By Terri Main
This is my eighth year
with Nanowrimo and I've had five "wins." Just about all my published
novels started out as nano-novels. I love November just because I can get to
Nano-ing again. If this is your first year, or maybe you just had a brief brush
with Nanowrimo, I have a few tips for you:
10. Write fast, not
good. Seriously, this is the most common tip and the one most often overlooked.
Nanowrimo is all about word count. You are trying to finish a first very rough
draft of your novel. Get it written, then later get it right.
9. Plan ahead. It's maybe a bit late now, but there is still some planning you can do for the last half of the month. I put aside a number of frozen dinners. I cooked up some of my favorite dishes and froze them. So, I can just pull them out and zap them in the microwave and save time cooking.
8. Late to bed, early to rise. Some of us are day people, and the better of us are night people. :-) Sometimes the easiest way to get some extra time to write during November is to simply either rise a bit earlier than normal or go to bed a bit later. It also has the advantage of having a quiet house.
7. Skipping is good. If you get stuck in a certain part of your novel, don't sit there wasting time pondering what to write. Skip over it and write something on the other side of the block. This applies to a specific wording, a paragraph, a scene or an entire chapter.
6. Write out of order. Sometimes I'm writing and struggling with one section of my novel because my brain is busy working on a portion of the novel that comes much later in the book. When that happens, I just put several carriage returns in and then skip to the scene that my brain really wants to write. I can compile everything later.
5. Reward yourself with
food and drink AFTER writing. Sometimes when I ask students about their writing
habits I find out that during an hour of writing a good ten minutes is spent
nibbling on snacks and drinking soda (or other beverages). Work straight
through and then have your snack, cup of coffee or soda.
4. Write on the commercials. An average hour of television has 20 minutes of commercials. Just by muting the TV and writing during the commercials, you can rack up 300-500 words per hour program.
3. Get Social. One of the great things about Nanowrimo is the recognition that people all over the world are doing the same thing you are. On the Nanowrimo site, there are forums for each genre, places to ask for help, places to announce your milestones. Additionally, there are games and past times. You can participate in word wars or word sprints or take part in other writing games. There is something about writing with each other that can make it more fun. Also check your regional discussion boards. You may find that there is a live write-in in your area.
1. (This is the most
important) HAVE FUN!!! Don't take the whole thing so seriously. Enjoy yourself.
Nano is a game of sorts like baseball or bridge, but at the end of the game,
you have a novel. Don't expect a great novel. Expect to have fun writing a
novel. You can make it great later. Just follow your characters around and
become part of their adventures. Restore the joy to writing by turning it into
a game called Nanowrimo.
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