This is topic Nanowrimo 2009 in forum Hatrack Groups at Hatrack River Writers Workshop.


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Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Feel free to add yourself to this list if I have missed you.

This is a place to tell us your word count, your horror stories, your success stories, get advice, give advice...whatever you need to get you through. The only requirement I can think of is that you need to be insane enough to think you can write a book during the month of November. If you haven't done it before, it is so much fun!! Here is the link:

www.nanowrimo.org

When you are ready, let us know something about what you are going to be writing--genre, synopsis, or lack thereof...


[This message has been edited by Unwritten (edited November 02, 2009).]
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Who is outlining their stories, and who is free-styling? I'll admit, I've outlined nearly ever facet of the story thus far (except closer to the end), but that may be due to eagerness to get started.
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
My Page: http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/501903

Title: Gadzooks!

Synopsis: A small interstellar delivery company gets hired to make a far flung, handle with care delivery on the other side of the galaxy. It's a small, 'can't believe it's still flying' ship with an oddball crew. There are space pirates, space anomalies, quixotic robots, poker games, horny plant life, anti-technology rebels, etc. and the hilarity ensues.

I have the story and the characters outlined to a considerable degree. I have never outlined something this much in my life and yet I have no idea exactly what I'm going to write.

[This message has been edited by genevive42 (edited October 28, 2009).]
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Link: http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/537180

Title: Four of Clubs

Synopsis: Part two of fifty-two. Ordered against her will, Elizabeth Wilde must keep her arrangement with the CIA and travel to Mexico to attempt an assassination. The odds are stacked against her, though, as the CIA calls and warns the very criminal they sent Wilde to assassinate...

quote:
There are space pirates, space anomalies, quixotic robots, poker games, horny plant life, anti-technology rebels, etc. and the hilarity ensues.

Quite the variety!

EDIT: fixed mah po' engrish

[This message has been edited by Rhaythe (edited October 28, 2009).]
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
You can find me here

Title: The Saber Rose

Genre: Fantasy/Steampunk

Last year I completely winged it, and I will never ever ever ever do that again. But this year my planning isn't as far along as I would have liked. Oh well. I've still got a couple days, right?!

I can't wait, though! Good luck everyone!
 


Posted by Sunshine (Member # 3701) on :
 
I'm SpokaneSunshine on nanowrimo, and I've only got one "buddy" so you would be doing a good deed to add me to your list!

I was detoured during last year's nano with a dying niece and other crazy events, so I'll just start the one I planned last year.

Title: Ding Dong, We're Dead
Genre: Youth - Paranormal

I have a partial outline from last year, but I will probably stray from it since I've had an entire year for the story to percolate in the back of my mind.

[This message has been edited by Sunshine (edited October 28, 2009).]
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Bellian's Journey (not the final title) Heroic Fantasy

I've got mine outlined and the world is solidly built. My synopsis can be found on my Nano page below.

What I have to do is go through the plot and increase the stakes at the right points before Sunday, Nov. 1st.

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/511822

Good luck to you all!

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited October 28, 2009).]
 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
I'm winging it.

I know, I'm dumb to do that, but I want to force my creativity and see what happens.

If what happens is nothing, luckily I do have several novel ideas on the back burner simmering and bugging me to write them.

I'll just have to see what happens on Nov 2. I'm starting a day late, and I honestly couldn't even tell you a genre, or a single character.

Yup. Really, really dumb idea.

Why am I doing this again?

Pray for me, people. Or at least be my buddy so you can watch me squirm.

~Sheena

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/550719
 


Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Okay, I'm caving and joining in the NaNo fun... with full expectations of failure. I have to write an entire chapter of my dissertation between now and Nov. 11 - akk! - so I'm doing more like NaNoWriHalfMo. But we'll see - I've surprised myself before.

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/550591

Just to make life more interesting than it already is, I'm winging it.

Urban Fantasy - domestic terrorism, spies, & magic - based on something I tried for WoTF then realized I'd started in totally the wrong place.
 


Posted by Sunshine (Member # 3701) on :
 
http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/226507
 
Posted by annepin (Member # 5952) on :
 
Well, I still haven't committed yet, but here's me:
http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/407253

To those who are thinking of winging it--it some ways, I think that's the best way, though maybe the hardest. I almost winged it the first year--I knew where the story was starting and where it was ending, and what the climax was going to be, but not a whole lot in between. The second year I winged it too, and finished wiht 50,000 words, but without a complete novel. Anyway, it pretty exhilirating.


 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
I'm on Nanowrimo.org as KayTi

I added everyone I could figure out. A few of you I couldn't find (LAJD in particular, do you have another Nano handle? I was going on the list in the first post on this thread.)

Title: Working title is Selenium, but I'm currently running a quest on my facebook status to get a better name...I'm horrible with titles. If we're FB friended, have at it. If we're not...well, what are you waiting for? I'm Karen T. Smith, er, um, well, good luck finding me? Or let me know your full name, perhaps it's best not to try to search for a smith?

Genre: mid-grade (younger than YA, about 3rd-8th grade) Science Fiction

Synopsis:
It's days before her 13th birthday, and Brynne is in a race against time. She's on the space ship Selenium, plummeting toward a distant sun. It's up to Brynne and her gamer friends to rescue their colony ship after a sleeping sickness causes everyone over the age of 12 to fall into a deep coma-like sleep. Along the way she must figure out the complexities of the space ship, and the complexities of interacting with her peers, most of whom she prefers to play with in the virtual world rather than steel and silicon. Will she be able to create a cooperative team, save the ship from certain destruction, and figure out the mystery of the sleeping sickness before time runs out?

==
I have done a lot of pre-work on this novel, as I've been running a writing workshop for middle school students at my kids' school for the last 6 weeks, and I've been using the writing exercises as my novel prep time. It's been fantastic. I still don't have a strong idea of what happens in EACH episode/scene/chapter, but I do have a lot of the main arc figured out, a set of characters begun (they need more detailing) and a lot of the backstory identified. I think I'm in pretty good shape, but I should probably put a little more time into the outlining of what happens first, then next, then next.

I have done Nano twice before. The first year I had things figured out to about this level, probably a little less in terms of details about the plot (but those details evolved as I wrote, and I'd spend a little time at the end of each writing session doing some outlining for the NEXT session so I didn't have any writer's block problems.) Last year I did not do much prep at all and I found it MUCH harder to write, though I finished both years and have 55kish novels from them.

I'm hoping to see a difference this year, just in terms of my writing skills and overall writing maturity. Good luck to all of us!!

 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
Oh yeah, remember you asking about the preteen survivability of certain causes of death. Look forward to reading it.

Couldnt find a Karen T. Smith in Chicago on FB
Disregard...found someone minus the T. that looks exactly how I would have pictured you...plus your a member of the FB Hatrack Writers Group so I found you on there.

[This message has been edited by Dark Warrior (edited October 29, 2009).]
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Title: ???

Genre: YA fantasy

Synopsis: A bit murkier. I was going to spend the last 2 weeks of November storybuilding, but the novel I was editing has taken over my life.

My idea for Nanowrimo came from the first sentence challenge here on Hatrack earlier this year. An obese girl realizes that her recently married sister is sending her letters in code. When she can't get her parents to see the danger, she journeys to find her brother who is a soldier. The story will be about her learning to push past her limits to discover her own potential. It will have my trademark romance in it--if I can figure out how to add it without sending the message that only beautiful people can be loved. I have a few ideas.

I'd love a few more Hatrack friends on facebook too. I'm Melanie Sweat Crouse.

[This message has been edited by Unwritten (edited October 29, 2009).]
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
I am lesliedow on nano http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/306614


Title: (working title) San Francisco (I know it sucks but it's a working title)

Genre: Fantasy? Time Travel? (is that a genre?)

Synopsis:
Consula Angelina Isadore "Connie" Ramirez never considered herself a hero before she crawled back into her burning house during the 1991 Oakland hills firestorm. But when she saw the figure twisting in the flames, it was the only thing she could do. Connie, born of an old but faded San Francisco family, grew up on tales of brave and noble ancestors, but that was long ago.

The rescue became a journey when the firestorm blew her across time and space. She emerged in December 1849 San Francisco. Alone, she was pulled out of the flames of the Denison’s Exchange fire to become an instant sensation. Connie has been torn away from her home and everyone she loves including her young daughter, Angela. Now she must figure out how to get home.

I started planning this novel last spring during a Liberty Hall challenge called MidSommer Madness. This was in part a response to my totally unplanned nano work last year. I did write 50K words....65K actually. But I am still terrified to even look at the file on my computer. Ewwwwww! Maybe on Halloween! It would be a fright!

Leslie

[This message has been edited by LAJD (edited October 29, 2009).]

[This message has been edited by LAJD (edited October 29, 2009).]
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
So, I'd like to make a tools plug here. Any Mac people in the room might want to check out Scrivener. http://www.literatureandlatte.com/nanowrimo.html .

It is a writing/project mgmt tool that I now find nearly indispensable. They are offering a Nano trial that goes through the 7th of December. So you could use Scrivener to write and organize your nano work and then export into another format if you don't want to buy Scrivener.

I liken Scrivener to the tools that software engineers use to write code. It allows you to organize smaller text files inside a framework and then compile only the parts that you want in the final output. If you want to get really fancy you can hook it up to subversion on the back end or run it very simply on your macbook, like I do.

You have all your research, notes, drafts etc at various levels of detail. I'm not doing the best job of explaining this, but think about it this way. Instead of hunting all over your filesystem for that image of the map of eastern Elbonia where the great battle happens, that map becomes part of your document-you see it right there when you write that scene-but it is not exported as your final draft.

I no longer write at all in word and only free write in a wiki. It may have helped me last year, which I why I mention it.

Leslie

[This message has been edited by LAJD (edited October 29, 2009).]
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Does anyone have any good tools they use to help them figure out the magic of a fantasy world? I've added a couple of giants and other magical creatures, but my magical development of this world is sorely lacking so far. And since I'm sure that will spin my story in unexpected directions, I should get on that.
 
Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Oh, dear. I misunderstood, I think. I thought you did it ALL starting November 1. I think that means I am winging it. I have a list of possible title/starts. It makes sense to me to do it YA fiction or fantasy so that's probably what I'll do.

I am 'ribbit' on NaNoWriMo. I am going to have to do this relatively stress free so I am not expecting much. I do love to spin it out, though.

I think I will do it in the first person, too.
 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
I just realized I could finish this thing in a half hour if I just copied and pasted "Hey! This is my nano novel, ain't it so great." 5000 times.

That would get dull though, after about five pages, and a waste of space on my computer. My goal is to have something worth the space when I am finished.


I've figured out what I'm doing.

Shakespeare with Magic {Obvious working title*. Historical Fantasy

Fourteen year old Will Shakespeare finds a demon book that taints every thing he tries to do with it, and takes him on a voyage through his lost three years.

I got the whole thing plotted out. Character interviewed it to pieces, but never actually wrote the story, because I have this sinking feeling that no one really wants to read about a young Shakespeare. I'll try it though for Nano.

I'm giving myself permission to turn off the grammar police, so I might as well give myself permission to turn off the "This is going to be so dumb." police while I'm at it.

~Sheena

 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Leslie - I second the rec for Scrivener. I love it! Much better for my disorganized way of thinking (it only APPEARS disorganized when I try to put it down in vertical format on a document. What I need is the corkboard metaphor on Scrivener that lets me lay things out horizontally and vertically. It's a magical tool!)

Also - Shimiqua, I've read a book by Gail Carson Levine about writing (called Writing Magic, which is a great YA/Mid-grade writing book but has TONS of relevant bits for us old fogies as well) and in it she talks about times where she sits down to write and just writes "I don't feel like writing, I am not in the mood to write" over and over, because it's writing time and she must write.

Those days happen to us sometimes and in my opinion, Nano leaves us the leeway to include them in our word count. It would be better to use the free writing time to just brainstorm the next parts of the novel, but again you should feel free to use that in your word count.

Both previous years I did Nano, I would sometimes brainstorm my next day's writing session when mine was wrapping up before the idea train was completely run out, so I'd jot down where I was headed, reminders to myself about character's motivations and mental states, etc. Those words COUNT! Even if you edit them out in revisions, they still count for nano!
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Unwritten and ScaredyDog, I'm having trouble finding you at NaNo to add to my buddy list, as well as a few others. Would you mind posting your handle or a link?
 
Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
I should be ScardeyDog over there too. I haven't actually logged on over there since signing up, so maybe there's something I haven't done. I'll try to figure it out this weekend.

Working title: Legacy

Genre: YA Fantasy

Synopsis: A teenage girl is having trouble relating to her father in the wake of her mother's death. She finds a journal while moving and slowly gets sucked in to the magical world it describes. Soon she can't distinguish fantasy from reality, and isn't sure she wants to anyway. It's kind of Donnie Darko/Peter Pan inspired. I'm not too clear on what's going to happen... so a little bit of winging it for me.


 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I'm right here

I'm impressed that you found everyone else. I haven't been over there for awhile. I'm putting my editing on the back burner starting now, and I'll use the next 2 days to get in gear for Nano. Yeah.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Yeah, I checked, ScardeyDog you're not coming up with that moniker at NaNo. Hope you get it straightened out.
 
Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/559978

Okay, I'm gonna give this a try even though it scares the crap out of me. I've been working on this story in my head forever so maybe it's time to put it down on paper.

Title: Artifice

Plot synopsis: Jon Smiles, a Fixer, is paid to kill Adam, the A.I. that ushered in the technological singularity that changed the world. Of course, he also ushered in the Second American Civil War, collapsed the world economy and led to the rise of the Corporation States that now run the planet. Jon's never failed to complete a job but how do you kill a target that operates in the cloud?

Now, let's hope that I can flesh that out into at least 50K words and maybe, at the least, have a product I can edit later.
 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
Is anyone else freaking out yet?

 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Totally freaking out. But that may be more from not having anything to write, read or watch until November. I didn't want to start anything that would distract me from plotting my novel, but I think I need an outlet for all this nervous energy.
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Not freaking out, exactly, but struggling mightily to keep from just starting already.... This forcing oneself NOT to write thing is very strange.
 
Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
quote:
Not freaking out, exactly, but struggling mightily to keep from just starting already.... This forcing oneself NOT to write thing is very strange.

Quoted for Truth

[This message has been edited by Rhaythe (edited October 30, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I'm actually giving my brain permission for a couple of days off in preparation for Sunday's start. Tonight I might just play Guitar Hero until the buttons start to blur or I start to channel Jimi.

I will also probably read through my outline and character notes a half a dozen times today and tomorrow too. Not to mention imagining conversations between characters that, even with outlines, I don't have a full grasp on yet. That's usually one of my strong suits so I hope it will come as I start writing. Oh, and it looks like I will be making up most of the tech as I go along.

Uh, oh. Maybe not so much Guitar Hero tonight.

And fellow Americans, don't forget to set your clocks back Sunday morning/Saturday night. That's another hour to write!
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
So what is everyone else doing while they wait? Me, I'm compulsively checking Facebook. I've got all my loudest songs on constant playblack as I clean my house...which I can't keep my mind on for more than a few seconds at a time.

It's been a long time since I had more time than words to type.

[This message has been edited by Unwritten (edited October 30, 2009).]
 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
The other night at work I was thinking through reasons not to do it this year. (I keep talking myself out of it.) But then a weird thing happened, my other brain started countering my arguments. I even argued that I don't have a novel idea ready and then suddenly one rolled out in front of me. This is more or less an exercise for me, but then my only relatively published story was done as such. I'll get all my info up later, but here is my page (which lies empty.)

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/562166/edit/writer_info

I'm chompin' at the bit on this thing.
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
What I like to do, instead of letting the nervous energy get to me, is to find a nice quiet place in my head. In that place I let my MC come out or the any of the supporting characters. I let them find their voice so I know who they are when I get to writing them. I'm prepping but I'm not prepping. I know that sounds a little schizo but it works for me.

Oh, and I do that for all sorts of things. Speeches I may have to give. When I'm angry at a subordinate. When I want to strangle my kids. It's really a great stress reliever and you end up building the universe of your story in your head.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Pyre D, when I click on that link it says that I am not authorized to access that page. Do you want to try another link or give us your handle?
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Just take off the stuff at the end and go to his number

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/562166
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Got it, thanks.
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Well, Pyre Dynasty, you're on the list now, so there's no backing out now.

quote:
I'm putting my editing on the back burner starting now, and I'll use the next 2 days to get in gear for Nano. Yeah.

So far, my "getting in gear" has consisted of panicking that I'm so unprepared. I did name one more character, bringing the total number of characters with names up to 3. My story has quite a bit of travelling in it, so my goal for today is to make a map. I do have a ton of town names rolling around in my head, so that's a plus. I also need to flesh out (and name!) the people and places in the opening chapter so I can hit the ground running.

[This message has been edited by Unwritten (edited October 31, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I love writing villains.

I'm filling out my villain's character sheet and I came up with this line:

"This schism between his desires is what feeds his madness."

And suddenly he makes sense to me and he is at once insane and sympathetic.

This is going to be fun!
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Okay, I think I figured out the general plot line and several of the characters. Start tomorrow!
 
Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
We can all test our characters mary sue score...

http://www.springhole.net/quizzes/marysue.htm

Leslie
 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
Thanks for figuring out my thing, I didn't even look at it, just copied and pasted. (I was kinda running out the door.)
 
Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I am exultant!!! I just finished over 4 thousand words and my family liked it! Bwahahaha! Of course, I don't imagine that I can keep this up but still.

We'll see if they keep being willing to sit and listen to what I've done every day.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Congrats SavantIdiot! Do we have your link? Do you mind sharing it?

I'm hoping for the same but it's a slow start. 11:30 am, 600 words and I'm about to move on to introducing the second character of my ensemble cast. I'm glad it's Sunday. I just wish it weren't such a beautiful day outside.

[This message has been edited by genevive42 (edited November 01, 2009).]
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
YooHoo!!! Go SavantIdiot! I am not yet begun today. Have to shop for a new suitcase for the husband first, but I can't wait.

Leslie

Got both the suitcase and 1700 words today....

[This message has been edited by LAJD (edited November 01, 2009).]
 


Posted by gobi13x (Member # 6837) on :
 
I did it last year, so I will see if I can redo it. I am going to just wing the whole thing this year. I will see how that works.
 
Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Okay, I am adding everyone of you as a buddy. You don't have to accept me. I will write your name into my book as one of the bad guys, though, or someone who dies in a gruesome fashion, if you do not.

Ribbit aka SavantIdiot
http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/542329
 


Posted by Bent Tree (Member # 7777) on :
 
Although I am uncertain that there is something which can disengage my from my chronic procrastination, I figured I would at least give it a chance and set my bar a little lower by using this to write a Young reader novel I have been thinking about, thus increasing the likelehood of me fullfilling this goal. So... away we Go.

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/577669

Untitled as of Now

YR SF

WHat happens when two good-hearted but troublemaking teens from two entirely different planets meet? Well lets just hope the eccentric, six-legged Agilian scientist, Professor Orphington can keep them from starting and interplanetary disturbance.

[This message has been edited by Bent Tree (edited November 01, 2009).]
 


Posted by annepin (Member # 5952) on :
 
Okay, if I'm a gonna do this I better get started, neh? Here goes....
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Food? Why do I have to stop for food? This is going slow enough as is.

Fine. Frozen fish fillets and french fries. Now go write while it's in the oven.

Oh, and did I mention the mariachi band across the street? No, I'm not kidding. At least they're good.

I think it's going to be a late night.
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I hope you guys finish your stories. I am excited just reading about them. Also several of you like the same stuff I like reading. I have to go add Harry Potter, I forgot that one.
 
Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
3700 words on day one. I'm pleased.
 
Posted by ArmadonRK (Member # 8864) on :
 
Hi all, I'm a newly registered member here, although I've been a reader of the boards for a while - it's how I discovered NaNoWriMo in the first place.
I just wanted to throw my name into the fray, and wish everyone good luck!

My Page:
http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/560107

Title: Angels
(tentative, although it hasn't changed in the two years since I created the idea)

Synopsis: In a world of uncertainty and fear people feel powerless in the face of danger that seems ever present. When people with power beyond that of mortal men come into the light of day, some try to band together to change the world for the better. In the face of religious strife, economic frailty, warring nations and global terrorism, even they struggle to make their mark on the world.

The idea came to me as "What would Superman do if there were no supervillains in the world?", although it has changed significantly since then, that is still a good summary of the basic premise.
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
2122 words, just came up with an awesome way to introduce one of the primary forces of conflict, wahoo.

Already have my MC's mom's disapproval running, her introversion established, that she's a good big sister, jealous of the perfect kids at school, and misses an old friend who doesn't play the same video game she does. Feeling like I've accomplished much, after a terrifyingly slow start.
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
4200 words today. That's a record for me. I owe it to someone in my rl writer's group that hosted a write-in at her house.

genevive42 - mariachi band? Wow! Good luck!


 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
I sleep tonight with 6500+ words under my belt.

The quality is OK, but I mostly enjoy seeing the story unfold. I have an outline with over 60 scenes, but my scenes aren't matching up too well as I intended on introducing another POV and it didn't work with the flow.

With NaNo, you have to make quick decisions on story direction.

Congratulations to all those who got started. It took me an hour to work up the gumption to get going (I watched NFL football while I thought.
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
Managed 4200+ words on my first day. My characters are writing themselves and making the story. I can't really judge on how good it is but I'm really happy with my output and I don't even think I'm done writing today. The great thing is I've only introduced 4 characters so far and they've all become interesting to me. I think that's a good sign.

EDIT: I hate when I misspell things.

[This message has been edited by Joseph Forrest (edited November 02, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I got to 3440 words and it took most of my day. I'm finding it a slow start. I am happy with what I've written though.

I have an ensemble cast and because of the structure of my story any one of them may be the pov character depending on the situation. I don't switch between them haphazardly, only when it makes sense. But I was getting to know each of them today. I started with the ship's Captain and then the First Officer and so on, down the line. That way, each one got an introduction and some time as the pov character.

The thing is, when I write a character I really have to get into their head. I think this is what slowed me down. I'm hoping that as I get to know them it will be smoother. Also, until this morning I wasn't exactly sure how I was going to start. The rest is actually mapped out better. Now, if I could just find a way to end the first chapter.

Well, I introduced six characters and a pet and I will start their first adventure tomorrow.

Congrats to all that have started and good luck to us all!
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I'm feeling sheepish at 2005 words. It looks like everyone is off to a tremendous start! I'm enjoying what I've written so far, although most of it wouldn't make it through my editor's gauntlet. I start right off the bat with backstory--my character is trying to figure out why her sister is sending her such bizarre letters, and she is thinking about the things her sister is writing. I think it's interesting, but possibly not the best way to start a book.
Hey, who let that editor out of the closet? Get back in there! Sorry about that. It won't happen again.
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
I got in a ton more writing yesterday than I expected... which is probably for the best since I don't think I'm going to be able to do that again any time soon :-)
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
My goal was actually higher. I wanted to hit 4000-5000 words. I had the WHOLE day set aside. Really, I was just trying to give myself a cushion to cover an off day. If you can pull off 2000 words a day that will give you five rest days this month and you'll still be golden. You're doing fine.

I did manage to find the cap to the first chapter this morning and am now at 3559 words. I will try and steal bits of time while I'm at work and put in a few words there. Fortunately, I can do that and even if the boss walks in I won't be in trouble. He's actually quite supportive of my crazy quest. Unfortunately, it's Monday which means the ordering needs to get done and we're usually pretty busy for the first half of the day. The second half is anyone's guess.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
It's been a while since I started a new novel with all new characters, and I'm finding I am having the same problem that I've had before--my main character, a spunky gal named Tess--isn't so spunky yet. She just lets everyone walk right over her. I guess it takes a few chapters before my characters really start to act like themselves. They are just so shell shocked to find themselves out of my brain and out in the open.
It's also hard to be amusing when I feel tired. And I do feel tired.
 
Posted by Cheyne (Member # 7710) on :
 
If you were my buddy last year you are still my buddy. Otherwise i am here: http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/407767

[This message has been edited by Cheyne (edited November 02, 2009).]
 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
I feel so behind. I wrote 2178 words today, but it was a slow start. I usually love beginning novels, and can pop out a ton of information, but not this time. I had a hard time finding a good place to start, and how to introduce my main character the right way. It was rough going for a while, I had a lot of false starts. I couldn't choose a format for the longest time, I kept wanting to write in first person, but I know that's the wrong choice for this story, because I have to shift PoV's so much.

I ended up starting in a completely different POV than I planned, because the beginning wasn't working the way I wanted it to. The starting POV is through a character I didn't know existed before today, but now is crucial to the storyline. How did that happen?

I do like how it is coming out though. I think I found the right beginning.

It is so awesome to force myself to write. It's cool when it does finally work out.
~Sheena
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Hang in there shimiqua. I'll bet that it will flow much more smoothly now that you've found your start and like what you've got.

Also, does anyone know if there's a limit to the number of writing buddies you can have? I don't seem to be able to add anymore.
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
I think I got things figured out over there finally. If I haven't added you as a writing buddy please don't be insulted, I'm just incompetent.

And I wrote just under 3000 words yesterday. Let's see if I can repeat it tonight
 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
Thanks G.

Is it sad that it is my first day into it, and people are already telling me to hang in there?

I feel good. I'm glad I kept going. If it wasn't for nano, I would have quit a half hour into it and would never have discovered this cool new character.

Write till you bleed, people. Write till you bleed.
~Sheena
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Good job everyone! I'm puffing along at 3500 words today. Pretty much on track. I have my first two chapters complete. I'm sticking pretty close to the Heroes Journey pattern so these are in the Ordinary World and mostly setup for the first Call to adventure.

I'm trying to write a scene/chapter a day since most of those are ~ 1500-3000 words. I figure if I can do that, then I will be thinking in scenes- kind of like complete thoughts. The scene tomorrow is big - my MC moves from 1991 (normal) to 1849 (adventure). And I have to describe a big fire. I've written the fire scene a couple of times already but don't like any of them so I am starting from scratch.

Leslie


 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Chapters? You're doing chapters? I consider that editing. I guess we know why I am spinning through this. Though today didn't flow as quickly as yesterday. It was still fun, and probably another 3500 words. Tomorrow some of the tension building is going to happen, I think.
 
Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
Hey Shimiqua,

Don't worry about slow starts. This is the first time I've ever gotten past page 35. I'm totally used to writing short stories so I hope I don't crap out halfway through.

Biggest thing keeping me going is seeing what everyone else is doing. The little element of competition is keeping me chugging along. I want to be able to say I completed this even if I do end up writing a complete piece of crap. Hopefully, I can edit and let other people here help me out and come out with something quality.

So, encouragement is a good thing. Even this early.
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
quote:
Chapters? You're doing chapters? I consider that editing.

Maybe. Though I consider it a good way to subdivide. Keeps the thoughts organized.

Day two, and I've gotten my total up to 7130. Just in time for Monday Night Football to ruin my productivity. Hopefully this streak continues. I'd be real pleased with a 3550-word average if it lasts a big chunk of this month!
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Aaargh! It's been too busy at work to get anything done on the book and you all are writing away and I'm stuck on the West Coast and not able to get home and write until 7pm.

By the way, I work in scenes and chapters too. I usually write a scene, take a break, write the next one, take a break. etc. I can't afford such breaks tonight, or for the rest of November.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
I know, Genevieve, being on the west coast really sucks for these things. I'm on the west coast too, just not working right now.

And IdiotSavant, I'm doing chapters, but I've been planning for months so no worries...no chapters works too! 8)

Leslie
 


Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
I just put chapters in automatically. I don't know how I could write without at least some scene breaks, and some of those scene breaks are naturally bigger than the others, hence chapter breaks.

I'm really annoyed at my characters right now. They keep talking and talking and talking, and I just want to get them out of the nightclub so I can blow up a car in their faces! Move it already! :-)
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
I didn't do any division of chapters and such last year, and as you can imagine my story ended up a mess. This year I'm breaking up my scenes.

3k more completed. I wrote two really depressing scenes today. One of them was unplanned, but I think it will be good. One of my characters witnessed something that motivates the way he thinks and acts in the future. Yay for nano-driven spontaneity.
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
2456 today, giving me a little 1244 word buffer. I like me them buffers. I need them for the days life gets in the way and I write no words.

I've just introduced the major conflict. All the grown-ups on board are asleep and our intrepid main character is starting to figure out that this is a big honking deal.

Now the fun starts, right?
 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
I'm sittin' on 526 which is about five hundred more words than I got last month so I'm happy as a freshly stuffed goose. Today I slacked off because I bought a new dinky laptop that I can fit in my manpurse so I can write on the run. I also only had my frist thoughts about this book a few days ago so I still have a lot of brain work to do on it. But I'm not worried, my mind doesn't let me miss deadlines, even if it takes building a time machine to do it.
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Can I borrow that time machine when you're done with it?
 
Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
5200 words tonight between watching Major League baseball, the NFL and the NBA all at the same time.

I'm up to 11,700 words.

New characters. I've invented medieval army life and some of the rules that go with it. My outline is still whacked out, but my main character is still about where he should be.

I think and write in scenes, so that's what I outlined at the beginning to give the novel an overall structure. For me, chapters end up being somewhat arbitrary and depend on how the scenes come out.

Keep it up! 28 days to go!

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited November 03, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
It was slow going. I was having trouble letting go and not worrying too much about what I was putting down. Then, somewhere around 1:30am it started to take off.

It is now 3:00am and I had better get to bed before I pull a true all-nighter and am wasted at work tomorrow. (Like I won't be anyway.)

I actually know what's going to happen in the rest of this section, but I'm losing it. I need sleep. Hopefully the flow will continue tomorrow.

Day 2 - 2691 words
Total - 6131 words
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Realized that trying to figure out how to get from in the house to out on the adventure was taking too much time. I'm skipping it completely and moving on to the good stuff.

There was also a whole backstory between two characters that they didn't tell me about until late last night. Good grief people. We're on a deadling here.

And finally, realized that not all my characters are human. This should have been obvious way before now, but I'm kind of slow that way.

So, I didn't get a ton written, but I should make up for it today.
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
Day 1 was great, Day 2 was a bomb. Only 500 words and the associated "what did I get myself into?" panic. I slept on it though, and reading about all your progress has inspired me to get back in there. Today was supposed to be a no-writing day (fencing takes up all evening) but I'll try to sneak in another 500 words.

I did learn something yesterday though - no TV during writing time.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I'm hoping this holds but after hitting the groove last night at 1:30 am, I can't stop thinking about my story. Twice on my commute this morning I had to voice memo ideas on my cell phone so I wouldn't lose them. I have a good picture of what's coming next and I can't wait to get home and write.

I'd love to feel this way every day.
 


Posted by ArmadonRK (Member # 8864) on :
 
I had a decent day one, getting through 2000 of my planned 2500 words before opting to take a break. Day two was a bad day, even though I got 1300 words done and hit Nano's suggested quote, I ended up backtracking and erasing 600 words.
Some of you might be shouting, No! Don't listen to your inner editor! but that doesn't really work for everyone. My inner editor is also my inner storyteller, and it didn't just tell me I had a poorly written passage, but that it was detrimental to my work in the long run.
Backing down yesterday allowed me to recompose myself and have several bursts of inspiration in the time between, leading to a productive Day 3. I ended up redefining an important character in my second attempt, and I think I saved myself some serious tragedy in the process (in the work, not in the story itself, I would never shy away from tragedy in the fiction )

I now plan to carry on and see if I can't catch up to my originally intended rate of 2500 words a day.

[This message has been edited by ArmadonRK (edited November 03, 2009).]
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
I am about to go back and change something, too. It's one of those "crap, I forgot I had decided that character was out of commission" issues. I'm going to go fix it, then extend the scene. If I leave it unfixed it will annoy me literally every day until the end.

On the up side (in a weird-twisted-this-only-makes-sense-if-you're-doing-Nano kind of way) the project I was thinking was going to come through today did not, so I'm not going to have paying work for the next couple days, so...I have more time to write!

 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
Only a thousand words today, but I'm happy. I had to write in Iambic pentameter (Spl?) and I think it went okay.

A spell to cleanse, a cleanse to heal, a shade
Of black to disappear. Once followed these
Instruction’s three, No devil can rein over thee.

Make sense? I was drumming against my desk as I wrote it.


I think I'll write more in a little bit, but I need a break. My hands are tired from all that drumming.

3,516 total.

Owasm how are you already at 11,000+ words? You are a freaking mazing.
~Sheena


 


Posted by Cheyne (Member # 7710) on :
 
Yes Owasm, what secret 'Spice' are you using to pad those numbers...?

Seriously, I hope no one is going to judge themselves by their output. Use Nanowrimo as it fits your writing. There are no losers (okay some you are losers) only more and less successful number counters.
Last year I got 15000 words done in November. I didn't cry that I hadn't reached 50K, 15K was my best month by far. I was far more interested in the barriers I was able to take down from my own writing. Use the successes you do achieve and do try for 50k, just don't get down if you don't make it.
Success is what you take away from the experience. Maybe, when I have completed 50k in a month, I will sneak back in the dark of night and erase this wishy-washy message. Until then good luck and have a blast.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Wow, it sounds like everyone is having a good week.

quote:
Can I borrow that time machine when you're done with it?

I'll have one of those when the story is done but you have to walk through a wall of flame to turn it on....LOL!!!

I'm happy that I'm turning out a couple of really solid scenes each day and those are going to translate well into chapters or parts of chapters. I've also been taking some time at the end of the day to plan the next days writing so I have the night to sleep on what the rascals will be up to in the next chapter/scenes. So far ( three days in) this seems to be working for me...

Leslie

[This message has been edited by LAJD (edited November 03, 2009).]
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Note to self: A scene-based outline in chronological order, covering all the main points, would be a useful step in prepping for Nano.

Sigh.

I did a lot of prep...but not all the right KIND of prep. It'll pick up, just laughing at myself and realizing that a more detailed outline, as much as I fight against the idea, is the thing that I need in my writing life.
 


Posted by annepin (Member # 5952) on :
 
this is how we learn, right? I'm amazed by all of you out there! I've gotten about 2300 words down.
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
I've decided NaNoWriMo is evil. It's like taking a drunk into a bar during happy hour. I just broke the 20K mark. Somebody really needs to confiscate my computer for a few hours....
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
20K?? Wow. I didn't start until Monday, and then I squeezed 2500 pitiful words out. Today I wrote 2500 more, and it was bliss. If only writing was always like that.

Funny/Not so funny story...Today my plan was to write a story about a hike from one town to another. Bright idea...to take a nice, short hike before I start writing. Forgetting that the path was not well marked and forgetting how much I stink at being out in the woods, I ventured forth. And got lost. I wasn't so very lost. But then I remembered that it's hunting season, and I was dressed in blue jeans and a navy blue jacket. I didn't know that my next door neighbor has 2 statues set up in the woods behind his house until one scared the snot out of me. I decided to cut through their yard and out into the road to get home. And then I rocked my writing...the words just spilled out of me and I got as much done as I'd planned to even without the hike. Good stuff.
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
It's exciting hearing how everyone else is doing. I read mine so far to my co worker and she is very excited about it, wants to know how it ends. I said, 'Yeah, me too!'.

I did all right today. A lot of stuff came up that kept me from working on this. I am a little past 11.5K words and I am not unhappy at all. If I can finish it in 50K words and not slow down too much, I will have time to edit it some anyway.

I have too much story, though. At this rate there is no way I can pack it into 50K words. What do you do? Just pick out things to eliminate? Or write it up to the point where you satisfy the 50K requirement and don't worry about it? I guess it doesn't matter but I think I will be dissatisfied if I can't bring it to a close.
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I have a question. My MC is narrating to someone who is transcribing his story. I am interjecting comments from the person doing the transcription in footnotes. Is this the best way to do this? I started out just making little blocks in italics but that didn't look right to me.
 
Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
quote:
What do you do? Just pick out things to eliminate? Or write it up to the point where you satisfy the 50K requirement and don't worry about it? I guess it doesn't matter but I think I will be dissatisfied if I can't bring it to a close.

I would think just write your 50k and go where the story takes you. If after the 50 you feel you need to edit down or add in a few chapters then worry about doing that.
 


Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
@SavantIdiot - I think footnotes would be perfect. Ever read the Bartolomeus books? They do exactly that.

Also, re: 50K. I don't see 50K as a stopping point. That's just the minimum achievement, not a place to artificially truncate your story. A bunch of people on Codex are shooting for 90K or more. I would just keep writing through the the end, even if that means carrying on to 75K and December, or what have you.
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
You can go over 50k, it's just the minimum number of words required to "win" nano. I have friends that have every intention of hitting 100k this month.

I should have just under 3k more tonight. I'm sitting at 2700 with a couple parts left to write.

Kitti - I'll take that computer, along with your words. jk

I'm liking my accidental strategy. I had intended to have a complete outline with each scene, but I think if I had actually reached that point in prepping for nano - I would care too much and nitpick about what I was writing. I have a definite beginning, middle, and end. And a vague idea of what needs to come out during the story.
 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
"Try not. Do or do not, there is no try."

Maybe that should go in the Movie Quotes post but it seemed appropriate here.

Way to go all you word jedi's that are 'doing'!
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Sixteen thousand six hundred and fifty five words of laughter, tears, lust and fears. Our hero tonight met his first god. Ain't it grand. It was never in my outline...
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I got sleep-napped by my body as soon as I got home from work tonight. Four hours of sleep, a busy day at work (it looks like the holiday busy period is starting) and even with a cup of coffee I couldn't help falling asleep sitting up.

So I got a late start and only managed 1063 words today. I'm going to go to bed before I'm exhausted and hope for more productivity tomorrow, my day off.

Total after day 3: 7194 words

I am finding it really challenging dealing with this ensemble cast. When they're all together I have to juggle the speech tags to keep it straight. When they split up I'm changing the pov character depending on the situation. So I have a lot of different heads to get into.

It's not coming out as humorous as I expected either. I wasn't going for all out silly but this first adventure has little humor. I'm okay with it if it stays more adventure but I will still try to get some good doses of humor in. I do wonder if I've missed being on the right track though. I guess I'll work on figuring that out December 1st.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Oh, and don't forget to post your word count on the NaNo page. Once you're logged in there's a little window in the upper right corner, or you can go to Edit -'Novel Info'.It's fun to see where everyone is, even if some of you make the rest of us jealous.
 
Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
I feel like I'm joining the party a little late, but I'm doing NaNo again this year. Forth time around. Looks like you've all gotten off to a great start. I'm at around 10,700 words right now. Got some time off work, so I'm trying to get a good buffer before I go back on saturday.

I'm -darklight- over there, if anyone wants to add me as a buddy. I'm going to try to find some time to look some of you up.


 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
I forgot to say, I noticed one or two of you mentioned about deleting sections of what you've written. One of the NaNo e-mails mentioned not deleting the bits you don't like, but put them in italics or something, to delete after NaNo is done, then carry on. That way, you still get the credit for writing those words, and you're not losing any from the total written. Just thought I'd mention it
 
Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
For those of you that don't regularly read PVP, the artist has a storyline going on about Nano this year:

http://www.pvponline.com/2009/11/02/write-fight/
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
I broke 10K tonight and I'm very happy with that. I've reached a personal goal for myself. Next goal is 20K. My strategy is really simple. If I can make it to 15K in each week then I think I'll be good. Regardless, my one and true intent is to make it to 50K and I'm not stopping until I do.

As far as the story, well, I can definitely tell it'll need some work after I'm done. It's really sloppy but this is the first time I've ever tried writing anything this long. So, I'm not too bothered by that. I think it has good potential at being a really good story with some spit and polish after NaNo is done.

The main thing is that I'm having a ton of fun writing it. I've never really been this excited about something I've written. Like I said, it's no masterpiece but it's potential really makes my brain start going. I'm looking forward to crafting it into something more readable and then passing it along to someone to add some notes for me. It's definitely going to be a lot of fun.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Owasm, you are smokin!

8)
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Okay, you guys are smoking! I am sitting here laughing at some of the posts and really learning from others and being stimulated just by seeing how stimulated everyone else is. I am glad we all fall in love with our stories.

Also Do or do not, there is no try. is my new email signature. I have used it before but forgot about it. Go, Yoda!
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
This is what the NaNo people say about deleting, taken directly from the site:

"And please remember: If you write a paragraph or chapter you don't like, just put it in italics (or change the font color to white). Do not delete! After you write your way across the 50,000-word finish line, you can double back and clip out all the parts of your book that make you cringe (I think you'll surprise yourself with what you decide to keep). For now, just keep moving forward! There's an old folk saying that goes: Whenever you delete a sentence in your NaNoWriMo novel, a NaNoWriMo angel loses its wings and plummets, screaming, to the ground.

Where it will likely require medical attention.

These are words to live by. Resist the tyranny of the delete key!"

I got a chuckle.

 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Aieeeeee <crash!!!>

Just kidding. I reworked the little bit I needed to (switched the dialogue tags, etc.) and made it so it wouldn't drive me crazy the whole month, and by doing so added 100 words to that day's count (for simplicity, I have a separate page in Scrivener for each day's writing, so when I realized i had to go back to fix something, I had to go back to the previous day's page.)

I then went on to add 1815 new words yesterday, so I'm still pleased! Not much of a cushion but enough. I don't really expect this story to be much more than 50-60k (Mid-grade/YA) so I am happy with my progress.

Good luck to everyone!
 


Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Okay, so I think I've figured out why NaNoWriMo is threatening to take over my life. There is something about going into an intensive writing session (NaNo or otherwise) completely unprepared that forces me to mine areas of my personal experiences and expertise that I would never consider writing about under other circumstances. Previously un-mined mountains = lots to work with.

Also, those little counters on the NaNo site are messing with my head. ("You're a fourth of the way there... a third now... look at how much less you got done today than yesterday...") I think this shall be my new motto: The counters made me do it.

I just broke 25K.

The counters made me do it.
 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
quote:
I just broke 25K.

...and all the richer for it.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Wow, you guys are all doing really well. I'm at 7580 and have my MC in the scary otherworld now and she knows it.

I'm still pretty happy with how my planning has worked out for me. I think Nano is like a crucible for how each of us like to write best. If you are a planner/plotter then Nano lets that really shine if you are a wingit-er then nano lets that come through.

I am really happy about how well Scrivener is helping me stay organized! Wow is that a great tool.

It's so fun!
Leslie

 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Go Kitti.

The world series is gonna kill tonight's output.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
LAJD--our word counts are almost identical. I don't know how long it will last but I am in that sweet spot where I know just what to say and my output is only hampered by how fast I can type and how much free time I have.
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Owasm - I don't know what you're talking about. Since I know the screaming Phillies fans rioting outside my house are going to keep me up until at least 2AM, I'm planning on getting TONS of writing done tonight... ;-)

Seriously, they already had the police barricades lining the sides of the road as I walked home from work. Eek!
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
22,000. Another 5,500 words today in spite of watching the Yanks win the World Series. Oh, my aching back.

My nominal goal is 5,000 words a day and I don't know how long the plot will hold out. I'm about 20% through my scripted scenes. That will get me to 110,000 words.

I don't know how I'll do it visiting grandkids for a week during Thanksgiving 2,000 miles away, but I live to try.

Great work, Kitti! The words are piling up.

We should count up all the words we Hatrackers write. There are 23 of us signed up. We should get between 750,000 and a million word written. That's a lot of content.

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited November 05, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Kitti and Owasm, you two are amazing. Great job!

My ensemble cast is really starting to come together. Some things are happening more quickly than I expected and one relationship revealed itself to the reader in a way that I didn't know was going to happen.

I just finished the crew's first adventure. Next, I introduce the villain. He's a little nuts, and very egocentric. I don't really know a lot about him beyond that but I will be finding out when I pick this up tomorrow.

This is starting to get really fun.

Written on day 4: 3889 words
Total so far: 11,083 words

Keep on truckin'!


 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Also, with regards to finding ways not to delete that awful bit that's going to drive you crazy, try this.

Make a section at the end of your manuscript for deleted scenes, then just cut and paste. You get the word count and they're still left on the cutting room floor where you want them.

I have a section for notes at the end too. It all counts.
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
I only got about 2,000 in today. It was a little bit not knowing where to take my story and partly because I'm tired from work.

I'm learning a lot though. This is the first time I've ever not gone back and edited what I've just written. I really like it.

I'm also glad to see that you're all doing very well. I just wish I had known about this sooner.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I just broke the 10,000 word mark! I might even find some time to write tonight, so I'm feeling happy. I haven't even been over to the Nanowrimo site yet. I might swing by there as a reward.
Happy writing!
 
Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
I wrote another 2000 some words last night. Up to a total of 6600 or so. Fencing is unexpectedly cancelled for tonight, so I'm hoping to hit 10K. That would be a personal best.

Oswam, SavantIdiot, everyone already over 20K, you guys rock!
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I think we are all amazing. At the moment, I think this is the best Nanowrimo year I've had. Ask me again in a couple weeks.
 
Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Oooh Unwritten you just beat me to 10k! Maybe I will write more tonight..though. I just posted 9645. And I pretty happy with what I have done. I read back over it today and it actually makes sense! This time last year the wheels were already coming off the wagon.

I agree we need to keep a count of our total Hatrack wordcount. I'lll bet we also beat the Random Musings thread for most pages in a post thread, too. LOL. We're already up to page 3!

I too am heading out for T-Day, off to Scottsdale to have Dysfunctional Family Theatre with my husband's family. I'm even going early to help my poor mother in law so I will be there for a week. I figure that as long as I ahve my trusty laptop and an internet connection, I'm golden. (I'm bringing my backup laptop, just in case)
8)
leslie

 


Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
So, I got almost no work done on nano today. Hmm. Looks like I'm a sprinter, not a long distance runner. Writer. Whatever. But I did get a lot of stuff done for work and I'm almost done packing (I'm moving - again - this weekend), so that's something.

Has anyone ever done one of those write-ins they talk about on the website? Was it any good/useful/fun/etc?
 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
Finally got my netbook right were I want it and now I'm rolling. 2500 and some change. Which compared to everyone else here seems slim but I'm happy. I'm a build momentum kinda guy.

My only problem right now is 50,000 is a ridiculous length for my story. I'm not worried, I'll write a sequel if I have to. (Which is hilarious if you knew what my project was.)
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I wrote more than I expected to. One of my dear friends came into town and I spent most of th day with her. I never get to see her.

I got up to 15952 just now. I had to stop and do a little research. Did you know moths are supposed to taste something like almonds/popcorn/hazlenut? You hold them by the wings and eat the body. Some people cook them but not my MC!

If anyone feels willing to contribute to this research, please do some field testing and report back here.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Calling it a night. I ended up with 10,752 words, which is right where I wanted to be.

I just spent way more time than I should have trying to add you all as my buddies finally. If I missed you, let me know. I like to see everyone's stats, although the site runs so slow on my computer I don't spend much time there.

It probably says something about my psyche when I tell you that one of my favorite parts of Nanowrimo is the Travelling Shovel of Death. It made an appearance in my novel last year. I just think it's fun. You can read about it here: here

[This message has been edited by Unwritten (edited November 05, 2009).]
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
I was going to stop at a grand total of 16k after our write-in tonight, but then I thought - why not make it 17k? So 17k it is. I blame caffeine. I will regret it tomorrow morning when I have to wake up for work.

My biggest surprise this year has been the 3-4k word days. I expected to be struggling to get the 1667 I needed. I remember last year (my first year), I was practically beating my head against the wall trying to get the words to come out.

Unwritten - they were promoting the Traveling Shovel of Death at my write-in tonight. If I need the words badly enough....
 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
My monitor is shaking from the quake of all your inspired fingers. Keep it up people!
 
Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Up to 27,400 words.

This was an interesting session. My MC meets a wizard he can talk to, like a therapist. I've also dropped a few hints (I hesitate to call it foreshadowing at this point) for things to come and as I did, one of the turning points in the novel resolved in my mind. It's coming up tomorrow night or Saturday.

I made the mistake of reading some of my work thus far. Ouch! I can see why they don't recommend editing as you go. I've got typos and other issues galore.

Look Forward, Not Back!

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited November 06, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I got to introduce my villain tonight but not much else. I came home tired and I have a mouse that is itching from something, though after cleaning everything thoroughly, I don't know what. Tomorrow I will get her some new food even though what I have is in an airtight container and hope that solves it. After that, I don't know what else to do. The poor little thing. I keep smearing her head with neosporin, hoping it will help but she doesn't like that very much.

Day 5 word count: 419 words (sigh)
Total: 11,502 words
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
OMG! According to my NaNo progress report I'm writing an average of 1610613293 words a day! No wonder I'm so tired.
 
Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Had my first slow-down. Only got about a thousand words written yesterday. Being dog-tired and watching Ice Age 3 with my wife may have had something to do with that, though.

Still, almost ready to break 15k words, so I'm ahead of the game.

Really, though, the slowdown is because I'm in-between critical story components. I have X-events ready for the MC and SC, but they have to get to point Y before that happens.

This has been a fun exercise, however. Glad I tried it out this year.

Good luck to all!
 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
My computer died. Microsoft had some bug mess up my schedual and tried to force me to buy Microsoft seven.

Not gonna happen, Microsoft.

My sweet handsome husband was able to recover all of my documents, including Nano, but this computer issue has eaten three and a half days of writing. I am still at less than four thousand words! I am in trouble. Luckily I can still use open office, and also luckily I saved Nano as a .doc file.

We'll see what happens, but that finish line is looking awful far away right now.

La sigh.

I'll keep you posted.

~Sheena
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Nice work everyone. I am still having a little trouble navigating the website - NaNoWriMo's - so I am not getting the full benefit. I would rather be writing or have to be working.

I was thinking about the itchy mouse and wondered if you tried changing the bedding? If it isn't the feed, it has to be environmental. The thing may have an allergy to some of the feed, too/instead of, though, of course.

I have a dog right now with chronic earaches and it pretty much has to be his food so I am getting militant about what he eats.

I think my story works but when you aren't editing you don't really know, do you? Plus I have noticed that I need to put my stuff down for awhile and go back to it in order to look at it with fresher eyes. This isn't going to possible for this work, of course.

Someone offered to swap chapters and I am thinking of letting them look at some of this, but I am afraid it may derail me to have someone else edit what I am not editing.

On the other hand, my 'real' novel is actually getting a professional edit (I may need a shoulder at some point) this month so there is no point in sending any of that.

 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Sheena, I threw Kubuntu on my box for that very reason. Windows Vista lasted all of five minutes when I bought my laptop.

At least you were able to recover your docs. Good for your hubby. Score one for the tech nerds.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Thanks for the thoughts on my itchy mouse. But yes, I changed the bedding. I haven't changed her food choices at all but it does seem to be an allergy thing more than a skin thing. I'm going to get her a fresh bag regardless, just in case it's somehow starting to go bad.

I have been through this before with her but usually a good cleaning or a change of activity and environment has solved it. Maybe she's allergic to something that blooms this time of year and we just have to wait it out. I'll keep you posted.

On a good note, I just got up and cranked out a few hundred words. But now I know where the scene needs to start and I think it will flow much more smoothly today.

Well, off to make breakfast and get ready for work. I'd much rather stay home and write right now.


 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
I broke 3K last night, I found I can get a bit of work done after work (I get off 1Am.) I think the Nano site is a little overworked.
Wow that daily goal bar graph can get pretty discouraging, it looks like I've done nothing, even though I'm only 7k behind.
I'm not discouraged though, I know how I work and I know I can do this. (If I couldn't then my mind would be banging the panic button, and I'd be bailing out.)
 
Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
I finished my writing session last night, logged my total into my tracking spreadsheet, and found that I'm at exactly 10,000 words. Isn't that funny?

I haven't written today and am not sure I'll have time, but am glad to have reached that particular milestone. I need to get cracking, though. I'd like to have a bigger cushion than I have right now.
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Everything that has happened today, has happened to stop me from writing. Last night, I had two dreams, and in both of them there was some inventive method preventing me from writing. I should have seen it as an omen. First off this morning, msn held me hostage and refuse to allow me to do anything until I downloaded the newset version, which I didn't want, but downloaded because I had to, and I hate! By this time I had managed about 300 words.

Then my wireless internet router decided to have a sickie and I had to turn off the computer and the router to allow it to cool down, so went and did the weekly shop. When I got home, the router was working again and decided to have some lunch and then maybe write a little. Wrong. I got one of my wonderful migraines, which I have now had for seven and a half hours. Hence, I've spent around three and half of those hours asleep, trying to get rid of the darned thing, and somewhere in the middle, had to make a 60 mile round trip to pick up my daughter and her boyfriend.

I have managed to add another 600 or so words to my total, somehow, but very soon, have repeat said 60 mile round trip to take daughter's boyfriend home. When I get home, sometime around eleven tonight, I'm going to try to push my daily word count up to 1000 words. Have to go to work tomorrow and sunday, so not expecting to get much done this weekend either.

Shouldn't complain too much, I'm just a bit over 15,000 so still have my buffer. Was hoping not to have too much left for the last week of the month, so when I'm off work monday to friday, I could actually rest!

You all seem to being doing great. Keep up the good work! everyone!
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
I know how you feel darklight. Yesterday when I got home from work I was simply too tired to even work on my story so I got absolutely nothing done at all yesterday. Then, last night, I had a dream about a story that is many times better than the one I'm currently working on and had to get up this morning and write down a synopsis for it. I want to work on it so badly because I think the idea is more solid but I'm forcing myself to write the one I started on because after I'm all said and done with NaNo I think it can be edited into a good story too.
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
darklight - don't suppose you can make any hay out of all the delays? have your MC's get into communications trouble, or have to detour to help a teenager in distress?
 
Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
quote:
For those of you that don't regularly read PVP, the artist has a storyline going on about Nano this year:

I am a recovering World of Warcraft addict and that just gave me a flashback
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
*** 32,560 ***

5,000 a night, that's all I ask.

It sure is tempting to get to 50K by Sunday night, but I don't think that's in me. One more battle, exposure and flight. That's what's on the plate for tomorrow.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
All I can say is, Wow you guys are all awesome!!!

Leslie
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Work has been getting really busy - retail in November and my word count has dropped to about 500 a day. I'm just tired when I get home. I'm going to try and regain my cushion tomorrow (the store is closed). Glad I had a cushion in the first place.
 
Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
You know you don't really have a life when you hit 40,100 words in seven days.

I'm such a competitive tool, that I just have to go for it. There is mind over matter, I think in a sense, NaNo can be muck over mind.

Every time I go back and insert a clue about what happens (such as a mysterious tattoo), I am appalled at the simple errors abundant throughout.

Time to end error-making tonight and buckle down for another day tomorrow.

Keep at it!
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
I've been a bit worried lately. Over the last couple of days, when saving my novel in Word, it's been telling me I can't save it in the document I'm working on, and I have to create a new one. So far, I have three documents each with different stages of my story. When this happens, I panic and send my story to myself via email as back up.

This has never happened to me before. Does anyone know why Word is doing this to me?

At 18,000 words and counting. It would help if I opened the document, but then that would mean I would have to actually write something.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Darklight
That sounds bad.
Have you googled the error message? I would start assuming that word is going to do something bad until I figured out why it was doing this and either use an alternative program second computer or reinstall or something.

Leslie
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Darklight, go into your document, select all, copy, then open word pad or notepad or some other type of editing program, paste special, unformatted text (if you have this option, you may not have the option to paste unformatted, since Notepad has virtually no formatting. I can't remember what happens with wordpad.) Save.

MS Word sometimes corrupts files, no apparent reason other than it embeds a bunch of junk in them.

Saving as doesn't necessarily save you from the problem, because once the file has the corrupt information stored in it, it seems to carry it with through future versions.

You can/should also PRINT your story from time to time. Worst case scenario, you have to type it back in, but at least you know what it is you wrote. (there are some scanners/scanning programs out there that can convert scanned images of printed words into text.)

We've talked about issues with word processors before. As I recall, Tale Spinner has some background/detailed technical explanations for what is going on when these things happen with Word.
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I hit 20K a little while ago. I was going great guns for the first of the week, then had a couple of wrinkles in my life but I think I am back. I am also seeing some slowdown because my story is getting more complicated and I am trying to get from A to B but not exactly certain how to do that.

Darklight, everyone, have you tried www.box.net? It is free up to maybe 5Gigs of memory. It is secure and a good place to keep documents.

You may want to download Word again which may be the first step in recovering your work environment but until then I would register at box.net (free up to I think 5 gig) and be sure to save what you have. Emailing is a good idea, but do copy it from your document and then paste it into an email. I think this way you won't carry the problem with the verbiage.

Now, google mail aka gmail has a free word processor program sort of similar to word if you want to set up a gmail account you can work online and save it online, too.

Anyway, good luck with that. Owasm, do you sleep at all? You're amazing.

Oh, hey, does anyone know anything about wills and trusts? My MC's mother is killed by her lover, the supposed father to my MC. I want to have her set up my MC's trust & care arranged so that the lover benefits with the kids living and is severely penalized if he offs the kid, too.
 


Posted by Meredith (Member # 8368) on :
 
Not doing Nano, but I'm checking in to see what you guys are doing. Very impressive!

quote:
Oh, hey, does anyone know anything about wills and trusts? My MC's mother is killed by her lover, the supposed father to my MC. I want to have her set up my MC's trust & care arranged so that the lover benefits with the kids living and is severely penalized if he offs the kid, too.

Okay, I am not an attorney, but then I don't think this is really giving legal advice. It probably depends at least a little on where your characters are. I would have her set up a trust for the children, with the remainder, if the children die before adulthood, going to a charity. The lover can be paid out of the trust for taking care of the kids. But he won't get a dime if they die. Of course, she'd have to name someone other than the lover as trustee to keep him from raiding the trust.


 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
quote:
Now, google mail aka gmail has a free word processor program sort of similar to word if you want to set up a gmail account you can work online and save it online, too.

Hmm, could this word processer be utilized on a blackberry or the new Droid by Verizon?
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Every now and then, I send my sister an e-mail with my story on it. Then I save it on a flash drive as well. And a good thing too, because there seems to be a Nanowrimo Hatrack Computer thing going on. My husband had to wipe our computer clean and restore it over the weekend. I think my Nanowrimo story is still there, but that flashdrive saved me a lot of worrying while I was computerless. I didn't get anything done over the weekend, but I knew that would happen. I had the loose ends of living to tie up, you know? I'm almost exactly where I should be--at 11,600 words. I'd like to add in the hint of a buffer before next week at this time.

Good luck this week my friends!
Melanie
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Done! 50,300 words in eight days.

I'm not quite half done with my novel, so I will continue apace. Well maybe not at quite the same pace, but I'll keep piling on the words.

I'm actually pleased with how this is coming out. The story continues to surprise. An amazon-type warrior-ette showed up that I didn't plan for. She ended up giving my hero a token that he will use later when she lies moldering in the jungle. Also this weekend saw a three thousand year old woman giving our hero a gift. Another tool for his future. Sound corny beyond belief?

Perhaps, but that's NaNoWriMo for you.

Keep writing.
 


Posted by BenM (Member # 8329) on :
 
Wow, decent rate Ken. And gotta love those amazon-warrior-ettes. They remind me of an episode of Futurama...

My Nano ambitions, little that they were, have fallen by the wayside. I'm currently engaged in a short story project that seems to be calling to me more. Not to worry: Onwards and upwards, to loftier heights and more egregious cliche use nevertheless!
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Owasm, pardon my lack of tact, but are you human? Great work!

Great work everybody! We survived the first week. Hooray!

The end of the week had slowed to a crawl but I spent all day today writing. My total right now is 17,724 words.

Ten things I learned in my first week of NaNoWriMo:

1) I don't actually write any faster, but I get more done because I'm not being picky about word choice and I am moving ever forward.

2) What I'm writing isn't that bad, but the above is easier to do if I assume that any and all words are going to get rewritten anyway.

3) I CAN go back and add a line or two here and there if I think of it later. I don't consider that editing. That's writing and I don't want to forget the idea. It would take me as long to make a note as it does just to add a line, so I just add it.

4) My boyfriend is awesome and patient and supportive. He's there when I need him and gives me space when I need to write. I couldn't ask to be with anyone better. I need to make sure he knows how much I appreciate him, especially during NaNo.

5) It's easier to focus if I take my netbook to Starbucks and keep the WiFi turned off.

6) I need to limit the number of 'brain' games I can play online when I'm taking a break/procrastinating.

7) Eating and sleeping are necessary.

8) It's best if I leave off with an idea for the next scene and type it in the space where it's going to start. Then I already have a direction for the next day and don't feel so much pressure when I sit down wanting to churn out 2000 words.

9) Caffeine is good.

10) If I can't find a block of time, a couple hundred words here and a couple hundred words there still help to keep me on track. It all counts.

What have you learned?



 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
Well, I just broke 20K so I still feel like I'm doing good.

To answer Genevieve's question...
I've learned that pushing ahead is a good thing.

Ideas birth new ideas and if you don't stop you won't ever have too.

I also have learned that I am fully capable of doing this writing dream if I really put my mind to it and not much can stop me but me.

I've also learned that there is a lot I don't know but that I'm ready to learn.

NaNo is probably the best thing I've done in a while.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I learned that this book has been simmering in the back of my head for years--I just had to add some characters. Nothing I've ever written as come out as easily as this.

I've also learned some of the same things genevive42 has learned--especially that it's best if I stop writing at the beginning of a new scene instead of at the end of the last scene. It helps me to pick right back up without doing much rereading, which is very important because my inner editor just can't stand reading it yet.

BUT--genevive42 says that if she can't find a block of time, a couple hundred words is good. That doesn't work so good for me right now. Things go much more smoothly if I type for at least 2 hours (maybe 1, if I'm in a crunch), and use those smaller blocks of time to do a little research, get to know a character better and just generally get myself so excited to write the story that it pours out when I finally sit down.

The other thing I'm learning is that my writing is better if I've been eating healthily, I'm pretty caught up on my sleep and I've exercised some.

The best thing I've done is start taking a leisurely quarter mile walk before I start a major writing session (and I only got lost the one time).

I don't have loads of time to write--only six to eight hours a week that don't involve losing sleep, but so far I've only needed to stay up really late one time (and that's probably the section I'll end up deleting completely).

This is my third year of doing Nanowrimo, and the first year that it hasn't felt like a complete frenzy the whole time. I seem to be making habits I can stick with. If writing was my full time job, 50,000 words in a month seems relatively reasonable, although I'm not sure I would do it this way 365 days a year.
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Thanks, Meredith! That is what I figured. The executor of the trust is someone who has deep suspicion of the lover so that works out well.

What I have learned is that I can narrate really quickly. I think the main reason I am over 20K is because there is not really much dialogue in my story. If I had a lot of dialogue I suspect my word count would be not nearly so high.

I have also learned that it is painful to be writing on one project when another is screaming to be worked on.
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Unwritten, is that a nano technique? Cut and copy?

I like to spend longer blocks of time writing. I find that my mind is sort of like a flywheel. It takes a bit of time to get the wheel spinning, but once it does, the ideas flow. It does get a little hard to sleep sometimes because at the end of a writing session at night, the wheel continues to spin.

Short sessions barely get the wheel spinning, for me. I would imagine if you look at my scenes, they are shorter in the beginning of a writing session.

I also find that, for me, dialogue pushes the action and vice versa. I've really tried to keep narration down to a minimum and do as much showing as I can. My thinking there is that it will cut down on the rewriting, with perhaps an uptick in grammar editing.The only thing that dialogue slows down, is I have to remember to put beats along with the dialogue.

 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
8 days, 14,363 words. What have I learned?

1. No T.V. while writing. My husband usually leaves the T.V. on in the background while playing WOW. When I try to write with the T.V. on my rate drops from 1000 words/hour to 100. Music seems to be fine though.

2. Every little bit counts. A couple hundred words here or there on nights when I only have 1/2 hour of free time has really helped me stay on track. It keeps me thinking about the novel even if I can't write it until later.

3. I have ADD. Not really. But I've found I can only sit and write for about an hour and a half before I need a break. I'm not bored with the story, I just can't maintain focus for that long. Sometimes just going upstairs to get a snack is enough, sometimes I take a longer break to do yard/housework.

4. You guys are awesome! Every time I don't feel like writing I come over here to check out what you are up to. Your progress is so inspiring I get right back to it. Thanks!
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Thanks all, for your advice on my Word problem. I've started in a new document, from the beginning of chapter seven, and so far had no problems with it. It's just a pig to know how many words I've written as I keep having to add the total words of the original document, to those of the new one. I think I'm going to go ahead and tranfer the old file to wordpad or something as a safeguard.

Kayti, you mentioned printing the document. I only wish I could. I'm out of ink right now, and since a new cartridge costs me the equivilent of a days wage (I realise that doesn't sound a lot, but to me, its way too much) I can't afford one at the moment. I'm not even sure, with Christmas on its way, if I'll have one by the time I need to print my next WotF story. I also remembered last night I have an online back-up store that came with my anti-virus software, if only I knew how to find it, so should have a copy there if the worst come to the worst.

As for lessons learned. This is my forth NaNo and it has taught me that I can write a much better story this way. Better as in, every word is relevent to the story. There are no long winded pages of narative that would later be cut. I also work better to a deadline, even if it is really a self imposed one. No, I couldn't write like this all year round--though I used to when I first started writing many years ago, I would write three to ten thousand words a day, every day, but then, most of it is now in the trash can.

As for length of writing session, I can write either way. On my days off from work, I aim to write 200 words an hour, every hour, which usually takes me ten minutes to write. But I can also have four and five hour breaks, and have an hour session where I'll get 1000-1500 words down. I certainly can't write for more than an hour at a time. I get kind of tense if I write for too long, and need to go do something else for a while, even if its some housework.

Also, if I'm watching a TV show, I like to rattle of a hundred or so words in the advert break. If I watch a couple of hour long shows, which is usually on a Thursday evening, I can soon get eight or nine hundred words down on the page, and still watch my show. Plus I don't have watch the dreadful adverts.

Considering the migraine I've had since friday, that I now think is a virus since my son has it too, has been hampering my ability to focus, I'm about to break the 21,000 word mark. But to be honest, I'll be glad when its all over!

Owasm, you're amazing! I think we'll all doing great, keep it up!
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
KayTi, Spokane Sunshine and annepin, I've noticed that you haven't posted your word counts over at NaNo. Are you still with us?

One more thing I've learned is to take a break when you need it. And no, the time you spend bashing your head against the monitor because you don't know what to write doesn't count.
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
22 thousand in a week. What have I learned?

1) Just write. It might not come out exactly as I saw it in my head, but then I can't get my head published some day.

2) Just write. Ideas look better on paper than swirling around in the nether.

3) Just write. You can't edit a blank piece of paper.

4) Just write. Editing sucks anyway.

5) Just write. Your characters will ignore you no matter what you do, so stop fighting them.
 


Posted by Meredith (Member # 8368) on :
 
quote:
Thanks, Meredith! That is what I figured. The executor of the trust is someone who has deep suspicion of the lover so that works out well.

Wills have executors. Trusts have trustees.
 


Posted by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (Member # 59) on :
 
quote:
Kayti, you mentioned printing the document. I only wish I could. I'm out of ink right now, and since a new cartridge costs me the equivilent of a days wage (I realise that doesn't sound a lot, but to me, its way too much) I can't afford one at the moment. I'm not even sure, with Christmas on its way, if I'll have one by the time I need to print my next WotF story. I also remembered last night I have an online back-up store that came with my anti-virus software, if only I knew how to find it, so should have a copy there if the worst come to the worst.

Darklight, if you can put the document on a CD or a flash drive and take it to a local printer (the one near me has to have it as a PDF file) you can have them print it out for much less than the cost of an ink cartridge.
 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
6120 and feelin' fine.

I actually do have ADD and I would rob a bank for an hour and a half of focus. I try so hard to keep my BIC but still find myself realizing something that needs my attention right away, like loading the dishwasher at three in the morning. I actually sometimes start writing another story in the middle of the one I'm working on. (I know I'm bad but I delete most of them, so I'm actually doing more words than is up there, but I think writing half another novel inside of my real novel is cheating.)

I do love this, writing this book feels like I'm opening a tap and it just gushes out, like it did when I was a kid. I'm also getting writer's highs like you wouldn't believe and I'm sitting on a writer's headache right now, all of this means I'm doing good. I did the math and at 6000 words and twenty two days left to do it I have exactly 2000 words a day to go. Just thought that was funny.

What I learned from this week, I spend way too much time not writing. This isn't time I'm doing other interesting things, just time I'm spending telling myself I should be writing. Also when I'm in a big writing session the less thinky games are the better ones. The other day I actually loaded up Diablo II.
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Kathleen, I've been thinking about doing that, or, even better, being a little cheeky and asking a friend to print for me, with a little recompense of course.

I've actually been feeling quite down about my story. It's not the usual thing I write. I tend to go for a lot of fast paced action, but this has been more leisurely, strolling along for a while, a quick burst of action, and back to strolling. It's going to pick up soon, and the last third will be quite different, but I've not been all that happy with it, but I feel much better now. I explained the entire premise of the story to my seventeen year old son this afternoon, who is very good for bouncing ideas off and giving honest opinion, even if he doesn't read the stories, and he said it sounded very good and even helped me with some ideas for some tricky parts I hadn't quite figured out yet. Ok, it's only my son, but our conversation has given me a boost.

Just to add to things learnt. I've learned that I'm obsessed with updating my word count. I do it after every three or four hundred words. I just can't stop myself.
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
quote:
KayTi, Spokane Sunshine and annepin, I've noticed that you haven't posted your word counts over at NaNo. Are you still with us?

I've learned over the years that trying to get on the Nano forums/site in the first few days of Nano is a pain in the patooty, so I had been avoiding them. I keep a separate spreadsheet with daily totals (and separate files in scrivener for each writing day.)

I uploaded my end-of-yesterday word count (I'm right on pace) and am hoping to get another 1k words in tonight.

I think what I am learning the most is that I'm not making this the priority it should be. I'm finding lots of ways to waste time instead. I think I'm just not particularly into the story yet because we're not into the high action (and because i should have outlined more, sigh.) But also I need to do something different for next year, because writing about life on space ships/in space is starting to grate on my nerves a bit. No characters running through grass or getting stuck out in the rain. Little limiting.


 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Another thing I learned. I used to hate coming up with names and substitute swear words. Since I don't have time for heavy contemplation of these things during NaNo I just make some fecklespit up and keep going.
 
Posted by ArmadonRK (Member # 8864) on :
 
Well, boy am I behind. I won't say it couldn't be helped, I didn't bother to speed it along, although I did run into some trouble that forced me to stop writing and go back to the scribbling/brainstorming/outlining phase. I am incapable of writing if there is a detail I come across that I don't know. I don't need to know what's coming step by step, but I need the trivia that invariably winds up being important, like the exact village a character is from, or the nickname of a girlfriend, or the ethnicity of a minor antagonist. When such a hiccup arises, everything comes to a halt until I find my answer.
So today is a day to get all that out of the way and back to work.

But first I have to go back and change the country a major character is living in, since I realized my first run through was too haphazard. Someone needs to jump across the Atlantic Ocean.

Congratulations to those who are way, way, way, way, way ahead. I don't know how you guys did it, but I admire your focus and dedication. Some of you either you have a phenomenal work ethic, or you got very carried away.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Hi Everyone
I love the enthusiasm here! I logged 16,265 words last night before bed and hope to round the 20K turn today. It's been very different from last year, for me and I have learned different things.

1) I planned much better this year and for me, that has made a world of difference. I have strayed from my outline but that structure helped me understand more readily how the variations will work. More than anything I realize that I am not a pantser and likely will never be, and that's OK.

2) It's OK not to have everything planned! I can still write if there is a bitty piece of research not completed. (rolls eyes- what a dwb)

3) I write better under timed sprints. I am also a member of the RWA FFP (romance writers association fantasy...etc) group. They have an ongoing chat room that runs 45 minute group writing sprints. After the sprint we fess up to what we have done and talk about problems. I love it. I can't google some odd gold rush fact when I am racing the clock.

4) I loooooooove writing. 8) It's fun. That sobering post in the general forum notwithstanding, I hope I can do this for a living some day.

8)
Leslie
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
I found in writing my three novels (two not yet complete) this year that I am pretty much a controlled pantser.

For me, I need at least a wireframe of the story I'm writing.

My first attempt was about pure pantser style. All I did was jot down my character names so I could keep them straight.

My next attempt was very controlled (as a result of Liberty Hall's Midsommer Madness). I found that I didn't get as much into the story as I'd like and I had to plop in additions to the plot both before and after my outline. That one ended up at 90K+ words and is scheduled for a rewrite in Jan.

I seem to have reached a happy medium with my NaNo novel. I spent a lot of time worldbuilding... This actually makes writing as a pantser easier because you don't have to pause to figure out distances or coinages or whatever, which is, to me, a writing impediment. My outline consisted of writing a treatment (pantser style) and sketching out scenes on a spreadsheet that had character names (I tend to forget them as I write) that act as my wireframe.

So I'm not quite halfway through (55K words) and I can write the story to hit certain wireframe points to maintain the MC's growth and progress. I've already realized a new ending is required because the vision of the overarching story is coming together and the project is expanding from heroic to epic fantasy.

Nano has forced me into figuring this out. What is interesting to me is seeing all the different styles and writing experiences shared on this thread. I'm looking forward to lots more in the next 20 days.


 


Posted by Sunshine (Member # 3701) on :
 
Quote: KayTi, Spokane Sunshine and annepin, I've noticed that you haven't posted your word counts over at NaNo. Are you still with us?

I'm here. I have written a bit, although not as much as I should have since I came down with a really nasty bug. Then I had to put some fires out at work, so that has eaten into my free time. I've got about 5,000 words, and plan to catch up within the next few days. I haven't posted my wordcount because I haven't been able to get onto the Nano site for a few days (it's always closed for maintenance when I check). I'm glad I checked here for updates; thanks for thinking of me.

What I've Learned:

1. It's way too easy to fall into the trap of "if only I had the time".
2. With a goal of 1.600 words per day, it's really easy to fall despairingly behind.

 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I'm slowly falling behind as well. I'm at 13,500 words, which doesn't seem to bad at first, until you realize that the last 1,500 words took 4 days to write. Ah well--tomorrow is another day, and my big projects are mostly over.
 
Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Help! My characters have nodding-itis. They all nod to each other all the time. sometimes they bob their head in agreement or what have you, but help! How can I portray some kind of agreement (one of the main characters is giving orders/directions to the rest, getting them to agree on course of action, etc.) without so much nodding? I'm honestly afraid some will get whiplash before too long!

I'm at 17858 so far, so I'm doing fine (I'm a little bit ahead) but I need a solution to this horrible nodding disease before I drive myself bananas!
 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
Your characters are kids...watch/listen to your children and see what they do. Maybe the answer is right in front of you.
 
Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
quote:
nodding disease

cute, makes me think of the 'poochy lip' or something else that Patch the Pirate would sing about.
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
So, its been one of those days today. Got 600 words written before work, which I was very pleased with, since I'm now only a couple hundred off 25,000. Good start to the day, I'm happy, its going to be a good day. So wrong.

Just before I set off for work, I go tell teenage son, who didn't get up when I woke him up an hour earlier, that I'm going. Aparently, its my fault he didn't get up, so is the the fact that I forgot to make him a cup of tea, and that his dentist appointment this afternoon is at an unsuitible time for him, because he'll lose out on the time he gets to spend with friends.

All the way to work, I get some not very nice texts from him. I ignore them, since I don't want to deal with this before or at work.

Break time: Get some texts, then a phone call from daughter. Mum, there's something wrong with the dog. He's bright red, his skin is all saggy and his face and neck have swollen up. Rushes home from work, gets dog to vet. An allergic reaction. One and half hours of missed work and one £34 injection later, I get home. So today I've earned precisely minus £25. Not good. After I get the dog home, he jumps up, hits the top of his head under the windowsill. I now have swallon faced, bleeding head dog. I then have to go out, to come home to swollen faced, bleeding head, all-over-body knobbly dog. Oh, and I haven't written a single word since this morning.

I have to take angry teenager to dentist soon. I'm not looking forward to that. Hope to get some more words written later; I'm not staking my life on it though.

How's your day going?
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
darklight, here's my suggestions:

1. Punch the teenage boy in the mouth. Serves two purposes. He will shut up and respect his mother and the dentist visit will now be required.

2. Put the dog to sleep. I don't mean kill it. I mean put it to sleep...with sleeping pills. Then it won't be able to get into anything to have allergic reactions.

3. Quit your job, because coming home with negative money is bad. Better yet, ask for a raise.

4. Ignore everything I just wrote because I'm only hoping to make you smile a moment and maybe forget about having a bad day.

As for me and my writing, I've been sick the past couple of days and I've gotten virtually nothing done. About 500 or so words a day I think. When my head hurts and I'm stuffy I really don't feel like doing anything but laying around and being a lump somewhere.
 


Posted by Meredith (Member # 8368) on :
 
I'm not a parent so take my suggestion for what it's worth.

1)Take the cell phone away for a week. Texting is a privilege. You abuse, you loose it.

Oh, and BTW, if he's over 13, he should know how to boil water. If he doesn't, he's not going to learn any younger, as my father would have said.

2)I am a dog owner. If the dog is crate trained, now is a very good time for the crate. The dog can relax in it's den, won't be stressed, and can't get into any more trouble.

3)Take a deep breath.

[This message has been edited by Meredith (edited November 11, 2009).]
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Kayti, I had to laugh at all your bobble head characters.
Sometimes a head tilt means yes.
Sometimes a raise of eyebrows means yes.
Both of these are the kind of yes that is a little surprised to find they agree.
Or mostly, I think hand gestures. A finger point. "That's it!" or
Both hands out, palms out, held up vertically can mean 'yes, yes, okay!' or 'I get it!' as well as other things.

Or just have them look suddenly thoughtful. Or just say "Okay."

Or she could just read his assent in his eyes/expression/face.

As to teenaged son and the big bad day: Sorry! My response to my children when they were being was always the same (well, as long as it wasn't abusive!) "I love you, too!" and then you do what you gotta do anyway. If they can be silly-hostile we can be silly-loving.
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
I hit a slump at 25k and have been trying to get myself out of it for the past 3 days. I kept writing really short scenes and the words weren't coming at all. If it weren't for nano, I would have probably given up and not written anything. So that's what I love about nano!

Today the words came back and I have to say there is something empowering about hitting 30k. I've got a better idea of how I want this one part of my story to go. I am hoping to get another 2k in tonight.

Good luck to everyone, especially those who have had real life setbacks!


 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
I'm getting to the point that I don't even want to open up my Nano file. I get on the computer to write, and I look through my files saying "What else do I have."

Closing in on almost 12,000 words, not bad since I lost almost five days to dumb computer problems.

I just don't want to write this story anymore. Can I start a new one, do you think? Maybe mix them together in an inedible pile of words.

~Sheena
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Sheena--if you can stand the slowness, go take a look at the Nano forums. They'll give you some ideas of how to have some fun with your story. Who knows? One of them might catch. Actually, who needs the Nanowrimo forums. We can give you some fun ideas.

1. Use the travelling shovel of death.

2. In the next 2 pages, bring your main character to the brink of death.

3. Add a romance (OK, knowing you, you've probably already got one. Now switch it up.)

Kayti--My characters all have to pause and thoughtfully consider the question before nodding. Or they freeze, and have to force themselves to move again. Maybe you should be grateful for the problems you've got.

I cracked 15,000 today. I want to be at 25,000 by Saturday, which will be quite a challenge. BUT, I have a babysitter watching my son for a couple of hours tomorrow, so I'm really hoping to have hit 20,000 twenty four hours from now. My "wow the words are just flowing from my brain" experience is now over. It was very fun while it lasted.

I did figure out a very important plot twist this morning, and I'm relieved, because I was beginning to think political intrigue was just asking too much of my imagination.
Melanie
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
Sorry to hear about your bad day, darklight. And about the ADD Pyre.

Have you ever read The Blind Assasin by Margrat Atwood? She has a character who is a writer for the pulps. The book has a fantasy story, a current story and a woman's memoirs going on all at the same time. Don't delete that other novels - maybe they can fit in somewhere.
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Owasm hits 60,700 words.

I'm a sucker for challenges. Obsessed? Maybe a little. I was going to watch the Utah Jazz on TV tonight but they sucked so I got in more words than I intended.

My story is moving right along and in the direction I wanted. I just finished one of the BIG turning points tonight and go into uncharted/outlined/figured out territory for the next 20,000 words.

Darklight, sorry to hear about your day. I've had a few myself and have darker days ahead, but I'm clear for the rest of November anyway.

Keep at it, everybody!


 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I just broke 21,000 words.

Today I had to take my boyfriend to the eye doctor (He is legally blind and has a myriad of problems, all of which are under watch and treatment but only so much can be done.) The thing is, what is usually a rather long appointment went really fast every time I opened up my netbook to work on my NaNo story. I got a few hundred words in while his eyes were dilating but every other time they were super speedy to show up and call him in. Since I was in the middle of a scene when we left we went over to Borders where I finished the scene I was working while he listened to his ipod.

darklight, if you drink I suggest you have one good one at the end of today. Savor it, enjoy it and try to find the humor in the sheer absurdity of the scale of how bad a day could actually be. If it were in a story, it might be funny. Remember, comedy is tragedy that happens to someone else. Maybe make some of it happen to your characters. Here's to a better tomorrow.

Good luck all. I know many of you are past it, but I see 25,000 coming up in the next day or two. Can't wait.
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
quote:
Owasm hits 60,700 words.

Freak.
 


Posted by ArmadonRK (Member # 8864) on :
 
Going to do some reasonable catching up today, I think. I feel like I'm about to hit the 'breaking point' in my writing.
I don't know how it is for some of you, but for me the earliest work I do always feels forced. I'm shaping my characters into people they're not, and forcing them to do things against their will. Eventually I reach a 'breaking point', when I stop writing the characters, and they break free of my control. Then I'm just telling the story around them, and I don't even have to think about the characters any more and they just do what comes naturally to them. For me that's when the story really becomes worth telling.
I'm not quite there yet with this story, I still feel like there's more to be written and decided and told about them, more shaping to do, before I can really let loose, but I'm looking forward to hitting that moment soon.
Today I've had two instances of long passages revealing things about characters I had never planned or intended, which is the first sign of it all coming together.

[This message has been edited by ArmadonRK (edited November 12, 2009).]
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Hi all
I finally rolled over the 20K mark yesterday.

had a bad couple of days with a rotted beam and tub of bondo, but I'm good now...
Oh yeah... lost a few brain cells to bondo...but they were extra anyway.... 8)

Sounds like everyone is having a month, except Owasm who is writing machine.
8)

Keeping writing!!!!

Leslie
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Thank you everyone. I really apreciate all your thoughts and comments. Joseph, you did make me laugh, thank you!

I've had a much better day today, no mishaps, the dog looks like a dog again and my supervisor at work is letting me make up the time I lost yesterday, so I'll be in work earlier saturday and sunday.

I made around 2000 words yesterday, and am aiming for about the same today, but probably not going to make it. My goal is 30,000 by the end of tomorrow. I feel much happier now I'm past 25,000, its a good place to be.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
quote:
I don't know how it is for some of you, but for me the earliest work I do always feels forced. I'm shaping my characters into people they're not, and forcing them to do things against their will.

Especially so in this story. That's the beauty of Nanowrimo though--I got sick of the beginning so I jumped ahead and after writing 50+ pages this way I realized that the whole beginning would never happen to this character anyway. That's why I hated it so bad. Still looking for a good starting spot though.

I'm happy to be at 20,223 words today. There's still a shot I can make it to 25,000 by Saturday night. If only I could have another day like today. I'm really hanging onto my sleep time so far. I have only sacrificed a few hours of sleep at the Nanowrimo altar. That may change this weekend.
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
The NaNo bug still has its teeth in me. Another 4,000 words tonight.

This is the pivotal moment of the novel and I didn't know how it was going to come out. I'm sure I'll have to rewrite more angst and tears and regrets into it, but for NaNo, just words... just words.

I just hope there's not too much telling, but it had its surprises. My MC was supposed to face the world alone, but he's picked up a sidekick. I don't know what this guy's significance will be since he showed up out of the blue.


 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
23,202 words

Had a good session tonight after work, even if it did include a half hour nap in my desk chair with my feet up on the bed.

I finally figured out my soundtrack for this thing. It starts with the soundtrack to Firefly, then it goes to a cd of a Chinese singing trio we picked up while we were there. Then onto Mongolian throat singing, a friend brought that back. And then some mellow Moroccan music. Though I don't know if that one is authentic or just inspired by. I usually prefer very authentic, but this one works as good background music. It ends with the soundtrack to Mr. and Mrs. Smith which has a fun, upbeat element to it.

I am really starting to get into a groove with my characters. The humorous element of my story isn't as strong as I had originally thought it would be but there is a lot of heart I didn't know was there either.

About a month ago I posted a question about figuring out how to determine the main character in an ensemble cast. Well, what I've discovered is that the crew of the ship is the main character. The pov shifts from scene to scene depending on whose pov is the most critical or the most interesting for that scene. But the story is about the crew. No one person is always the center of attention. This started out being a challenge because I had to get into each person's head and I didn't know them all that well yet. Now, even though I'm still learning new things about them, it's flowing much more smoothly. ArmadonRK
is right about that breaking point. There's a section coming up that I can't wait to write. I think it's going to be a lot of fun.

Keep writing everyone!
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
Work and some sort of evil magic has conspired against me to stop my story. Workload has picked up a lot in the last week. Military life is unpredictable at best.
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I think I'm starting to get it!

OSC talks somewhere about how your first draft is really just a learning experience and won't bear much resemblance to the final copy. After writing my first novel I couldn't imagine how anyone could go to that much work and then throw it out in the trash as a "learning experience". But this Nanowrimo story I'm really starting to get it. The first time through is really just an oportunity to get all my ideas down, and as I do it, I'm learning about the characters and letting the story take me down unexpected paths that might or might not go somewhere in the end.

The character I've developed by the middle of the story bears little resemblance to the one at the beginning, and so that all needs to change too.

Rather than constantly going back and rewriting, I just make myself a note and ride the story to the conclusion as though it was a galloping horse. By the time I'm done, almost everything about it needs to be changed, but I've learned some incredible things I couldn't have learned any other way. So this is not the time to worry about whether I'm showing or telling, or if the dialogue to exposition ratio is perfect. It's not even about getting the characters names perfect.

When it's done, I'll give it a few months to rest and then try it again. I think that would be the perfect time to outline it and make sure the names are right. Then I can cut and add and do all the things to make it shine.

Everyone has their own writing style, and I think I've found mine!
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Well, I just broke the 30,000 word barrier. I feel as if I could write another 1,000 words tonight. I'm at an interesting part and I can't wait to get to the exciting bit and don't want to stop, but it's almost 11.00 pm and I have to be up at six in the morning for work, and if I don't stop writing an hour before I go to bed--something I learned a long time ago--I dream about my characters and that just screws with my brain.

At least I've got lots to write about tomorrow. I feel this story is just getting going, and I have a lot in front of me. 50,000 words just isn't going to cut it.

If I'd have to say one thing I've learned these last few days, it would be that slow and steady is much better than writing a whole lot in one day, and burning myself out. In previous years of doing NaNo, I've gone for the 'write as much as I can in a day' approach, sometimes 6-7k in a day, but then had some days when I've only managed a few hundred words. This year, I've kept it pretty much to a 2-3k a day, with one exception of a little over 1000 one day, and I think I'm going to get the 50,000 done in less days than I have before.

Unwritten, about knowing things will have to be changed later, but waiting for the rewrite. I agree. I know there are parts I'll have to go back and reorder and add some stuff to. I only hope I actually end up liking this story enough that I think its worth spending more time over when the end of the month comes.

[This message has been edited by darklight (edited November 13, 2009).]
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I think I'm going to like this story enough to work on it, but it's going to be at least as many years of editing as my first Nanowrimo project. That's a sobering thought.

But then I remember that every minute I spent on that story was worth it, and I'm cool again.


 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
I broke 25,000 words. Woohoo!

But I really don't want to see the repair bill.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
quote:
I broke 25,000 words. Woohoo!
But I really don't want to see the repair bill.

Congratulations! I made it too! 25,025 words, and now I'm taking a break. I've got to regroup. The story is still exciting but the writing is not even meeting my purposely low standards.

I'm still waiting for the moment when it all comes together and I can see where I'm going. As of this moment, I have one more scene where I know what I'm going to do. I also know how it ends but there's a HUGE chasm yawning between here and there.

Do I have the courage to step off that cliff?

[This message has been edited by Unwritten (edited November 14, 2009).]
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I broke 25,000 words. Woohoo!
But I really don't want to see the repair bill.
------------------
I don't care who you are; that's funny!
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Okay, now I have a picture of a battlefield covered with broken words. There's a solitary figure in the middle of it, the writer, and she is looking down at a pile of forsaken words and letters in her hands. Her only thought, "My God, what happened here?"

Okay, enough for melodrama.

Unwritten, you talked about how you've discovered the nature of the first draft being a learning experience. I've just recently come to understand that myself. A few months ago I started to get it and realize that the novel I had written and so lovingly nurtured for years needed a lot of work. I still believe in that story but I am going to approach it from a completely new standpoint and do a lot more world building that I hadn't realized I needed. But now I am working on my NaNo story and I am starting fresh with the new approach I've discovered. I don't know which one I'm going to start editing first come January.

I do like the idea that NaNo presents. I'm thinking that it would be a good way to approach any new novel concept to test it out. That way, if it doesn't work then not too much time has been lost. If one month is too short, maybe make it six or eight weeks, but keep a tight schedule to get the benefits of speed writing. Next time I start a new piece, I'm going to try this. Of course, there's always next year's NaNo.

On another note. I thought I had a short section that was going to be easy to write. I should've known better. There are two scenes that are needed that just revealed themselves to me. If I don't write them, I will not like this section so I might as well write them now. They're going to be fun, character oriented scenes though. I'm just anxious to finish this section because in the next one I get to put a couple of the characters through hell.
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Unwritten & Genevieve; me too. I actually sent of the novel I sweated over for the last year to an editor because it wasn't meshing together well enough. The PROBLEM for me is just what unwritten said (or was it someone else?) is that when I write that slowly I lose the thread I had at the beginning. This thing I have written for NaNo I think holds together better and isn't losing itself in itself. Well, I plan on stopping it aroung 50k, too, so it is half as big as the other.

So I, too, am going to start the other one over and write it quickly so it stays fresher in my head. This one is turning out way better than I expected.

I am roaring past 42K now. I suspect I will hit 50K in the next few days. I am amazed at myself.
 


Posted by ArmadonRK (Member # 8864) on :
 
Passed 13k quite easily tonight, and if I keep a similar pace the rest of the month, I can get this done easily.

I did stumble a bit tonight, falling into an old habit, which is framing dialogue cinematically. This is probably the one truly great flaw in the way I write. I often get so absorbed in the conversation, I forget everything else and just write enormous blocks of text in quotation marks.

Fortunately, when I realized my mistake, I was able to go back and make some changes, remembering that one segment of chapter 11 of OSC's Characters and Viewpoint that has improved my writing more than anything else ever has: the three pages titled Attitude.

So I owe Mr. Card a thank you, for reminding me there's more to a conversation than just the words being spoken.

And for helping me pad my word count.

[This message has been edited by ArmadonRK (edited November 15, 2009).]

[This message has been edited by ArmadonRK (edited November 15, 2009).]
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
I"VE FOUND IT... THE SECRET TO UNLOCKING MID MONTH NANO SLUMP...

THE SLUMP-O-MATIC.....

OK, I'll stop yelling at you now..... Actually, I found this really bizzarre picture and in a fit of Nano-induced procrastination I did a blog entry about this. It's truly amazing how much I got done this weekend just by procrastinating around Nano.....too funny.

http://www.leslieadow.com/?p=25


 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
I enjoyed your blog entry, Leslie.

I haven't hit a slump yet, but I just wrote a very boring episode that will definitely be changed in the next draft. It just about put me to sleep. The MC is going to have to get more out of it.

I'm up to eighty-one thousand seven hundred words. The trick is write and NEVER LOOK BACK. If you do, just as Leslie said, you lose time.

I'm still on track to finish this puppy this month. I'm flying back to Wash DC for Thanksgiving and hope I can use my laptop on the flight. That's nine hours (battery willing) of writing.

I've seen some of my buddies on track and some haven't started. Keep those fingers pounding the keys!

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited November 16, 2009).]
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
I had a pretty bad weekend writing-wise. We were up visiting my parents so my wordcount is still at 21K. This week is also going to be rough - we're going back Thursday night, and I doubt I will get any writing next weekend either.
 
Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
yep, clearly leslie had too much coffee tonight...LOL!!!!

going to bed now.....
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Leslie, the Slump-O-Matic rocks!

I have to say though that I haven't hit a true slump. There have been a few slow patches but nothing that made me not want to write.

I have spent the last three Sundays at Starbucks with my netbook for an obnoxious number of hours. But it keeps me from getting distracted. I bought the netbook specifically for NaNo and have to say it was well worth it.

Today I wrote about 4600 words. I am absolutely loving the section I am on and can't wait to get back to it. Lots of great character stuff.

I just topped 30,000 words.

Keep going y'all.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I spent the weekend reading Catching Fire instead of writing. My husband was less than pleased that I thought I could read AND write this month. I was saving it for my reward on December 1, but I made the mistake of opening it. Oh, it's good stuff.

Midway through, she wrote a sentence that pretty much sums up the whole first 25,000 words of my Nano book. "We run and lift things and stretch our muscles." Man, I want to edit. I'm even thinking of changing to first person right here in the middle--which would be ironic considering the first time I did Nanowrimo I made the mistake of starting in first and changing to third mid-way through. I swore I'd never write in first again, but my book is screaming for it.

On the other hand, the thought of writing in present tense makes me shiver like I just heard fingernails scraping down the chalkboard. It worked in Catching Fire though. I never even noticed it.

The month is half way done my friends. This is where things get exciting. Good luck!
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Stupid chest cold. Lost two days to writing. Luckily I'm pretty far ahead, so no real worries, but it's broken my stride.

Eh well.
 


Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
@ Rhaythe - I know the feeling. I'm finally starting to emerge from the grips of swine flu and really annoyed that I've basically had to let my nano project sit for over a week. Grrr. Stupid diseases. They have no respect for authorial deadlines :-)
 
Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Right now my back is killing me. I've been sat on this chair far too long today, long enough to write 5,000 words exactly!

It's been good/bad day. Writing good/everything else bad, including a vow never to shop at my usual supermarket again. If they won't give me the £72 in vouchers that they own me from august (which I was relying on for Christmas) then I'm not giving them any more of my money. End of story.

Total words for november thus far: 39,000.

Kitti and Rhaythe, hope you're both feeling better soon.

[This message has been edited by darklight (edited November 16, 2009).]
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Thanks, Darklight. Hang in there, Kitti!

PS: 41k broken! 9k to go! Though, I'm only about 65% done with the story, so I wonder if I'll actually finish it by the 30th.
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Oh, Raythe! that is great. congrats.

I've been slow for a few days gathering research and thoughts but I'm doing better now. Logged about 1500 words so far today and plan to do more.
Leslie
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
50k
*does a happy dance*

I am learning so much this nano:

There are definitely key things that have been added to my story that wouldn't be there if I didn't feel pressured to write. For example, I had a scene where I needed something to happen, but I didn't know how to go about it. The first time I tried to write the scene it badly derailed and went in a direction that made me very unhappy. I tried again with the same result. It wasn't until we had a "word war" (equivalent of the sprints mentioned earlier by LAJD) at the write-in I attended that the scene managed to come out in a way that made sense for my character.

I LIKE my story. (It seems like a weird thing to learn, but I think it is important if you are going to spend a lot of time on something...)

I need to work on setting up my scenes better. It's nano, so I suppose these things are to be expected, but I will get through part of a scene and realize I forgot to mention an important detail that was needed at the moment. I end up adding things like "And he was wearing boots."

 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Congratulations sjsampson! That's awesome.

Well I broke down and edited just a smidgen tonight. Should I ever mention writing in first person again, someone just please knock me on the head.

I'm at 26,705 words and right when everyone else is starting to think about word wars and sprints I'm thinking about slowing down, because I'm not quite sure how to get from here to there now.

Do I want her to stay in the Capitol and use her mother's connections to do some spying?

Does she believe all the horrible things people are saying about Chris/Brandon?

Is the final stage of her journey going to be a major part of this book? It was originally going to be, but I'm just about journeyed out.

Which of the characters she has met are going to stick with her? and why?

Is this book meant to be a stand alone book or am I setting the stage for a sequel?

If someone could just spoon feed me the answers to these and many other questions I'll sleep better tonight. Thanks.
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Remember that what you write for Nano doesn't have to be how the story ACTUALLY goes/ends. You can write it one way in Nano, and heck, if you still need the word count, write the scene/section in another way (or have the character take a different course of action.) Make notes to yourself about what you were thinking to do - "either use this part or the part afterwards, but remember to change the guy's car color to blue." - even notes count for word count purposes, if you wrote them during nano!

I'm up to 28,0001 words as of today, which is a smidge ahead. Just a smidge.

Did some fun word sprints in the last day that helped me stay focused. Found that I could even benefit from self-imposed word sprints without a writing partner to compare notes to afterwards. Gives me something to post to facebook at the very least.

My biggest lesson learned: Next book, don't set it on a spaceship/space station. I'm finding the hallway/common areas structure entirely too limiting. All three of my Nano projects have taken place on space ships or space stations. Hmm...


 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
I've hit nearly 87,000 words tonight. I hadn't intended this to be a 5,000 word night, but the Monday Night Football game wasn't very exciting.

I've got some interesting questions to answer next session. Is the guy who he spilled his guts to really his friend? Or is his servant a spy for a rival wizard? Just thought of that. Hmmm.

It's good to see a lot of people making progress. Some have fallen by the wayside, but that's the nature of these things.

Keep your head down and write, write, write.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Monday was super busy at work so I didn't get any writing done there. But then I got home, had dinner and FELL ASLEEP. I didn't realize I was that tired. Between couch sleeping time and actual having gone to bed sleeping time I slept eleven hours last night. I can't believe I did that.

I'm a little ahead so it's not too detrimental but I keep getting ahead on Sunday and then start slowly losing my word cushion over the week. And I'm having fun with this part too.

I usually hang out with my boyfriend on Tuesdays but he'll understand if I say I need to NaNo. We'll see how work goes today. Hopefully I'll have some progress by tomorrow and keep some of that cushion I worked so hard to get.
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
I had a nap after work on Monday too. Luckily not for 11 hours though, so I still got some writing in.

I'm farther behind than I would like, and this weekend isn't going to be any better, but I knew that coming in. I'm trying to just soldier through a couple thousand more words this week and have a big push at the end.

Despite this being a terrible week for writing I am really loving nano. I gave my MC an unexpected head wound last week. I also decided after writing the first 10K that my MC was claustrophobic. This week I think someone she is becoming friends with will betray her. Fun times...
 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
I haven't exactly fallen away, I just had a terrible week. Didn't get one word out. I was sick, not with a big flu or anything that would have kept me out of work, just with a general unhealthyness that made me feel like the inside of my head was growing while the outside was shrinking. I passed 7K today. I have done as much as 10K a day in the past I just need to do it. So I still believe that I can win.
Another thing that troubled me was Diablo II, I know I said that it was a good game to play while thinking about writing, but I forgot how addicting it is and how bad it is on actual productivity.
I need a good whack in the noggin and a big sack full of bloggin.
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I past 30k today. Just barely. I still feel like there's an important element missing in the story. It probably has something to do with my two dimensional minor characters. Still, this is the most complicated plot line I've ever tried to write, and just getting the bare bones onto the screen is an accomplishment by itself.

I'd like to get to 40k by Saturday. I'm still waiting for that a-ha moment, and I'm hoping I didn't waste it when the beginning of the book went so smoothly.
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
People are tipping into 50K land. Savantidiot (ribbit) and SJSampson among others. I see darklight is close.

It's great to see folks moving from the blue bar to the green on the NaNo meter.

I hit 92,400 tonight. I've averaged a bit over 5,400 words a day. I find it's getting harder, but I've finally circled around and caught up to my outline. I figure another 30K to finish this first book of what became a series in front of my eyes during Nano. I just have to follow the scenes I've sketched out. I figured out the ending. I'm not sure it offers enough closure but, hey this is a first draft.

Keep at it we've got 13 more days to NaNo!

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited November 18, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Hit 32,411 and still going strong. If it weren't 2am I'd keep going. But I left off in the middle of something so I'll have somewhere to go in the morning. Tomorrow is my day off and I have until 2:30pm before I have to go to a dentist appointment. After that, I'm going out to have some fun.

I'm finding that a fairly steady approach is working for me. I certainly have days where I get more done but that's mostly due to time available. Once I hit 30,000 the pressure diminished and I've just really gotten into my characters. There have been some small revelations, but surprisingly no major u-turns. But this is probably an 80,000 word novel so there's still a lot to be discovered.

Keep writing! We're going to make it. Yes, I mean all of us.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Kitti, you started out sprinting. Are you still with us?
 
Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Ok, I've completely lost it. I've just had one of those headdesk momemts. I couldn't remember who had written Nineteen Eighty-Four. Seriously, I couldn't. In fact, I couldn't even remember that it was called Nineteen Eighty-Four. I just had Big Brother in my head--as my character was about to reference it--and my mind was blank. I had to use google!

Doing NaNo is not good for the brain.

43,000 words and still going, I think.
 


Posted by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (Member # 59) on :
 
It's stress-related, darklight. Even the best minds can only focus that deeply on a few things at a time.
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
I'm sorta back, limping along but alive. Today's the first day in a week that I haven't been spiking a fever and have been able to put any real time into looking at a computer screen. Fingers crossed this means I'm actually on the mend....
 
Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Ugh... so I lost this weekend to a chest cold, and I just lost the last two days to a double ear-infection. Wow. This has not been my week. Still stuck firmly at 41k, but I hope to change that tonight.

Hang in there Kitti. I'm in the mucky mire with you.

Oh, and I still say Owasm is a writing freak.

[This message has been edited by Rhaythe (edited November 18, 2009).]
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
Just passed 25K and it feels good.

Enough writing for tonight, I can no longer spell.
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
I have a headache tonight. I could write for another hour or two, but I fear the first brush of burnout might exhibit itself.

What a marathon. 97.4K. Tomorrow I will certainly hit 100K. The story's got another 20K left in it before I bleed into the next volume. I will quit when I get the ending right and start on some edits over Thanksgiving weekend.

I'm glad to see the steady progress our group is making. Lots of time to get it done.
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
I'm almost to 33k. I've been doing writing sprints on FB the last few nights and it's really helped keep my motivation up. I've been sprinting with someone who's not doing Nano, but you guys are welcome to join the ruckus. I'll smoke you, I do that.

Meanwhile, one of the things I enjoy about writing is that I get to stick in all kinds of little things that are important to me. Like I just inserted a baby sling into the storyline.

Hope everyone else is through the boggy middle, starting to think about ramping up to the second act climax and/or the major climax...
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Yikes. I have never had writer's block as bad as I have it today. This is my last huge block of time to write without losing sleep for the whole month of November but I can't think of anything to say. Maybe I'll just go exercise. And when I come back, maybe I'll write some backstory. That might be more useful than trying to slog my way forward when I'm pretty sure I'm headed in the wrong direction.

Or maybe I'll break down and go as insane as some of the people on the Nanowrimo forums who try to make their story as weird as possible. No. I don't think I'll do that. It seems like the waste of a perfectly good month.

How do you cope with writer's block?
 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
Unwritten, I've had that happen to me a couple of times this month. On both occasions, I've had my MC take a walk. First time he ended up at a diner, where he had an interesting conversation with an old friend. The second time, he met some people and from them, he got some information that will later tie in with the information he already has, and what he will soon discover, and be what drives him to find a solution to the problem.

I always find too that taking a shower helps. I always have good ideas in the shower, where I have no chance of writing them down. A couple of times I've had to say to one or other of my kids while rushing down stairs: Don't talk to me, I need to write down what's in my head before I forget it.

I've not written anything today, because right now, I need to figure out how to get him from where he is, to where he needs to go--his father's ship. There's something on there that he needs to help him bring about the solution, but he doesn't know it's there until he goes there, but unless he has a reason to go there, he won't find it. See what I mean? Since he's about to help someone who's in trouble, he might use it as a hiding place, but I think I need a better reason.

Anyhow, for your block, maybe just have you characters have a quiet moment, chill out or something, it usually works for me. I've also gone through the 'push through the block' approach, but I end up just wandering aimlessly for two or three hundred words and end up thinking, what was that all about?

Good luck with getting through this.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
2751 words is all I have to show for my whole day of writing. That brings me up to 34355 words. I ended up making a cast of characters at the beginning and describing each character--which gave me almost a thousand words. :-)

I think that I'm trying to fit too much into 50,000 words. A lot of my world development has taken place as I'm writing, and so a lot of it is only in my head. So, for at least the next day or two, instead of trying to finish the story, I'm going to go backwards and fill in some of the holes, and see where I am at the end of that. I won't cut anything out, I'll just add.

Hopefully if I stop trying to force myself to figure out the next step I'll just wake up one morning knowing what it ought to be. If not...well, we'll cross that bridge when we come to it.


 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Thank you darklight for your suggestions. I get my best ideas when I'm on a long, slow walk with no pen or paper for at least a mile.

I've currently got my main character on her own purposeful walk to...somewhere. I haven't worked out the details yet.
 


Posted by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (Member # 59) on :
 
If you're blocked about what comes in the next chapter, skip that chapter and write a chapter that comes later on or a chapter that's almost at the end.

Write whatever you know will happen eventually, even if you don't know how to get to it from where you've already written.

Sometimes, writing what you know has to happen later will give you ideas of what has to happen in between.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
34,545 words

Things are going smoothly. I've been doing a pretty good job of leaving my internal editor locked in the closet. Though sometimes I get stuck when I don't know how the next section is supposed to start. I'm even getting better at dealing with that. I usually just sit and think and can come up with it but I'm also not worrying too much because there's that chance that it'll get cut on the edit anyway. I'll worry about making it right when I'm sure I'm going to keep it.

For everyone who's been sick, I hope you feel better soon. Hang in there.

Should I mention that I did some of my NaNoing at the beach today? I am loving my netbook.


 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
My first goal was, of course, getting to 50,000 words in less than ten days. My second goal was getting to 100,000 words in less than twenty. My last goal is finishing the novel.

Today (it's 10:13pm MST), I hit my second goal. I'm pretty happy about it. Everything is moving ahead. My MC is about to get the stakes raised against him as he is stripped of his leadership of a small group and swept into a revolution. I've got about 20,000 words to get him to his absolute low point and sorta kinda triumph.

I'm seeing more green bars out in Nanoland. Keep it up. This is been fun. At least until I go through the first read.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Congratulations Owasm! I remember the first time I did Nanowrimo I wrote 109,000 words by December 9th when I finally came up for air. I did a lot more editing as I went that month too. I can't even imagine doing it again. I'm just in complete amazement that what you are doing is even possible. Keep it up!
 
Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Congrats Owasm! You are an inspiration to me...wallowing here at 34K words...8)

I am on mission today though, got to try to push through to 40K because I hit the road tomorrow and then it's hanging out with the 'rents and my husband's highly dysfunctional sibs next week. (my family is of course perfectly functional or if not, at least thousands of miles away).

I hope to write some but I may end up back home next sunday with pretty much the same wordcount, depends on the drama level.

So, what is everyone else's strategy for Turkey week, those of you in the States that is?

Leslie
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
In the spirit of NaNo, I created a cover for my novel with a little extra time I had this afternoon. You can see it on my NaNo page by clicking on the Novel Info tab.

Now I can get back to my writing...

http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/511822

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited November 20, 2009).]
 


Posted by Emily Palmer (Member # 8877) on :
 
I already finished my NaNo novel. But I will still cheer you on. Keep writing, people! Come on, you can do it! Yea!

By the way, I'm a spy . . . I mean, uh, sub moderator for the fantasy forum.
 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
What is this fantasy forum that you speak of?
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Owasm you've been slacking. My cover was posted by November 1st.

(snicker, can't believe I called Owasm a slacker, mister-a-bazillion words)

[This message has been edited by genevive42 (edited November 20, 2009).]
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Excellent, genevive!

Update: It's 12:57 Mountain Time and I have finished my NaNo novel. It's complete at 105,000 words. I thought it would go a little longer, but the muse wanted a rip snorting, gut wrenching end.

Now I'm actually going to have to edit it. It will be interesting to see how it holds up.

[This message has been edited by Owasm (edited November 21, 2009).]
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Congratulations Owasm. But I suggest letting it sit for awhile before you start editing. Not that I ever took my advice, but in retrospect that first edit wasn't very useful. I was still too deeply involved to see the flaws.

Thank you all for the advice. A few tears and a couple word sprints later and I'm back in the game. I learned a few new things about my main character via trying to get her to do something out of character. I now realize this is the most virtuous character I've ever written about, and I can't wait to go back and delete those scenes. In December. But at least it got me past the worst of the writer's block.

Things are getting very quiet around here. I hope it's because you're all writing more than I am! Later, later...
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Nine days.

Need 15,000 words.

Piece of cake.

Although yesterday a piece of cake cracked a temporary crown while I was at work and spun me into a crazy day of dentistry, driving and no time to write. So maybe I'll change that statement.

Easy as pie.

Mmmmm, pie.

 


Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
With 5,000 words to go, I came to a virtual standstill.

Thursday I worte 1160 words. Yesterday I managed 1100, but I wasn't too unhappy. My daughter bought herself a laptop so I claimed her four month old desktop and spent a few hours setting it up to my personal settings, and getting to know Windows Vista. It's nice to have a computer with all the keys still on the keyboard--my puppy ate several of the laptop's keys a few months ago and I've been struggling with it ever since. Plus the little problem I had with trying to figure out why my MC would need to go to his father's ship got cleared up, and I didn't even have to figure it out myself. My character came up with the answer all by himself. The wonders of writing!

So, I've gotten about 400 words written tonight so far. I'm aiming for 1000. I guess because I know I've done it, I don't have to kill myself writing these last three thousand words. Just taking it easy now. I should be done Monday anyhow, in time for five relaxing days off work.

Anyone else almost done?


 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
More people are creeping to the green NaNo bars and more have crossed the finish line.

Keep at it.
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Congrats Owasm!

I'm at 37629 words (not counting the 500-800 in character definition and notes to self that I'm going to tack on at the end so I can give myself a little bonus/breathing room if I have to miss a writing day.) I just had a near-kidnapping/baby shaking but my main character snatched the baby back, and even taunted the bad kids into throwing the baby's stuffed green donkey back to her. I accidentally introduced a second potential love interest for her (the MC, not the baby!) who I didn't even know existed, but he's got long dark hair that partially covers his eyes...one of which is blue, one of which is brown. He's very cute, but hanging with the wrong crowd. We'll see if he shows up again. I honestly have no idea at this point, but I know that bad kid crowd is going to have to play in again.

Meanwhile, I've got to find a good use for the green donkey stuffed toy. It's *very* important to the baby, who just helped the MC solve a particularly tricky problem. Hmm....maybe the green donkey can remind the MC of something...give her an idea at a critical point. I think that's the right direction there. Maybe a slingshot kind of thing...hmm...(off to make notes in the MS RIGHT NOW so I don't lose the idea...)


 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
I think it's funny how close we always are on word count KayTi. I'm at 37,769 tonight. Things are slowly moving forward. I skipped a whole bunch of stuff and cut right to the most exciting part. It's a lot darker than I'd anticipated. The Prince is being held prisoner in a dungeon (I've known that all along) and they keep injecting him with drugs and then letting him go through withdrawal (this is the part that came as a surprise to me). My hero is currently out of commission with a head wound (no idea where he got it though) leaving my heroine to save the day. Hopefully I'll figure out how she does it before the next time I write.

 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Due to life, I've had two days of not writing and haven't moved from 35,000. Well, I got a hundred or two out yesterday between customers but we were very busy. Today is my day off and I'm going to spend all of it writing.

As for where I am. The crew is stuck in a giant traffic jam waiting to use a wormhole that will get them through a particularly bumpy section of space. The wormhole is currently under construction but waiting two weeks is still better than the alternatives. It's kind of like sitting in freeway traffic because it beats the neighborhoods you'd have to drive through if you got off. Anyway, the crew gets bored which leads to a variety of antics and, just to add to the main plot, they're going to spot the space pirates that they previously tricked in the line to use the wormhole. So they're going to have to figure out a plan as to how to evade them once they all get to the other side. The other question is,'how are the pirates following them?', or are they?
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Wow; good for you Owasm. And SJSampson, I think you beat me to 50K!

This has been the best experience for me. I am adding bits here and there and editing already. I don't know what else to do. My region is very competitive per word counts and I feel a little guilt for not contributing much in the last few days. I hit 50K and then I've been waffling whether to go ahead and edit and start cleaning it up or to just start another one.

I will definitely do this again next year.
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
SavantIdiot, are you an evil lushguin? lol I guess I better get writing again....
 
Posted by darklight (Member # 5213) on :
 
I just hit 50,000. Yeh!

The story isn't finshed, so I'll probably add more to it over the next few days, but as for NaNo, I'm done! And it feels quite good.
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
50 thousand word ceiling broken.

Still at least two big acts to go before the big and almighty "The End", but like Darklight said: it feels quite good.
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Congratulations for getting over the finish line!
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Wohoo! All these people crossing the finishing line early! :-)
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Not quite there yet but I got to just over 40,000 words. That was my goal for today so I'm happy.

Congrats to all who have made it!
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
Back from my weekend trip and ready to get down to a week of serious writing. I still have 20K left to go, which seems insane, so I'm trying not to think about it. I work better when I break it up into smaller pieces. My goal is another 2000 words tonight.
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
41,028 words

Wow. The view from this side of 40,000 words is a lot nicer than it is from the other side. It was quite an abrupt transition from feeling hopeless to feeling empowered.

Keep it up anyone else who is still trudging up the mountain. Now I remember that we can do it!
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
42,145 words and all is well. I'm having a few, 'oh crud, I don't know what the next scene is,' moments but I do know where it's going overall.

What's great is that I don't have to have any commitments for the next two days if I don't want to. Not sure what I'm going to do for Turkey Day. Most of me just wants to write. I have invites but they're all casual. Am I being a bum if I don't go? I'll certainly pass 50,000 if I stay home both days.

I'll have to think about it.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
crickets
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Actually, congrats to everyone who has officially posted and won! I hope to join you soon.

I think this is a good time to give thanks for all of the people in our lives who have helped and supported us through this crazy month. They've listened to our wacky plots, taken on more chores, encouraged us, and maybe even helped with some ideas when we were stuck. They've put up with us walking around like caffeine zombies and given us a shoulder when we just weren't sure if we could do it. It's these people who care about us, that are willing to let our needs come first during NaNo that we should be thankful for.

So this weekend, think about those people and give them a big hug and let them know how much you appreciate them.

And I'd like to send out a big hug to all of you for being willing to post your thoughts and experiences. It's been really great knowing that I wasn't alone in all of this.

Okay, sorry to interrupt this gushy moment, but I still have 8000 words to go. What am I doing here?
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Wait a minute. SJSampson is a CRAB?!! Also, I don't really drink much so I think 'penguin' is the phrase for me. And I have no idea why we are penguins. I mean, for Marylanders, Crabs makes sense.


 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I am feeling very thankful, too. Just for being alive, mostly. For my family, demented as they are. I am thankful for this group which has been shepherding me through my baby steps into actually writing. For NaNo which has made cataclismic ? differences in how I understand what I need to do in order to write well.

Frankly, I wish I could do NaNo all year. I think I work better faster rather than slower. I am going to have to structure my writing so that I do that first rough draft FAST and then go back and clean it up.

Robin McKinley's message was a nice validation for me personally. She does the whole first draft without looking back and THEN goes back and edits it twice, adding and deleting.

I was trying to do it as I went. Twenty months after I started, over a hundred thousand K words and I like my NaNo's chances of being complete first.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
45,330 and I've hit a moment of slowness. I think that because I know I can do it, some of the urgency has left me. I will make it but not as far ahead of schedule as I had originally hoped.

For everyone in the States: Happy Gobble Day!
 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
quote:
I've hit a moment of slowness

It's the tryptophan.
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
It's the tryptophan. ha ha ha That's pretty good.
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Just wrote those splendid words, "THE END"

Unfortunately, I still have three thousand words to write before I hit 50,000. There are several places I skipped because I didn't know what was going to happen. I have a better idea now, so I guess I need to find them and get started. But not right now. Right now I'm going to revel in the moment.

It ended, rather abruptly, about a chapter before I thought it was going to. All of a sudden I thought, "It's over. Holy cow. None of that other stuff really needs to happen. This is the end."

There's room for a sequel too--or not. It stands alone pretty well, even if I did leave all of my characters still in hiding and one of them detoxifying from some pretty nasty drugs. At least they're all together, and most of them are in love.
 


Posted by Dark Warrior (Member # 8822) on :
 
congrats Unwritten. I have never done Nano and it seems like an accomplishment in itself...but how does it actually work. Are their prizes or just a completion letter? I will probably do it next year.
 
Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Unwritten,

You can always do a character sketch for one of your main characters and turn it into a little story... perhaps a background piece for your written novel.

Congratulations on finishing your novel.

More and more people are crossing the finish time. There is still time to get it all done.
 


Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Dark Warrior,
The only requirements are that you start in November and write 50,000 words before November 30. You can do all the story planning you want to before that, you just don't actually begin writing. At the end you can print out a certificate saying you finished. Ta-dah!

The real glory in Nanowrimo is doing it with so many other people. They promise that your story will move in directions you never expected and I'm here to testify that it's true. Right when I thought I'd written my story right into the ground, I decided to explain the plot to my husband. At the end, he said, "Why didn't they just kill him?" and I thought, "Why didn't they just kill him?" and suddenly a minor character stole the whole rest of the book. It was incredible, heady stuff, and I hope you join me next year!
Melanie
 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
I just wrote "The End" today, too. This weekend I have to go back and finish a scene near the middle, then another one closer to the begining. I'm worried I'll still be about 4K short after I run out of plot. Thanks for the character sketch advise - I might end up doing that.
 
Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
46,539 words and I'm fighting to the finish. But I will make it.

I have a good direction for my next section so it will flow better now. I cranked out 1300 words after work tonight.

My novel is probably 80,000 words so I'm still in the thick of it. 'The End' is nowhere in sight. That doesn't bother me though. I'm having fun with my characters.

Congrats to all who have made it!
 


Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I can visualize the end. I actually am editing like mad now. I finished a prologue sort of thing up front yesterday. The end I am finishing up. I may have trouble with ends. I AWAYS picture what happens next. What a great experience.
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
It's done. I've got my printed certificate in front of me. Now what do I do? I feel lost and disoriented (and euphoric too. Don't forget that!) That novel I was editing in October seems so far away. And don't even get me started on how far away the planet Earth feels. OK, OK, my family is staring at me with puppy dog eyes. I guess they deserve a little attention now that the contest is over. That answers that question.

And to all of you who aren't finished yet--keep going! I know you can do it!

Hurray!!!! I did it! Three years running!
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Congrats to all the "The End" people! Woo Hoo!

I have a 12 hour drive tomorrow and then 11K words to the 50K line but I still feel good about making it. This T-Day week has not allowed for much writing. But I ahve done a lot of scene planning so I am primed for a sprint tomorrow and monday.

I will certainly go down typing!

(And after all, I have 50K more words to write before this puppy is really done!)

Leslie

 


Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Ha! I made it!

Unfortunately, if I were to stop writing now, I'd be leaving the heroine captive to the bad guys, with all sorts of plot unresolved. After all this work, I can't bring myself to just deus ex machina her out of danger and declare an end. Sigh. 50K down. Probably at least another 30K to go, and that's before I go back to finish the scenes I skipped over...

Maybe December can be National Novel Polishing Month?
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Finished! Story isn't done, but 50k words are.

I hope the rest of you are doing well in your race to the finish! Congrats to all who have already finished, be sure to enter your stats on the nano site so you can collect your free goodies. Pointless, but good fun.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Made it! Just a little over 50,000 at the moment and I may try to increase my word count before tomorrow night, but I made it!

I wonder if my butt print will ever be erased from that chair in Starbucks? After this November it looks pretty permanenet to me.

And of course, there's still plenty more book to write. Right now though, I'm starving. Fishsticks for everybody!
 


Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
TaDa!
I did it and even had more word than I thought when I added in all the extra scene synopses and character analyses that I did this month!

Yay everyone!

leslie
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
So it's pretty much over. I know there are a few people finishing up today but before everyone leaves this forum I would like to ask a question. Feel free to answer whether you finished or not.

What did you learn by doing NaNo?

I learned that it's okay to forge ahead even if everything before isn't perfect.

But I also learned that at this point in time I can't forge ahead so fast that I'm willing to be totally sloppy. I still fix typos and I still care about the quality I'm putting down even if I'm not a perfectionist about it. This is just me. I don't know if that will ever change, or if it should.

I learned that notes and outlining are good. They don't stifle creativity, they free you up so you don't have to worry about what happens next. This was the first time I ever used an outline and I'm glad I did.

I learned that I am very comfortable sneaking in a few hundred words here and there and I don't always have to set aside a big block of time.

I learned who of my friends and family is supportive of my writing and who doesn't get it.

In regards to my story specifically, I learned that it is very important not to just know your characters but to understand how they interact with each other. Some are more consistent and some are very different with different characters. This can be a source of a lot of depth and a lot of fun.

Would I do NaNo again? Absolutely. There's always more to learn.

I hope everyone had fun!

 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Those of you who still are writing, keep at it until the last moment to upload your work.

A number of posts ago, I suggested we add up all of our words that we Hatrackers wrote. Just add your name below mine and we'll give it a week and see how many words you accomplished, even if you didn't make the 50,000.


Owasm 105,004
 


Posted by Pyre Dynasty (Member # 1947) on :
 
Well I dropped out, but I still am happy I did it, I will finish the story, soon. My problem is that I suddenly became awasre of a test that I had to do before the end of the semester which I had forgotten about, thinking I'd get to it in December but then I did some math and there is a fleasbreath of time in December to do it and so I had to get myself into shape, and that meant I would not be able to spend the time on writing that I needed to. I still did some writing, and I did a lot of concept work, (which I should have done in October.)

Will I do Nano next year, yes, and I will plan ahead so that I have time to do it.

What did I learn, that to write I needed to write and in the writing I will have written. (Ok that's just wordplay.) I learned that I really do need to write more, I have way to much unwritten for my own good.
 


Posted by shimiqua (Member # 7760) on :
 
I also didn't finish. Here's what I learned.

(1.) I do not work well with a deadline. I kept finding myself actually cleaning my house in effort to not spend anytime writing. I know that's weird, but I also learned (2.) that I write as a way of rebelling. Giving myself permission to write actually slowed down my writing process. Sad but true.
The third thing I learned is that(3)I have to write the moment I become inspired. Half remembered inspiration moments are not as strong, which means I need to sit down everyday and write. Someday's I will catch the inspiration, and someday's I wont. And(4.) You people are so freaking amazing. I'm honored to write alongside you and am so happy for your success. Owasm you are inhuman.
Great job!
~Sheena

Owasm 105,004
shimiqua 7,400

 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
Finished! Although my last ten words were something like "I can't believe I actually finished nano." I could have probably written something better tonight, but last night I was so close I just needed to finish.

What did I learn?

I am a very goal-oriented person. Okay, I already knew that, but I learned that I like writing to a deadline, even if it is self imposed.

I learned how much plot a novel needs to have. This is the first one I've ever written and I ended up adding a lot to it.

I hope I learned how to write better prose. I'm pretty new to this and my writing is kinda rough. I think 50,000 words of practise has helped me a lot.

You guys are great! I didn't realize before joining hatrack how important this kind of support is.

Edited to add:

Owasm 105,004
shimiqua 7,400
ScardeyDog 50,002

[This message has been edited by ScardeyDog (edited November 30, 2009).]
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
Owasm 105,004
shimiqua 7,400
ScardeyDog 50,002
genevive42 50,470

Edited because I added a few hundred more words.

[This message has been edited by genevive42 (edited December 01, 2009).]
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
 
Posted by Unwritten (Member # 7960) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247

What I learned:

That sometimes, if you force your way through writing it the wrong way, it makes it a lot easier to see what the right way should be.

That having good friends to cheer me on and to do writing sprints with me made a huge difference in my success rate. And being part of something bigger with you all was amazing too.

There's more, but my computer time appears to be over, so I'll have to come back later.
 


Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565 (I have more to write, but I haven't written them yet so they "don't count")
 
Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565 (I have more to write, but I haven't written them yet so they "don't count")
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
 
Posted by SavantIdiot (Member # 8590) on :
 
I learned that I can write pretty fast, on a first draft, anyway. I don't really know how to do an outline but I think that's okay. For now.

I learned that ends are going to be tricky for me.

I had a total blast. I really appreciate you guys going on the journey with me. Thanks!
 


Posted by sjsampson (Member # 8075) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565 (I have more to write, but I haven't written them yet so they "don't count")
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
sjsampson - 60,503
 
Posted by Kitti (Member # 7277) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565 (I have more to write, but I haven't written them yet so they "don't count")
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
sjsampson - 60,503
Kitti - 50,677 (though for some reason the nano online word counter gave me a few hundred more...? maybe it double-counted my hyphens or something)
 
Posted by bluephoenix (Member # 7397) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565 (I have more to write, but I haven't written them yet so they "don't count")
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
sjsampson - 60,503
Kitti - 50,677 (though for some reason the nano online word counter gave me a few hundred more...? maybe it double-counted my hyphens or something)
bluephoenix (blue_phoenix86) - 50,075. First time I've won (WOO), and I learned that A) once I start something, I have to write EVERY DAY, else I lose the threads of all my plots, and B) OpenOffice.org Writer gives horribly inflated wordcounts.
 
Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
quote:
B) OpenOffice.org Writer gives horribly inflated wordcounts.

Really? How far was yours off? When I uploaded to Nano, the two readings were only off by 75 or so words.
 
Posted by LAJD (Member # 8070) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
sjsampson - 60,503
Kitti - 50,677
bluephoenix (blue_phoenix86) - 50,075.
LAJD (lesliedow) 54,618

I learned that I am indeed a plotter (duh) and that treating each work like a project will give me the best results. This is not really much of an epiphany since I am a born organizer and work as a project/program manager type person.

One new think I picked up is that if I find that I am stuck on something that is related to plot if I review the goals and fears of the characters who are in the scene I can often find a reasonable path through the problem. It may not be the best path, but it gets me past the stuck point with some continuity.
Leslie

 


Posted by sholar (Member # 3280) on :
 
sholar (listed as scholarette on nano)- 55,874

I remembered that writing is what I love.
 


Posted by Owasm (Member # 8501) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
sjsampson - 60,503
Kitti - 50,677
bluephoenix (blue_phoenix86) - 50,075.
LAJD (lesliedow) 54,618
Sholar - 55,874

Current Total: 705,162

 


Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
About OpenOffice - I had that too! My document was 600 words longer somehow.
 
Posted by bluephoenix (Member # 7397) on :
 
quote:
Really? How far was yours off? When I uploaded to Nano, the two readings were only off by 75 or so words

850 words, would you believe! It counts things like * as a word, which doesn't help, though I still don't know how it managed to be so far off. It certainly made the last 15 minutes of NaNo exciting for me .
 


Posted by Rhaythe (Member # 7857) on :
 
Out of curiosity, did you have a repeating header and/or footer? That will add to the word count per page.
 
Posted by ScardeyDog (Member # 8707) on :
 
I didn't have a header or footer. I probably had about 30 hash marks, maybe that number of hyphenated words... I'm not sure what could have acounted for the other 600 words.

bluephoenix - A little too exciting! Congrats on getting it done anyway.
 


Posted by ArmadonRK (Member # 8864) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
sjsampson - 60,503
Kitti - 50,677
bluephoenix (blue_phoenix86) - 50,075.
LAJD (lesliedow) 54,618
Sholar - 55,874
ArmadonRK - 15,405

I could have written more, I wasn't exactly a symbol of time-management, but I don't think NaNo is entirely suited to my writing method either. Maybe if I'd known about it earlier than the 29th of October and had time to plan I would have made more progress, consequently I ended up doing a lot of paper-and-pencil scribbling and outlining instead of typing.

I'll proudly be a member of the NaNo losers club though, and I got a good start on this novel I can continue working on in the coming months.
 


Posted by Joseph Forrest (Member # 8460) on :
 
Owasm - 105,004
shimiqua - 7,400
ScardeyDog - 50,002
genevive42 - 50,470
rdrhoads - 58,182
Unwritten - 50,247
KayTi - 50,565
ribbit aka SavantIdiot 61,545
sjsampson - 60,503
Kitti - 50,677
bluephoenix (blue_phoenix86) - 50,075.
LAJD (lesliedow) 54,618
Sholar - 55,874
ArmadonRK - 15,405
Joseph Forrest - 20,058

No excuses really. Work and life got in the way a bit is all. It did lead to me getting a really good idea for some characters though and I realized I was writing too far in their future. Congrats to everyone that made it though. That's awesome.
 


Posted by genevive42 (Member # 8714) on :
 
That makes 740,625 words contributed by Hatrackers, unless more get reported.
 
Posted by Emily Palmer (Member # 8877) on :
 
You can add another 50,211 words from larelmian.
 


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