm britelord, in case you need a writing buddy :)

Now the trick is to choose just one story idea.

Monday, October 19, 2009

NaNo: It's a verb

Are you NaNo'ing?

I feel kind of torn this year. I'm not planning to participate in NaNoWriMo. Yes,
that's a mouthful. So I'm verbifying it. I'm not NaNo'ing this year. Just add it
to the dictionary and get over it. And add "verbify" while you're at it :) Ahem.

I've done NaNo (and won) the past two years in a row. It was actually the motivator
for starting and "finishing" my first book. I use the quotes because I've written
at least three separate endings for that first book, and have made a couple of
rather thorough edits to it since the first time I "finished" it. And I have half
an idea for a further edit that would be rather significant (changing wordcount, and
hacking apart the entire beginning). Not sure if I'll ever do that.

I can't seem to stay on topic this morning, can I? Well, therein lies my problem
with NaNo this year. I have three WIPs. Three! One that I started almost a year
and a half ago--a romantic suspense. Love the idea, love the characters. Paused it
to start NaNo last year. The second one is last year's NaNo book--Leap, my sci fi.
Its not done. But its sooo close. And I'm closing in on being able to finish it.
Really! Number 3 is the book I never thought I'd actually write, and started as a
lark, by writing a single scene. On this blog, no less. And here I am, closing in
on 40% completion.

So, it's Mid-October, and I have on my plate about 20,000 words left to write on
last year's NaNo book. And 30,000 more on my contemporary category-length. And,
say, 85,000 of 90,000 (or perhaps 50,000 of 55,000, depending on where I take it) on
my suspense. So, should I scrap it all and start a new book for NaNo?

Um, no. I think that would be bad, bad, bad.

And, did I mention that my family is taking a vacation in November? Going for a
week. To the beach. Not even to visit family. I'm reveling in the selfishness of
daring such a thing during the Holiday Season. We are driving to our destination,
and it is entirely plausible that I'll be able to crank out a few thousand words in
the car each way. But I'm thinking my hubby will be annoyed with me for holing up
in the hotel room writing alone while he's with the kids.

So, my official participation in NaNo is out.

But I'm going to try to finish both Leap and my category romance by the end of
November. Starting now. Maybe I'll even start tracking daily word counts. 50,000
between October 19 and November 30. NOT NaNo. But it will be a stretch for me.

I'm thrilled to cheer on everyone else who's doing it for real!

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Carnage

The carnage isn't as bad as I feared. Yet. I removed a couple of chapters from my WIP that I had written during NaNo, and later decided to toss. I wanted them to count towards my word count, so I'd left them in place :) I was afraid that I'd loose 10,000 or more words, but it only came in around 5k.

Now, I need to get moving forward again. I've had a nice week and a half long break, between NaNo recovery, critique group, and spending the weekend out of town. I also have plenty of editing to do on the sections that I read in the crit group.

Some of the comments were interesting. One was about how some of my word choices gave the piece almost a historical voice, not a contemporary one. I'm not sure that I'll be changing that. I don't think it bothers me for it to sound a little anachronistic, and depending on which POV I'm in, it is supposed to sound stiff and formal. Like the words have been translated by-the-book from another language, which in a way, for that character, they are.

Several of the sections that got repeatedly mentioned just felt funny when I read them out loud. So, overall, I concur with a lot of the feedback. Don't know when I'll get around to changing it though. Soon, maybe.

I still have no working title for my book.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

The last word on NaNo (for now)

I almost forgot: I (somehow) did NaNo without a single visit to Starbucks. Not my intention at all, really.

I did have one cup of Starbucks coffee before the November MORWA meeting, but it was Starbucks from a Barnes and Noble, and I spent my meager 20 minutes of "writing time" ordering a new battery for my laptop (as the old one was dead dead dead). And I know I had one peppermint mocha, but it wasn't related to writing.

I don't know if this is a good trend or bad. A little sugar buzz would probably have helped some nights, but I relied on Halloween candy for that (the kids are now out of all cinnamon-flavored hard candies). What it did mean is that I didn't manage to flex any time at work to leave early and write in the afternoon. I missed that.

And now, a peppermint mocha sounds really good.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

In Summary

NaNoWriMo kicked my butt. It was harder this year. Much harder.

Last year, I had an idea, and just started writing. I hadn’t thought much about POV, or conflict, or anything else. I just felt my way through the process. I picked up a couple of books on writing during that month, and I know that they helped. Instinctively, I started keeping to one POV at a time, and the scenese definitely improved as I went. I did a lot of cutting and editing later on. A LOT.

Last year, I had more time. With a breastfeeding baby under 1, plus a 3 year old and a 3-day-a-week job, you’d think I wouldn’t. But I had naptimes, and after bedtime. And I was already used to sleep deprivation.

This year, I have RWA, which ate 2 of my writing days (Saturday meeting and a Wednesday crit group). I had an extra day of work every week, plus encouraged overtime at work. I was used to crashing by 10, and my 1.5 year old and 4 year old keep pushing their bedtimes back. And, because I knew what I was doing, I was more fearful about how it would turn out.

I probably only wrote on about 20 of the 30 days in November. I was able to crank out lots of words per session, luckily, averaging over 1000 words an hour. I wrote myself into a corner once and stalled out for a day (a day off work no less, which should have been super-productive!). When I restarted, it began with “Starting over. The last two chapters never happened.” So, probably 7-10,000 words will hit the chopping block soon (maybe even tonight). Several nights, I typed until I was nodding off at the keyboard (literally)…it should be fun to see whether I ended those scenes with complete sentences or not.

By Sunday night, I had 46,500 words. I didn’t get to my laptop until almost 9pm. Thank heaven for high school typing class, because I cranked out 3500 in 2.5 hours! And then NaNo’s website tried to tell me I was 100 words short. So I typed another 100 words. And then it told me I was out of time. Except my clock said 11:40. Guess I was in the wrong time zone.

The end result is, I have maybe 1/3-2/5 of a first draft of a novel. I’m still “Sweating” for another 40 days or so, and hopefully I’ll have 80-90000 words in a first draft by then. Like my first novel, don’t know if this one could ever sell. But it’s fun to write so far. And I have a bit more critique group support for my edits on this one.

Would I do this again next year? Maybe. November is hard. I like the idea of the June SocWriMo (or whatever it is called). We’ll see.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Do teeth have skin?


Notes:
1. NaNoWriMo's automatic counter under-counted my entry by at least 100 words the first time through. It did that to me last year too.
2. I'm tired. And I'm not writing tomorrow
3. Tomorrow's my only day off because I have to do a little editing on Tuesday for a Wednesday night critique group meeting. I'm not sure whether I'm excited or scared to go back and read the first few pages that I wrote a month ago.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Apparently my laptop is incapable of ripping CD's and running Word at the same time. I've been trying to do a little writing this morning (extra day off work!) before heading to my kid's daycare for their Thanksgiving lunch (which is, annoyingly, a traditional turkey dinner...why couldn't they serve tacos or something different!).

I'm still loading my iPod. We don't have that extensive of a music collection, and I think I'd only managed to rip about half of it before I stopped last spring. Today, I've got the box of Christmas CD's (proably 20 of them...). Except that the cd player or iTunes keeps Word from responding. I type fast, and it's frustrating to lose 6 out of every 20 letters that I type because the computer was just too darned slow to follow me :P

So much for doubling upon my word count today. Still, I ought to have some time after lunch (I'm leaving the kids there...they have nap time right after lunch anyway...why not let them nap there and then pick them up). Maybe I can at least get in my 2000 words so I don't have to stay up all night after making roll dough, pies, and starting to brine the turkey.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Seeing Stars

My current work in progress is fun. And exhausting. It's a paranormal romance. A sci-fi paranormal. Yep, funky alien sex. Well, eventually. The characters aren't quite there yet :)

So far, though, there's been plenty of action of the suspenseful kind. And, of course, one kiss. I'm not sure you could claim to write a romance, and make it over 1/3 of the way without that first kiss. Maybe in an inspirational christian?

Anyway, I've written so much action over the past week, that now my characters are able to take a breather. And I'm getting a little stalled out on the plot. Not really, because I know a couple more big events that have to happen. I'm just not sure how to get there from here. Yet.

It's funny, I've always claimed that I can't just write sequentially, and yet, I'm 35,000 words in, all sequential. I think that's my problem. Tonight, I'm going to have to write myself a note ("They talk, more flirting, yada yada"), and then jump into the next big plot point so that I can keep moving.

I'm not horribly far off of the NaNo pace of about 1700 words a day. But I'm behind by one or two days. So, in order to claim a new icon for my sidebar, I'm going to have to double up one or two days this week. Or go with a lot less sleep one of these nights. Hopefully, I can squeeze a little extra writing time in around pie-making and turkey brining (seriously, you should try it...makes a very juicy turkey...but I guess that's a post for my other blog).

Oh yeah, and my book still has no title. My working file is even named "unnamed alien paranormal.doc". Will have to work on that...

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Falling slowly off the wagon

I haven't quite landed on my rump in the dirt, but I think I'm hanging on by a thread. The NaNoWriMo wagon, that is. I'm not out yet, just behind. When I get a chance to sit and write, like tonight, I pump out 1500-1800 words in 1-1.5 hours. But life keeps intervening, and I can't write every day. And, unlike last year when I worked fewer hours (and had more scheduled kid nap times to take advantage of), I don't get to double-up on my writing time on any days.

Yikes. Well, I'm still in the running. I'm not out yet. As of tonight, I'm down about 4000 words from plan, an amount I could fix in about 3 hours. We're home for Thanksgiving, and I hope to be able to squeeze a couple of extra sessions over that weekend. And, if I don't quite make 50k by November 30th, I'm still on for 90 by January 26th(?) for 70 Days of Sweat.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Sunday distractions

From Becoming Jane:

"Mrs. Austen: JANE!
Lady Gresham: What is she doing?
Mr. Wisley: Writing.
Lady Gresham: Can anything be done about it?

Loved it!
I also loved the brief cameo from Colin Firth (and possibly Jennifer Ehle, I'm not sure...the glimpse was brief!).
Ok, break time over. I have about 5000 words to crank out before I'm caught up on NaNo

Monday, November 3, 2008

NaNoWriMo 08: Day 3

I have been completely unable to contact www.nanowrimo.org since November 1st. So, my only page count update is here on my blog. Hopefully soon, some of the glut of people will slow down on updating their word counts and let the rest of us in. Not bad--5667 by the end of day 3. I'm on track, though I know I'll have at least one day this week of no writing....only about 1000 extra words to catch up on to make up for that..