Thursday, November 30, 2006

Nanowrimo Memento

November is just about over, so now is as good a time as any to write up my Nanowrimo-Memento. Overall, it was a great feeling to finish and “win” by writing 50K words in 30 days. The wet blanket of the whole thing is that I didn’t end up with much that was salvageable. I intend to post excerpts from my mess of a novel soon and include plenty of pokes and prods at myself. I’m definitely no Hemingway, Adams, nor Trout.

Here are some tips for trying your own Nanowrimo next November. (Or, “Hey Eric, do this next year.”)

In advance, come up with a single, cohesive idea for a narrative including setting and characters.

You would think this would have been an obvious step, but I avoided it and it cost me the opportunity to have something that could one day be a readable story. In the past, I’ve liked my stream-of-conscious writing style best, and I was excited to see what would pop out of my head this month. It turns out that I need willy-nilly writing and structured writing in more equal portions to produce something that is readable.

Research your setting before you start this whole thing.

It’s not really important to have all the names and details of cars and guns and cities, etc. ahead of time, but it can be fun to have that stuff handy and throw it in when it comes up. It makes you feel like you’re actually writing something legit, that might actually take a reader on a believable journey through something that you created. However, don’t do a single bit of research while you’re in the middle of a writing session. Google is not your friend during writing, and it will just send you on rabbit trails that take up your session time. I confess, I used Thesaurus.com a lot. My vocabulary is not nearly as … um … what’s the word … you know, the one that means “big”… as I once thought. But that was quick; I didn’t dwell too long on finding the “perfect” word. Just “the” word.

Tell a lot of friends that you’re doing it.

I had four friends in particular who took the time to ask about it. If not for that feeling of accountability, I can remember at least two times when I would have quit. Ed and Hope sent email and posted on my blog. Mike checked out my word-count, asking why it was so low, every day. Jen was an ever-present source of encouragement. She’s really good at making you feel like you can do anything.

So tell people that you’re going to try writing a 50,000 word story in 30 days and then post your word count somewhere where they can check on you.

Visit the website often. Read and Post.

Set aside time before beginning a writing session to check out the forums. The community that has been built for this task is incredibly positive and supportive. When I got into the 20Ks and 30Ks, the agony I felt when I sat down at my computer desk to write evaporated once I checked in at some of my favorite groups. For me, these were

* Reaching 50,000
* Horror
* Science Fiction
* Fantasy
* Columbus OH
* Writing 101
* Newbies
* Nanowrimo Ate My Soul

I had some good responses to a few of my posts, and that felt great. I also doled out encouraging words as much as I could. That felt good, too.

Find the right schedule, including time of day and length of sessions.

I started in the early mornings. Bad idea. Not only does the brain not work in the morning, but I could never get into the “mood” of the creepy story I was trying to write. By the end of the month, I was writing at all times of the day, but I wrote best at night. This was not merely a “mood” thing, either. For some reason, I just had better ideas at night, and felt more comfortable.

A post in the forums explained a process of writing in 15 minute bursts, and that worked well for me. Next year, I’ll write for 15 minutes at a time, multiple times each night. I’ll probably try that with my other projects, too. It’s important to experiment with different times until you know what’s right for you. Have enough self-awareness to know when a certain time of day is just wrong, (and don’t listen to your self-doubting shoulder-demon who says that you’re just being lazy because you don’t want to get up at 5:00 in the AM.)

Stick with the original idea.

My level of enthusiasm for projects ebbs and flows. Bluntly, I’m fickle. So, when the going got rough on Story A, I switched to Story B. (Then to Stories C through F.) This left me with fragments of unfinished stories that I, in such a lame manner, incorporated into Story A. If there’s a cloud over my parade, it’s this. I really wanted to have a story that I could illustrate throughout the year and publish to the web, but I’m no closer to that than I was when I started this. Instead, I wish I had pushed through and found the thing that would spark my interest in Story A and developed it further. That’s what I’ll do in 11/07.

If you have any hopes of having something that can be edited into a form that others will want to read, don’t stray. You probably won’t have time to finish multiple stories anyway.

I’ll see if I can scrape out some samples from the novel to illustrate some of these points and to provide you with some entertainment at my expense.

posted by Eric at 9:03 pm • Filed under: writing  

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Tuesday, November 28, 2006

50,036

nanowrimo certificate

and my purple bar (on a post from the forums):

purple bar

More about the experience soon. For now …

*bask*

*bask bask*

*sigh*

posted by Eric at 10:38 pm • Filed under: writing  

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Sunday, November 26, 2006

The fifteen minute burst method

incrediblesOn the forums, someone posted a method for sprinting towards the goal line and achieving nanowrimo glory.

1. Commit. (No really! Decide once again to finish.)

2. Write for 15 minutes. Ramble, coast, pad out scenes, whatever. Don’t stop and definitely don’t think about it. Just typey-type until your fingers get warm and numb.

3. Stop after 15 minutes and take a break of at least 15 minutes. The break is important. Go hang out with the cat or watch TV or both.

4. Repeat! Try for 200 words per session, and do it as often as you can.

So last night and today, I watched football games and wrote. My word count for each 15 minute session varied between 551 and 893 words. For some reason, it’s just easier at night, so last night I was storming through.

Anyway, I pushed my way into 43K, and now my progress page says “with 5 days left, expected to finish in 5 days.” This is much better than being expected to finish in, say 12 days with 5 days left. I saw that on Friday.

Thursday, we’re done!

posted by Eric at 9:27 pm • Filed under: writing  

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Saturday, November 18, 2006

Glimbit now belongs to rock

Imagine my joy this morning when I saw that Tenacious D has commandeered my website and rocked it.
Rock owns Glimbit

(Tenacious D, a comedy-flavored rock band, has a new movie coming out. Part of their promo website lets you give a website a rock overhaul. Special thanks to coworker Jamiroquai for taking Glimbit to funky town.)

posted by Eric at 9:13 am • Filed under: web-designing  

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Monday, November 13, 2006

15K down, 35K to go.

I’m about to start playing really dirty with this writing game. I’ve had a few days off and in that time, I started to think about some different stories, (the usual: spaceships, pirates, monsters, minor prophets of the old testament.) Of course, it’s too late to start over and write one of these other ideas, isn’t it?

Well, not if you cheat. It seems that, in a library setting, you can have a character pick up any book you can imagine, and if you describe what they’re reading, well, before you know it, you’re writing that scifi action adventure you’ve been thinking about, or that tortured monster with a human soul story, or that one where the minor prophet teleports through time to convince modern-day scholars that he was really a major prophet. Okay, I made that last one up just now, but it’s probably the best idea.

So, there’s still a chance I could make 50K in 17 days, but this thing is going to be all over the place.

My NaNoWriMo Progress

posted by Eric at 7:46 am • Filed under: writing  

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Tuesday, November 7, 2006

Day Seven is When It Got Good

National Novel Writing Month is here to stay, at least for 23 more days. The past few days were like a trip down Cooke road, just west of High Street. (It’s hilly. Lots of ups and downs.) Sunday and Monday morning, I really didn’t know what to write, nor did I know where I was going with the story. I wrote a quick post to the nanowrimo forums which said my tagline was “Ghosts turn a library into a disco of fire and soulstealing.” What the crap is that?! That, my friends, is what happens when I make stuff up. I beg, borrow and steal from my surroundings, in this case “Danger! High Voltage” by Electric Six, and see if anything comes from it. I wasn’t really putting anything together, even from such an inspiring tagline.

Then the self-doubt crept in and I considered, albeit briefly, ceasing this silly activity.

But somewhere along the way yesterday as I haunted the halls of my office building, I got an idea that could build off of what I already wrote. Actually, it just gives some structure, a beginning, middle and ending. It also allows me to introduce some characters I was working on at this time last year, some little demonic heroes who are really easy to write.

So I’m back on track, and this morning while I was writing, I felt like I was there, watching something happen and just recording it. It was fun and there’s more fun to follow, I think.

(Sorry for the lack of detail regarding the story. More to come.)

posted by Eric at 8:39 am • Filed under: writing  

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Friday, November 3, 2006

5 AM Shuffle: Day 3 of NaNoWriMo

Wake up, make some coffee, pet the cat. Enjoy the silence and the dark morning sky.

chicken walking
My participation in NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) is bringing me great happiness and an abundance of absurdity. Losing myself in the activity of writing for several hours each morning, while making me somewhat nutty, has triggered some spark of new thought. It’s neat.

The first day went slowly. I think I wrote 600 words, each one pulled kicking and screaming from my brain. On the second day of writing, I scrapped them and started over. When I understand why I did that, I’ll try to explain it. I’m glad I restarted, because it’s a lot easier now.

I’m about 1600 words off schedule, as of this post, which represents about three hours at the pace I’m going. I should be able to catch up this weekend.

The characters are taking shape. The three I’ve introduced so far are taken from folks I’ve known, along with the setting. The narrative spends a lot of time in the characters’ heads, which I know will have to change if I want to write some action-driven scenes of a more humor/horror genre.

posted by Eric at 8:50 am • Filed under: writing  

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