Category Archives: NaNoWriMo

Guest Author: George Sirois on NaNoWriMo

GeorgeSirois

NaNoWriMo: The Dreaded Week 2

Even though this period of time has already come and gone, I’d like to talk about a very critical point in any NaNoWriMo challenge that Sharon apparently flew past: the Dreaded Week 2. Now, for those of you who have yet to take this challenge in any of its forms – in November for NaNoWriMo or June for the Southern Cross Novel Challenge or, frankly, whenever you want – the hurdles are always the same.

When I took up the challenge in June of 2008, I decided that this would be the perfect opportunity to tell the story of one of my favorite characters that I had ever come up, Excelsior. I made the necessary adjustments to his back story, I made the man who would become this great character a teenager rather than an adult – which was how he started back in 1992 – and I had a basic template of a story in mind. The beginning and the end were all set; it was just a matter of how I would get there.

The first week was a blast. I got to write all these really cool scenes that introduced the main character and some of the supporting characters, and I got to take the first steps that set the plot in motion. After a week, I had finished just about four chapters, I was on pace to make 50,000 words before the end of the month, everything was in great shape.

And then, as Week 2 started, I realized I had hit the wall. I had no more of the plot to unearth; now I had to make my characters DO something. Of course I shouldn’t have feared much since this is all about just writing the first draft, and first drafts are supposed to be crap. After all, writing is re-writing. But I still wanted this story’s big step forward to be a meaningful one. Hours passed and I kept asking myself, what happens next? My enthusiasm was replaced by anxiety and I began wondering if I had what it took to finish this monumental challenge.

Suddenly, the moment of inspiration struck! Kind of.

Instead of sticking with this very limited group (Matthew, his uncle and this older mentor-type of man – who would later become a woman when I realized I didn’t have any major female characters), I decided to go back to the other planet that I had written about in an earlier chapter and introduce some more characters. They had to be transported to Earth to assist the mentor with Matthew’s training, and once I made that decision, I felt the previously gummed-up gears in my head start to turn again. It felt great shaking off this problem and regaining the momentum that I was in danger of losing.

After that scene ended, I went back to my original characters and nothing felt forced anymore. From then on, much to my relief, I was having fun writing again. The second week came and went, and every single day, I was keeping up with my word count. This continued all the way through June of 2008, until I wrote “The End” on the manuscript at 11:35pm on June 30. My first draft was 58,000 words long.

Of course, this was only the first step in a very long journey with “Excelsior,” but it was a journey that now has a happy ending. I self-published this book in July of 2010, then pulled it off the market when it was accepted by Rocking Horse Publishing, a small press from St. Louis, MO. I took the opportunity to give it another edit (its fifth edit, if you count the rewrites from 2008-2010 and another edit in early 2012) and now I couldn’t be happier. But all of this wouldn’t have happened if I didn’t get over the stopping point during Week 2 of the first draft.

So I’d like to hear from all of you. Are you ahead or behind on your word count? Is there something that’s in your way? How are you planning to get around it? Share your issues here. Maybe someone will have the answer you need…

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-PAXP-deijE

NaNoWriMo 2013: Finished 11/14/13

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I have finished NaNoWriMo 2013, the date November 14th.  While I am extremely happy about this, two things need to be said. One is I wrote the words required to win but I am not claiming they are good words. Another thing is the book is not done. I need, in my mind, to add at least another 10-20k to make this book complete. So as the rest of the month winds down I will be adding but at a slower pace. I am proud of myself. When I started NaNo in 2011 for the first time I did not plan it. I decided two days before I was going to do it. That was a mistake due to my health. But it was a well earned win.

As I stand this is what I have:

NaNoWriMo

2011:The book written was called “A Woman of Color” which is a true story of racism.

2012: The book written was called “Moe’s Cafe” which had it’s origin from a writing prompt. The genre is action, adventure and a hit of the mob.

2013:The book written was called “Lost Faith” which fit the genre of YA, religious and drama. It stems from an apocalyptic world where faith is no longer recognized.

I can honestly say all three works were a joy to write. I love them for their individuality. But where do I stand now? They are all in various stages of editing and revision. A chore I hate and dread with ever fiber of my being. But it is time I get it done so I can start submitting them.

So I shut the door to NaNoWriMo 2013. It has been fun but man am I glad it is over.

NaNoWriMo: The stretch

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I know I have been quiet. NaNo has kept me busy like it does every year that I work on the frenzy. I been fortunate that the story has been writing itself, literally. There is a lot to be said about writing on what you know.

In my story I picked a region that I am familiar with and a culture as well. You don’t have to know everything in your book when you start, all you need is a thought or idea to carry it through. If you infuse a topic that you are familiar in all one has to do is wrap words around that thought. Yes I am making it sound easy. That isn’t what I am saying. By writing on something you know or are familiar with, you are making it easier to write.

This is what I have embraced in the book:

-My French heritage

-Northern Maine living

-Christian

-Persecution

You can write a lot when you use any of those topics let alone all of them like I have done in my book, “Lost Faith” that is being written for NaNoWriMo 2013. I already know when the 50k words are done, the book will be not complete. I will need to keep on going to make things go full circle. But I do like where it is going. That’s another thing. If you enjoy the book you are writing it is not work not in the sense people might think it.

My word count as of today gets me 11k shy of my 50k word count. I will take a few days off when I reach it to give my hands, neck and shoulders a break from it all. But after that will add to it.

I do enjoy NaNoWriMo where my sole goal is to win and worry about the book later. But when you are enjoying the book as it develops that is just icing on the cake.