Archive for the ‘ NaNoWriMo ’ Category

Sneak Attack November

EGADS!  Do you have any idea what day Monday is?  Do you?  DO YOU?!?!?!

Monday is November 1, which means it’s officially the first day of NaNoWriMo.  It kinda snuck up on me.  I kept thinking, “I have loads of time to get ready!  NaNo’s not until after my brother’s wedding!”  Now, however, my brother’s wedding is in the rearview mirror and I kind of feel like a deer in the headlights.

November is coming, you guys.  And it isn’t taking prisoners.

Never fear though.  I have a plan.  I’m going to write a lot, and then I’m going to write some more, and then I’m going to keep writing until my mind gives out or the joints of my fingers do.

Wouldn’t you agree that life is just better when you have a plan?

Have a great weekend everyone, and a spooky Halloween!  You can expect adorable costumed-baby pictures if you check in on Monday!

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Top 5 Reasons to Do NaNoWriMo

Oh man, October plunges perilously onward, rushing headlong into November like it knows that November’s where it‘s at.  What’s it, you ask?  It is NANOWRIMO!!!

I know I’ve talked about this before, but I just want to mention again that I’m doing it this year and invite you all to do it with me.  Why should you do it, you ask?  Why put it all on the line, writing 50,000 words in the month of November?  Well, I’ll tell you:

  1. NaNoWriMo gives you the opportunity to do something not many people can honestly say they’ve done: Write a novel.  It doesn’t have to be a decent novel (my first novel, written in NaNo 2008, is pure crap), but it can legitimately be qualified as a novel.
  2. It’s a terrific writing exercise.  You’re so pressed for time and words that you literally don’t have time to get writer’s block.  You just press forward, and it’s that freedom to just write whatever comes into your head that yields the really excellent plot points.  So what if an ogre rampages through your chick-lit novel?  Maybe you’ve just come up with a brilliant new sub-genre!
  3. It’s a fabulous conversation starter.  If people ask what you’ve been up to, nine times out of ten you will get an interested look if you reply that you were holed up all of November writing a novel.
  4. It’s fun.  You record your latest word counts on the NaNo site, and you can see a little bar graph that reports your progress, and you can peek over at your writing buddies and see their progress too.
  5. I’m doing it, and I will make it my personal mission to cheer you on.

That said, if you decide to devote all your spare time in November to writing a novel, visit the NaNoWriMo website to create your profile and sign up for NaNoWriMo 2010!  So what if you don’t finish?  Nothing ventured nothing gained, yo!

After you’ve created a profile, add me to your writing buddies list!  My username is ParsingNonsense, and if you add me to your buddies list, I’ll add you to mine, and we can be novel writing friends forever!  You can also leave your username in the comments, and I’ll add you that way.  This way, I can peek over at your progress and cheer for you!

18 days, my friends.  18 days until I open my brain, scoop out a bunch of words, and hurl them at a computer.  I’m ready.  Join me, will you?

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NaNoWriMo – Who’s In?

Extra-large bottle of Ibuprofen?  Check.  Forewarned husband?  Check.  New idea?  Check.  Oodles of spare time?  Uh, no, but we’ll pretend that’s not important.

That right there is my official NaNoWriMo essentials checklist.  NaNoWriMo (a.k.a. National Novel Writing Month for the uninitiated) starts in November, which means I’ve officially got about a month and a half before I sit down and try to crank out 50,000+ words during the month of November.

I did NaNoWriMo for the first time in November 2008.  One of Wes’ friends (who I would also consider a friend, if for no other reason than that I can beat him at arcade shooting games and he also once shared a plate of frog legs with me {which are exactly like nasty chicken, by the way}) talked me into doing it, and so we slogged through our novels from opposite sides of the country.  When the end of November came around, we were victorious (and very sick of writing).

The feeling I got as I crossed the 50,000 word finish line was indescribable.  I felt proud of myself (even prouder than when I graduated college, funny enough).  I felt accomplished (I could honestly say I’d written a novel!).  And I felt very, very ready to break up with my keyboard.  When I posted to my blog that I’d done it, lots of people celebrated that victory with me and it felt like a gigantic wordalicious party.  My Dad, who followed my progress closely, even left one of his rare comments on my blog to congratulate me.

So, even though I have a precocious and busy little baby who distracts me with his smiles and a part-time job that demands most of my creativity and focus, I’m strapping on my novel-writing boots again this year and signing my name on the roster.  Put me in coach, I’m ready to write!

I came up with the idea for my novel while I was feeding Aidan a banana, so now I have everything I’m going to need.  All I have left to say is: Who’s with me?

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Would you like to know what’s shocking?  Many things, frankly.  The price for tiny baby shoes that never actually touch the ground, for one thing.  The wait time to get into the best steak restaurant in Issaquah, for another.

What’s shocking me right this second is the calendar.  Specifically, where we stand on the calendar.

Ladies and gentlemen, we stand on the cusp of the end of October, which means we are a mere screaming toboggan ride away from November.  Those of you who have been reading for awhile may remember that last year during the month of November, I embarked on a ridiculous journey.  A journey to complete a novel of at least 50,000 words from start to finish during the month of November.

That journey was NaNoWriMo.  It was difficult.  I was running two different blogs part-time in addition to my blog, and writing additional content at the same time for my novel.  There were times when I thought my very joints would keep me awake with their incessant aches, and somewhere right around 24,000 words I started wondering if I could finish at all.

But I did.  I crested that hill and the view was mighty indeed.  The novel’s pure crap, but it exists.  Thanks to NaNoWriMo I can say without hedging that I’ve written a novel.  It was one of the coolest things I’ve ever done, and I remember it with fondness.

The big question then becomes: What about this year?  November starts in four days, will November 2009 yield Crap Novel 2.0?

No, no it will not.

It breaks my heart, but a woman’s got to know her limits.  I’m not running more blogs this year than I was last year, but the nature of those blogs and of my work for them has changed dramatically.  When I worked for Qvisory, I wrote one post a week and merely managed the content for the other four posts that went live.

For Offbeat Mama, I’m writing 3-4 posts a week.  It doesn’t seem like a big difference, but when you’re writing for a large audience you want to make sure your content is solid.  My name goes on those posts, and I’d prefer it strongly if they weren’t crap.

In addition to the Offbeat Mama posts, I still write 3-4 posts a week over here in addition to one post a week for Bottle Your Brand.  In short, I’m already producing a substantial amount of content every week, none of which is for a novel.

I guess you could factor being pregnant in there somewhere as well.  I will admit that nesting has taken over an alarming proportion of our weekend to-do list, and whereas I used to fantasize about sitting down and writing during the weekend, now I distract myself by imagining which projects we can complete given our resources, budget, and weather.

In short, it’s just not going to work out this year.  That’s ok, though, because next year is only twelve months away!  And I’ll have an eight month old baby hanging around then, so that’ll make writing a novel in a month easier!

Ten bucks says my NaNoWriMo novel next year will be about a woman who eats nothing but potato chips and cheesecake during her pregnancy, gains 15 pounds total the whole time, and never misses a wink of sleep thanks to her miraculous infant who rarely fusses and instead just smiles and coos all the time.

Obviously it will qualify as a “Fantasy” novel.

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A Prospective Perspective Change

I’m toying with the idea of scrapping my whole novel and starting from scratch with the same story, same characters, and a whole new perspective.  My writing class covered point of view last week and I’ve been dedicating some serious thought to giving a different perspective a try.

Granted, the idea of re-writing my 250+ page novel makes me want to cry just a little, but the more I go back and re-read it the more dissatisfied I become.  I’m not the kind of writer who normally feels dissatisfied with her work.  I’ll go back to old blog posts and most of the time I’m surprised I actually wrote them because I like them so much (I know, I’ve got the modesty thing down to a science).

With all the new skills I’m learning though, I’m slowly realizing how much better my novel could be.  Whereas before I would read it over and think to myself how good it was and how well I detailed the characters, I now read it over and realize that my characters have no faces and my story has a plot that’s neither well-developed nor resolved.

Normally, this would probably make me toss the whole thing out and start over but I’m still in love with this story and want to tell it.  I just now realize that I can do it so much better.  The trick, I think, is going to be to tell the story from a 3rd person instead of  a 1st person perspective.

My whole novel as it stands is written in present tense 1st person, which means my sentences are always happening right this second.  For example: I’m writing my blog when Wes walks in and gives me a hug

What I think would be a lot better would be 3rd person omniscient.  For example: She sat at the computer, face scrunched in concentration, typing madly to the sounds of Beethoven when Wes walked in and interrupted her with a hug.

I can give my characters faces, personality quirks, and a deeper depth of character with 3rd person than if I’m shackled to the perspective of one person who’s only in one place at one time.  Also, 1st person present tense gets a bit tiring to read (and write!) after a while.

Apparently, I’m in good company in writing my first novel in 1st person.  According to my good friend Working Girl, most first novels are written in 1st person.  The woman who teaches my writing class says that most publishing houses won’t even take a look at novels written in 1st person since they practically scream AMATEUR AUTHOR!

The last thing I want is to be that obvious about my amateur status, so I think I’ll give a different perspective a try.  I’m sure there are plenty of authors who can make 1st person look good but I’m not yet arrogant enough to assume I’m one of them.  The great thing about having already written a rough draft is that I have an excellent grasp of my story and my characters so I have the feeling the second draft is going to just pour out of me.

Now, the dilemma is: Will I have time to revise my novel before next NaNoWriMo?  I’m so busy lately I really question whether I’ll carve out the time to do this until I’m forced to do it by a voluntary deadline.  If I do have to wait until November, at least I’ll know what I’m writing about ahead of time!

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