If you already know all about nanorimo and are lookingfor a guide to success, then you might be interested in this article.
Let’s start at the beginning – what is nanowrimo?
Nanowrimo stands for National Novel Writing Month. These
days, the ‘national’ bit is a bit defunct, as it’s really an international
endeavour. There is an official organisation that run it and they have a website,
which you can easily find by Googling ‘nanowrimo’.
However, there’s nothing to say that you actually have to
sign up to the website to take part, you can do so completely in the privacy of
your own computer.
The basic principle is that you write the first draft of a
novel – all within the month of November. You are not allowed to have written
any of it in advance (although it’s is highly recommended to have a plan
sketched out – The Novel Factory software is perfect for this) and you
have to write 50,000 words. That works out at just under 2000 words per day
(they didn’t even have the good grace to pick a month with one extra day –
still, I suppose it could have been February).
The advantage of ‘officially’ signing up and submitting your
work to the Nanowrimo community, is that you may get more motivation by seeing
what other people are doing, and getting instant feedback. Also, I think you
get a kind of digital certificate if you complete it – if you’re into that kind
of thing.
However, the slight risk is that some places are funny about work that has been published
anywhere else, including on a website – so that’s just something to keep in
mind if you’re intending to take the work further.
What nanowrimo is
The point of nanowrimo is to get writing.
The main problem for most people that want to be writers is
that they don’t get their bum on the seat and the words coming out. This may be
an issue of finding the time (saying you don’t have time is not a reason, it’s
an excuse, and if you don’t like me saying that, then you won’t like me saying
this either – if ‘no time’ is your excuse, then you’re not a writer, and
probably never will be), feeling uncertain or embarrassed, not knowing where to
start, or being precious about the work.
Nanowrimo is a great way to get over some of those
obstacles. There is no time to overplan, procrastinate or be precious. Just
dump any old rubbish on the page. Writing crap is a necessary part of the
process on the way to writing something decent, and Nanowrimo shoves you out
onto the path.
Knowing that thousands of other people are doing it at the
same time is also highly motivational.
What Nanowrimo isn’t
I am always very careful to say that Nanowrimo is about
writing a ‘first draft’ not about writing a ‘novel’. That’s because a first
draft is so far from a finished novel, they barely look related. There is no
way you can get a finished novel out in one month, and a good rule of thumb is
that however long the first draft took – refining it into something even barely
passable will take about twice as long again. At the very least.
Anecdotally, publishers and literary agents groan when it
comes round to Nanowrimo time, because in the following months, they are
inundated with rubbish first drafts that are being called submission ready
manuscripts (as a side note, this is useful to know for choosing when to submit your novel – i.e. not in December).
Using the nanowrimo concept to suit you
There is no law to say that you can’t apply the principle of
having a fairly hefty challenge to suit your needs, if writing a first draft
doesn’t happen to be the thing for you.
For example, if you already have a first draft, you could
use the month to force yourself to get the second draft completed – although
this is a lot harder to judge – 50,000 words is a very clear goal that can be
broken down into discrete parts. But having said that, you could break down a second draft into two chapters per week, for example.
Another alternative works for short story
writers, which is to write 30 stories in 30 days. You don’t have to write one a
day, exactly, but it gives you a very clear guide as to whether you’re ahead or
behind and the average rate you have to keep up.
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