Friday, November 4, 2022

Query Friday: Query Support Group and Resolution Check In

 


Happy Fri-Yay!

Welcome to November.

 

It's gearing up to be a crazy month for writing with NaNoWriMo, #Moodpitch, and many agents closing to queries ahead of the holiday season.

1) To revamp my query and resume querying

 The query is out there in the world.

Put good vibes out for me.

Good Vibes Mind Blown GIF by Bokeh Productions

2) To write 500 words a day on a new project/everyday

I'm doing NaNo!!!

This is my first time, and somehow, just the thought of committing to writing every day is motivating me. 

Current word count (as of this writing):

That's 10% of the way through in 3 days.

Then again, it's been three days, so hopefully the momentum keeps going.

 Keep Going GIF by MOODMAN

3) To read more

Currently reading: 

 

4) To make more friends in the writing community...

There is still hope for me here. I'd love to connect here (drop me a comment), on twitter @midlifecreative, our using the #QuerySupportGroup tag. You can also find me on the NaNoWriMo site at BB427. Look forward to hearing from you!

       -B

Thursday, November 3, 2022

Dear O'Abby: Can you help me win NaNo?

 Dear O'Abby,

This will be my third year attempting NaNo and I am yet to actually hit that 50K target.  I have spent the last two months preparing this time, and feel like I'm in a better place than I have been previously - I actually have an outline this time - but am still feeling a little daunted.

Are there any tips you can give me that might help me actually win this year?

Thanks so much!

NaNoNaughty

Dear NaNoNaughty,

You do realize NaNo isn't actually a competition, right?  Winning isn't everything and if your primary goal is to win, then I think you're looking at this the wrong way.  The goal is to get a book written and any words you get on the page are helping to meet that goal, even if you don't get to 50K.

As for tips, I do have a few after having done this a few times myself, so here goes... I've probably given these before, but a refresher never hurts.

Try and bank over the baseline word count in the first week while you're still fresh and excited by your story.  I always try to hit 10K within the first three or four days because it gives you a cushion later in the month when you may unexpectedly get de-railed for a day or two.

Don't stop if you get stuck on a word or a plot point or a place you're uncertain about.  Leave a note for yourself, highlight it or change the font color so you can find it again later, and move on.  You mentioned you have an outline, so if you're stuck somewhere, look over the stuff you've plotted, figure out the next place you do know what's going to happen and skip to there.  You can fill in the rest later when you've figured it out.

Don't be afraid to jump around and write random scenes if that's what's going to work for you.  You don't have to be linear at this point.  You're just getting the story down, so if there are specific scenes you're excited to write, go ahead and write them.  You can add the connecting tissue later.

Don't go back over anything you've already written.  It's too easy to get bogged down in trying to fix things and at this point you're not here to fix things.  Just keep writing.  There will be time to go back and fix things later.  The last time I did NaNo I decided to change a huge plot point I'd set up in the first three or four chapters in later ones, so I just left it, wrote myself a note, and kept going without the school play that was going to be a huge element in the story up until that point.

And despite what everyone probably tells you, you don't actually have to write every day.  I "won" NaNo the last time I did it by taking a day or two off work a week for the four weeks of NaNo and wrote most of the 50K words I got that year in those 6 days, with a little bit added in the weekends.  If writing in big chunks works for you, then maybe consider this as an option.  Or if you can't take days off, but your weekends are reasonably clear, set those aside for bulk writing and adjust your goals for the week to fit your schedule.

Hope that helps!  And good luck.  I'm rotting for you to finish.

X O'Abby

Wednesday, November 2, 2022

#NaNoWriMo to Novel

The road is long for those doing NaNoWriMo with the intention to publish a novel one day. First, while 50k is a great start, most novels are twice as long for fantasy or sci-fi, and at least another third for many other genres. Then there's editing. Plus pitches, query letters, synopsis, or all the work that comes with indie publishing. There are several great debut author groups out there to get support during that first publication year. 

Here's the hard truth. Many writers will drop out of NaNoWriMo, give up, in the first few days. Some will quit at the editing stage. Many will throw in the towel during the query stage. 

Then there's the small group who will give up at the "finish line." For one reason or another, the book stops just before release. The author doesn't debut. It's rare, but it happens. 

I hope you'll beat all those odds, dear Operation Awesome reader. I hope you'll get your book out there, and contact me for your debut interview. 

Today's scheduled author is in the small group. Thus, there is no spotlight this week. 

I'm working on my NaNoWriMo project. If you are too, and would like to be buddies, here's my link.

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

NaNo Tip of the Week--Week 1 of NaNo 2022

  

Welcome to week 1 of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo)! Today we will focus on writing sprints. The goal for today is 1,667 words for the day with a total of 1,667 words. For Reverse NaNo folks, the goal is 3,346 words for the day with a total of 3,346 words.

Congratulations on starting your NaNo project! I am so excited to see where your project takes you.

Week 1 energy is amazing. I highly recommend attending a write-in virtually (or in person this year, from NaNo HQ) and meeting fellow Wrimos. Find people in your region, or who live in your area, by going to Community and selecting Find a Region. When you find a region and make it your home, you will be able to see where the region congregates on the web on the NaNo forums and elsewhere online (Discord, Facebook, etc.).

Go to a write in, virtually or in person. Participate in a word sprint, where the goal is to write as many words as you can in a specific time frame. My favorite (and current goal) is to consistently write 1,000 words in 15 minutes. I did it once last year, and whew, it was hard and it was great to know it was possible for me! I can't wait to do it again.

As for length, I do sprints as small as 5 minutes and as long as 45 or 50 minutes. I tend to favor the 15, 20, or 25 minutes with a break, and then divide these into an hour with breaks in between. I find it is easier to focus for the sprint length if I know that a break is coming in the near future.

Sarra Cannon regularly shares documents to track your writing progress for the month. I highly recommend watching her YouTube channel for writing tips and advice, especially for the planners out there. I enjoy tracking my sprint times and word counts to try and beat my record. You can also create your own tracking system by hand, or my favorite, playing in Excel or a spreadsheet program of your choice.

What are some of your sprinting goals? Do you find a certain length of time works for you?