Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Slowing the Pace

Oh, how it pains me to write this blog entry. I am happy for all that is happening in other parts of my life, yet I am sad for what this will mean for my novel writing.

I am not quitting. I will continue to write when I can. "When I can" being the operative phrase here. 

I have been offered the chance to write a book. A non-fiction book. It's a very short deadline, which means that while I'll still be writing articles by day, I'll be working on this book by night. I'm going to try and keep at the novel, but the daily goal of 800 words a day seems almost impossible when I consider that I have to write at a pace of 2,000 words a day in order to finish the book on time. I've also got at least four articles due before the end of the month. 

I haven't lost the passion for my novel, and I'm pretty sure I'm going to continue writing it, even if it's at a slower pace. But that's the point of my post, I guess-- a slower pace. I can't update three times a day like I have been doing in the past. 

So, until I see you again-- today, tomorrow, a week from now, who knows?-- happy writing. Keep those words flowing. 

I'll be back with a progress report soon. 

Sunday, January 11, 2009

On a Roll

Aren't I Ms. Productive today. Before 12 p.m., and I've already written over 2,400 words. That, my friends, is what I like to call a comeback. 

Not that I'm bragging or anything. 

I'm so tired. I've been working all night (doing the night shifts again), so I'm off to bed. See you tomorrow!



Saturday, January 10, 2009

Readers will judge the quality, not the time taken

Despite my negativity, I've finished my words for the day. Persistence, I tell ya. 

I think I'll be okay now going forward. The writing every day habit, the 800 words a day habit, is a good one. It keeps those fiction muscles flexed, and it makes me feel confident that I can go on. 

I'm currently reading The Time Traveler's Wife, by Audrey Niffenegger. Her first novel. A brilliant, brilliant piece of work. I'm amazed that this is actually her first novel. What a great concept. If you've been reading this blog from the beginning, you'll know that I love alternate realities. I love concepts such as time travel and lives split apart. My own novel is not time travel, but it is lives split apart into different worlds. Obviously, I'm reading TTTW and feeling absolutely and utterly talentless. 

I went to Niffenegger's site, however, so that I could torture myself a bit more, and read through her bio. Do you know how long it took her to write this novel? Four and a half years. She worked on it regularly during weekends, at night, and on holidays. She has a day job, after all. 

Four and a half years. For a novel as complex and wonderful as this? I'm not surprised. My novel is not as complex, but that time period gives me hope. 

It's not about the time you take to write it. It's about the quality of the work. There's no rush. As long as I keep at it, day after day, every day. 

So far, so good. 


Paralyzing Fear

I do know better. I may have had a break of a month, but before that I was writing fiction daily. Yet, I'm coming back to my work extremely agitated and nervous. 

I'm scared. I'm scared that it's not good enough, I'm scared that I don't know what the heck I'm doing, I'm scared that I'm going to be working on this novel for the next ten years without having a clue, and I'm scared that I'm not talentless.

Ah, the usual paralyzing fear. 

Except that I'm determined not to let it stand in my way this time. I've given up before. I've tried and failed. I have to remember that I have nothing to lose, really. If this one doesn't work out, I can go back to a career that I already have, knowing that I tried. 

But, to be fair, what's the reason that it wouldn't work out? There's always editing, there's always rewriting. I, a professional writer, should know that. 

So it might take two years, five years, ten years. Is that so bad?



Revisiting

In order to get back into my story again, I decided to read what I'd already written.

Oh my.

I was scared going in because I knew that I haven't exactly written flawless prose and there's a lot that's going to make the perfectionist part of my brain want to run to the nearest toilet bowl and throw up repeatedly.

But I survived. And the good news is that it's not bad. I didn't immediately want to watch re-runs of Gilmore Girls and eat nachos.

Oh, but there's so much work to do still. I'm only just getting into the meat of the story. I think I have a somewhat vague idea now, a better one than I did before, of what exactly I'd like this story to be. I'm cutting out the travel that I mentioned earlier. Me thinks that's a whole other book, so I'm not going to get into that.

You have no idea what I'm talking about, do you? Maybe I should start sharing a little bit of the story here as well. Not details, but maybe names of characters or small things like that, which might make this rambling journal a little bit more interesting.

We'll see.

I can't say I have renewed passion for this work again. But I'm still excited about it. Enough to continue down this path and keep going on those 800 words.

They're just coming a little slower today.



I is Back

Holy cow, that was a long vacation, wasn't it?

I've been back to work for the last one week, but it's only now that I'm getting to fiction writing again. There was a lot to catch up on. 

How were your holidays?

I haven't set any major new goals or resolutions this year when it comes to my fiction writing. The previous goals still stand-- 800 words a day, every day, until the first draft is finished. Then, I'll go back and revise. If I can have a finished, ready-to-submit novel by the end of this year, I'll have achieved my goals. 

In the month that I've been away from the writing, I've had some ideas and tangents that could possibly be explored, but for the most part, I've found that I'm somewhat disconnected from the story. 

Today or tomorrow, whenever time permits, I'm going to give it a read-through, see what scenes I have, and maybe organize them on index cards. I'm at a point in the novel that I don't really know where I'm going and what blanks I've left unfilled, so I need to fill those in for the sake of the story and what's to come. I've forgotten a large part of what I wrote. 

It's time to revisit. 354 words so far today. It's taking a lot more effort to get back into the writing. Oh, why did I ever stop?