posted
Just curious if this has happened to others.
For the past month my novel has been flying out of my fingers. I used to have to wrestle with it (see my "Wrestling with a gorilla" thread) but now it's just flowing.
Robert Howard said that he didn't write the Conan stories, so much as have Conan stand behind him and tell him the stories, and I really feel that this is what is going on with me. It's like my two main POV characters are standing there say "and then this happened."
I think that this has to do with teh fact that I've really nailed the characters down. I took the advice I read going into this story, and really got to learn my characters before writing. I know what they would do in nearly any situation, and this is really helping me now.
Just wanted to share my happyness. At this rate I'll be done my first draft in another 6 - 8 weeks or so (I hope) and then can start to do the 2nd draft stuff.
posted
I wish my characters would at least stand behind me long enough for me to finish what they're dictating...
Posts: 8809 | Registered: Aug 2005
| IP: Logged |
posted
I don't care one way or the other. I just don't want to have Conan standing behind me. If anyone should be the meatshield, it should be him.
Posts: 8322 | Registered: Aug 1999
| IP: Logged |
posted
LOL at Survivor. Conan is one of the best characters ever, IMHO, and it's unfortunate that popular culture has destroyed him.
Norwall, I know what you mean. At first this story was like trying to hold water in my hands. It just fought me. Now, it seems like I can't stop writing.
posted
Where does one go to purchase them talking characters? My characters stare at me blankly, as if to say, "I don't know. You're the one writing it." I wonder if they're thinking, "Well, it would certainly have been nice to be assigned to a better writer. Instead, I got stuck with her. Just my luck."
Posts: 247 | Registered: Apr 2006
| IP: Logged |
posted
I used to be able to write a thousand words in a half hour on Word, not it's like an hour. I have to force myself to write at the moment. I'd rather do other things than write, but I want to write and if I do the other thing's I'd rather do than it's procrastinating. I think I should go write right now...
Posts: 384 | Registered: Oct 2005
| IP: Logged |
posted
I had a dream the other night that my novel was just flowing from my fingers. I guess it would help if I actually committed some time to it.
Posts: 334 | Registered: Sep 2003
| IP: Logged |
posted
Well, I've had this one novel I've worked on, on and off, for---my god, fifteen years. The lead character keeps coming up, demanding to be written about---then leaves as soon as I get partway into Chapter Two. Last time, earlier this year, I was nine thousand words in, the characters were going into a bar / hangout, and then they all ditched me.
Posts: 8809 | Registered: Aug 2005
| IP: Logged |
My planned antagonist took over when I asked him why he was doing what he was doing. Now, he is a true MC and goes through a lot of character development/change. He was very insistent (more so than the protagonist) about getting his part of the story down and right.
I find when I am trying to force the story, it doesn't work. I can't write. Either the characters are telling me what happens next or I'm "blocked." If I'm "wrestling the gorilla" I either work on another project or skip to a different part of the story that wants to be written then.
I've had the ending of my current one in my head for . . oh . . years now but couldn't write it. Until now. 1 hour - 10 pages! Yipes! So I should finish the wrap up over the weekend. Then I have to go back and fill in story line holes.
If they leave you to go for drinks, go with them and listen.
posted
My characters have ADD and multiple personalities. Also, I think they like playing practical jokes.
Posts: 187 | Registered: Jun 2006
| IP: Logged |
posted
My characters do really interesting things, have very real emotions, are creative, and always have witty, clear dialogue except when they're not supposed to.
They just forget to tell me AHEAD of time where to be to see the story happening. I keep having to fill in the details after they tell me about the big important things that keep happening. It's never quite the same, and I'm sure that they're leaving out the little subtle bits that make the story flow really nicely.
posted
Congratulations, and yes. I speak of it as the "point of momentum"--where you've been rolling a giant boulder uphill forever. When you reach the top, it rolls downhill virtually by itself.
Posts: 283 | Registered: Feb 2006
| IP: Logged |
posted
I've written 10,000 words in two days. Talk about letting it flow, literally. It's absolute garbage, but I feel the idea or at least the small plot I see forming is credible. Anyways, it feels great to have the big blockage gone and allowing everything to flow much smoother, and just the feeling of writing frees my minds of my sucky life. Posts: 384 | Registered: Oct 2005
| IP: Logged |
posted
In the Hatrack forums, they have "dobies," that is, threads that exist to have a similar title. I was very tempted to make a dobie titled "Unleash the fowl!" but I figured that woulnd't quite fit here.
I like it when my characters can tell me exactly what to do. Too often they want to sit and do nothing and let events happen to them.
posted
That's GREAT! Kudos to you...enjoy it and hope it lasts a long time! Personally, I'm always most inspired to write like a maniac whenever I definitely cannot, like recently (preparing for a trade show next week). Ugh! Torture!
Posts: 61 | Registered: Jun 2006
| IP: Logged |
quote:I used to be able to write a thousand words in a half hour on Word
I don't think I can physically type that fast--that's 4.44 characters per second assuming 8-character words (the old way of counting) non stop for one half hour, without pausing to think or scratch an itch.
[This message has been edited by Spaceman (edited July 15, 2006).]
posted
I thought words were five characters. You know, four letters and a space? Maybe I'm a bit messed up there. And word has an autocomplete feature that provides possible completions for words that you've already used in your document. If you were used to using something like that, it could up your word count considerably. Even if we assume that Word's autocomplete and five letter words have nothing to do with it, 4.44 characters a second isn't out of reach for really good typists.