Productivity

October 30, 2007

Slow Down -- and Speed Up!

Is there a way to balance productivity and quality? When I read what I've written so far, it has a hurried quality to it. (Like all my blog posts.) I have a lot to do. I must hurry. Faster, faster, faster.

While that is all true (and I feel like a first draft is good enough for a blog post because that's all I have time for), I'm making a mistake with my novel. I may not have time right this minute while I'm working on my novel to churn out a chapter, I do have time to truly get into the scene and the character. Walter Wetherell (W. D. Wetherell) once told me to spend more time in my scenes and not hurry on so much. That's exactly what I'm not doing.

It's harder to add in things later. It's easier to cut than to add. I need to slow down. Not spend less time, not produce fewer pages. I need to slow down while I'm writing. I might be in a hurry because time is so precious, but the words are even more so. If it takes me several months longer to get my first draft completed, that's okay.

So, having decided that I need to slow down, what have I done? Why, signed up for Nanowrimo, which starts Thursday.

I feel like I've decided to slow down -- and speed up. That makes no sense. So how I'm trying to use it is to slow down because I'm going to spend more time working, which will coincidentally result in 50,000 words by November 30. If I feel I am killing myself or my novel, I am allowed to jump ship but not allowed to stop writing.  Anybody else done it or going to do it?

October 17, 2007

Making progress

Just a quick note to let you know that if you (me) will put your behind in the chair, you (I) can indeed make progress....

It feels wonderful, but I'm scared to read it.

October 15, 2007

A Fluid Start

The alarm went off and at first I couldn't figure out what that noise was. Then I remembered. Then I remembered I had set it to get a head start on my novel, because the first thing I do in the morning is usually the only thing I can be sure will get done during the day.

But I am allowed coffee, so I padded into the kitchen in my sock-feet and got an extra surprise when my feet got wet. Water on the floor is never a good thing. Either the refrigerator or dishwasher has broken, or maybe just some plumbing somewhere. Water everywhere.

And I had the first line for my novel: They call me Noah.

Not the novel I want to write, though.

My first thought was, DANGER! DEFEAT! YOU'LL NEVER WRITE YOUR NOVEL! THERE'S WATER ON THE KITCHEN FLOOR. OH NOES! And as I was mopping it up I thought, "This book I'm going to write must be really good because look at the trouble the Forces of Evil have gone to to stop me."

Then I wiped up some more and thought, "Maybe God knows what a shambles I'm going to make of this so He flooded the place to keep me from wasting my time."

Then I thought, "Maybe you just have a leak under the sink. Wipe it up and get writing!"

Sometimes a leak is just a leak.

So, I was slightly delayed to my first writing appointment but the detour gave me more inspiration and I ended up writing more than I planned, more than I expected and enjoyed it more than I feared. I want to find out what happens next.

A great start, though I may throw away every word. And I left myself notes for tomorrow.

October 12, 2007

Ways to Organize Your Novel

Yesterday I asked how people organize their works in progress -- physically or digitally organize what they've written. I got some great responses.

  1. Put the whole thing in one big MS Word file.
  2. Make a folder for the novel and organize your writing by making each scene a separate file named by the scene name (what happens in that scene).
  3. Make a folder for the novel. Each day's work is numbered. For example, Day 1's work is 1 and Day 50's work is 50. Also keep a file where this work is placed consecutively.
  4. Many people work all the way through (one file) but number or name chapters.
  5. Some people name the scene files and date them.
  6. Some people write it out BY HAND and then type the second draft in.... (Whew! I don't even write my mother's birthday card by hand.)
  7. Anything else?

October 11, 2007

Pre-Novel Planning

I start my novel in a few days. I'm already behind. How can I be behind? Well, easy. My father's in the hospital, I'm tending to a sick cat and keeping him separate from the other cats, and for some reason I'm participating in a garage sale. And I have some paying work I need to do if I hope to get paid.

The truth is that overplanning is not useful. I have no idea if this is true or what it means, but I'm certainly nowhere near that so let's just say it's an awful idea.

Here's where I am on my pre-planning:

  1. I know where and when I'm going to write.
  2. I know my main character and her deep yearning.
  3. I have decided that this first draft will be in first person because that will help close the distance between me and this character.
  4. I believe that God has a plan for this book. In fact, I'm counting on it. (Note: This does not mean that God's plan is for me to finish the book and get published. It might be something like God using this book-writing process to help me see things I don't understand more clearly. I'm available for whatever purpose God has for this book. I just need to be sure I show up.)
  5. I'm going to give myself weekly rewards for achieving my daily goals. These will change according to whim and budget.
  6. I'm going to count every session as a gift and as part of the process. Whether difficult, inspired, easy or transformative, if I'm breathing and spilling out words, it is a gift, no matter how good (or not)  those words are.
  7. I'm going to keep it fun. If it's not fun (to some extent), if it feels like a daily beating, I'm changing up everything. (Remind me of this.)

Things I wish I had done already:

  1. Figured out how to organize my novel using MS Word. I've made a big mess of keeping files as chapters and trying to keep track of the numbering in the past. HELP!
  2. Had my house in order. (Garage sale this weekend should help.) It's hard to have peace of mind when you live in chaos.
  3. Was on a schedule where we went to bed earlier so I will be able to get up earlier.
  4. Had read all those books I have on writing and knew what they were talking about.

What is part of your pre-planning?

September 26, 2007

How to find a writer's group

Terry asked how to find a writer's group. Good question -- thanks, Terry! I hope these ideas help you -- and others -- find the right group. And please, if anyone has more ideas, I hope you'll join the discussion.

You might start your own group with people you like and whose work you respect. Every group has to start somewhere....

If you're looking for an existing group, you might:

  • Contact writing professors at local colleges and universities and ask if they know of any groups (we got some of our members that way);
  • Ask local writers if they know of any groups;
  • Get in touch with local book reviewers for the nearest newspaper (they are frequently writers themselves and know of existing groups);
  • Go to writer's conferences and network (you may even find writers who live near you);
  • Go to readings and get to know your local writers and local writing community (they should be able to put you in touch with different writer's groups);
  • Find out if your local bookstores have affiliated writer's groups;
  • Contact your library, and
  • Search or advertise on your local Craigslist. (This last one is scary to me -- there are crazies out there.)

There are writers everywhere, and where there are writers, there are writer's groups.

If you write in a particular genre, you may find an online community. Although I am not a romance writer, I used to lurk on a romance writer discussion board because I happened to find it. They were extremely kind and helpful to each other, which is what I guess I should have expected from romance writers. (I just don't like romances unless they are dressed up as literary fiction or something else.)

Blanche DuBois might have always depended on the kindness of strangers, but I'm not sure that depending on the literary advice and guidance of strangers is a smart strategy.

What works for you?

September 25, 2007

Join or start a writer's group

Shame can be a great motivator. Envy, too. So can wonderful support.

Join or start a writer's group, and you get all three.  First, it's just plain down embarrassing to show up week after week at your group meeting empty handed. Writers write. If you're not writing, why do you keep showing up?

At least that's what you think that the other members are thinking. Which is as good as them thinking it, although the truth is more likely that they are thinking, "Good! Since she didn't bring anything there'll be more time to work on the piece I brought," or "The poor thing is truly blocked. I wonder if we gave her some of this wine if that would help shake some words loose out of her?"

Then, though writers would never envy one another, if somebody just got her third novel published and you are still perfecting your opening sentence, you might experience something like envy, only much more evil. Please do not take out your failures on your successful friend. She got her book published. If you don't write your book, you can't blame anyone but yourself. So bring her a bottle of champagne and buy copies of her book to give all of your friends for Christmas. Also, write good reviews on Amazon for her. And then, put your butt in the chair and write your own book. It doesn't even have to be good. Just write it.

The third thing is that writers are very supportive of each other. Keep showing up, and they'll keep telling you to write. Bring something you've written, and they'll help you make it better. You'll get into a rhythm that might look like pulling an all-nighter the night before the meeting just so you won't be empty handed, but at least you wouldn't be empty handed -- and you'll be making progress on something.

You'll also learn a lot from the discussion about other people's work. And, you'll get to read some great stuff before it's published!

Finding -- or starting -- the right writer's group is probably a matter of trial and error. Four friends and I started a writing group long ago and called it "Deadline Club" because we had all found out we wrote better with a deadline, so we imposed one once a month. We would mail out our submission for the month one week in advance, giving people time to read and critique it. Then we would give each person's work fifteen minutes of discussion. That group grew and lasted almost 20 years! Unfortunately, as the membership changed, we got the inevitable lunatic who managed to be offended by everyone and offend a few of us, so people quit coming. The truth is, the group had run through its life cycle. For everything there is a beginning, middle and end. Those were my most productive years, though, because if you didn't produce something three meetings in a row, you were OUT.

I got invited to join another writer's group and went for a while. These people were hostile. (One was a therapist and one was a minister. Go figure.) Or maybe that was their form of humor. One woman (a teacher) told me that she didn't like one of my stories because she didn't like people like the main character. Bad chemistry, irrelevant comments. I moved on.

Tonight I'm going to a different writer's group that has been kind enough to keep inviting me. These people are fully engaged in their novels, showing up week after week with new chapters, revisions and more stuff. One woman just ditched her first draft and is re-writing in first person. I can't keep track of who has had books published, but several have. The meetings start on time, end on time and are very focused -- and full of laughter. I feel privileged to be included. And very motivated, too.

What's your experience with writer's groups?

September 20, 2007

Plotter or Pantser?

Sorry it's been quiet here! I was on the wrong side of a deadline (it had passed) and I was knocking myself out to get  a paying piece out of the door. It's gone now, and though there are others in the in-box, this blog -- and my novel -- are important and so here I am.

I need to pick a date and post it at Novel Goal for when I start writing, and also exactly what my goals are. Baby steps! I tend to be too ambitious and then it shuts me down.

And I need to get in gear here with my pre-novel planning. I said I would have a month for that. Time is passing. What is my pre-novel planning?

Are you a plotter or a pantser (seat of pants writer)? (And is that pantser or pantzer?)

My friends in my writer's group all seem to be plotters. They have colored sticky notes on boards posted on their walls. I'm not sure how their systems work, but I'm sure I could turn it into a great procrastination tool. As a disorganized person, I also think I would get stuck trying to remember which sticky note color meant what and make a mess of the whole thing anyway.

I think writing  would be a much less harrowing task if I had plotted my novel all out before hand. I've tried this. And there are a couple of reasons why this method doesn't work for me.

First, writing from an outline is like work. Here's what you have to say, now say it. I get paid to do that, and though I do it well enough to get paid to do it again, there's not much room for my soul in this process. I have never been good at writing from an outline. In school, when they try to teach writing by teaching you to outline first, that was always a disaster for me. I can't write to an outline. I usually would end up writing the piece, then outlining what I had and turning that in. Very useful, huh? That whole outlining exercise.

I sometimes have clients that want me to do an outline first. I'll do one, with the warning that what they get may not fit the outline. But I promise that it will be much, much better -- and it is.

Then again, a scratchy, sketchy outline can be a good prop to keep me from running off into some kind of panic that puts me in a fetal position. I'll be 30 pages along and I don't know what happens next! So just kind of a sketchy thing (for some reason it has to be really disorganized looking -- handwritten with none of the lines running straight so I don't feel trapped) with a few possibilities for if I get stuck is what I use. Just to keep going for the next day or so. This sketchy thing doesn't take me all the way to the end and in fact only covers the next couple of events.

But the most important thing, for me, on why outlining or advance plotting doesn't work is that I can't write deeply from an outline. When I was in my MFA program, I spent one semester mentoring with Sharon Sheehe Stark. Now, when you mentored with somebody, you had to send them a packet every month containing two short stories (one could be a revision, the other had to be new) and two novel reviews, plus an explanation of what you were trying to accomplish and whether or not this was working. I was working full time and had had suffered a miscarriage. I was a mess but was so committed to my writing (and the program) that I pushed on. But I was afraid. I didn't know what I would find in that dark place inside me that was screaming with grief. I couldn't write from there. It was too soon, it was too bloody. So, I thought I would try something different. I came up with a story, plotted it in my mind and then on paper, and wrote the thing. Not too bad! I thought I had found a new way to write. Little wear and tear on the author, either.

I will never, ever forget Sharon's response to me. I don't even need to refer to it. "Very clever, Anne, and I don't mean that as a compliment. Every part of this story read like you knew what was going to happen from the beginning, except for one part."

And here I'll interrupt Sharon. There was one part where the story deviated from the outline and my heart took off running, spilling out words and images that were actually thrilling and authentic, perhaps even original. Sharon spotted this right away. My hair stood on end as I read her note. How could she tell? How did she know what part was pre-plotted and what part had spilled out on its own? They didn't look that different to me.

But she knew. And she was right. She told me that I didn't care about the characters, was not in touch with their deep emotions and that I was forcing the story. (How else to get them from point A to point B?) She told me to throw away everything but the one, spontaneous part of the story. Wow!

Then she went on to say, "You are stealing from your own excitement. You have taken the heart out of your story."

I thank God I had her that semester, and that she was gifted in seeing the truth of my writing and the truth behind my writing. It's much more difficult to write this way because it is scary. And there are many dead ends and false turns along the road. I will kill more trees than my plotter friends.

But this is what it takes. I need to trust that the mind that can dream such vivid and interesting dreams while I am asleep can dream vivid and interesting stories while awake. I'll try to help it along, but I'd better not try to tame it. I just hope I have the courage for this adventure without a map.

What about you? How are you going to write your novel?

Update: A wonderful, detailed post about this very subject -- and more to come -- is at The Writer's Roundabout. Well worth a visit!

September 18, 2007

This blog is to help the part of your that wants to write fool the part of you that doesn't want to write

Pardon the partial duplication from a post at Novel Goal, but I think it will make sense.

Why not combine Novel Goal and Novel Struggles?

First, a quotation from Maria Irene Fornes, a playwright:

"You must always keep changing your process. Because there are two of you, one who wants to write and one who doesn't. The one who wants to write has to keep fooling the one who doesn't."

Novel Goal is for the one of you who wants to write. This blog is for the one who doesn't want to write, to let that side talk and vent and get over it and for Pete's Sake get out of the way! And then help the one who wants to write figure out how to fool the one who doesn't.

We'll strategize and vent here.  In both places, we'll try to outrun the one who doesn't want to write.

Maybe I'll end up combining the two, but my initial vision is that Novel Goal is pure hope (and progress) and Novel Struggles is "is anyone else having this struggle?"

We can learn from each other, and fool that part that, for whatever reason -- fear, sabotage, laziness -- doesn't want to write.

September 17, 2007

What went wrong before

Why do I have two unfinished novels? Why didn't I finish? What went wrong before, and how can I change it?

  1. I put too much pressure on myself. I'd had some successes with short fiction and had won a fellowship, so I thought every word I wrote had to be really good. As a result, I kept from failing by writing no words (or not enough). So, this time I will only have pressure for production or time spent on the keyboard. It's about process, not perfection.
  2. I abandoned one novel, even though I had a publisher who said she would publish it (a big house, too), because I was trying to write what I was not. It was a Chick Lit, Sex-in-the-City, very funny book. And every chapter made me feel cheaper and cheaper. This book might have made people laugh, and that's a good thing. But it was not what I was meant to write. So, this time I will be authentic. I won't write to what I think somebody else wants to publish. I'll write the story I want to read. Publishing is secondary. I let go of worries about publishing.
  3. I haven't really abandoned the second novel. In fact, I'm going to spend time re-imagining it over the next month. I hope I can find the notes I took once at a conference where I was greatly moved by Robert Olen Butler's vision of the writing process. But the reason I stopped was that it mattered too much to me and I was forcing it. There's a difference between forcing yourself to sit down and forcing your story. I don't know how to prevent that right now. If the story's not going, what do you do? One friend told me not to do it if it isn't fun. I think I'll aim for a more playful, fun attitude. That doesn't mean every day or every week has to be fun, but it needs to have that feeling of pursuit of the things I don't know.
  4. I wasn't disciplined enough. I didn't show up for work. I procrastinated. This time I will block out time devoted to my novel only. Six days a week.
  5. I was really hard on myself. I will do this in babysteps, keeping focused but adjusting my work habits and expectations.

I probably did a whole lot more wrong than this, but if I can make these changes, I'll be light years away from where I was.

What about you?

Technorati novel struggles favorite

  • Help me in my struggles! Click below:
    Add to Technorati Favorites

Click here to read short fiction

Writer Interrupted