Next month is National Novel Writing Month, or as it’s called in the (writing) biz, NaNoWriMo, or NaNo for short. Yes, I know it sounds like something Mork would chant right after he called Orson, but NaNo is serious.
The goal is to write (at least) 50,000 words of your WIP (work-in-progress) in the month of November, an average of 1666.66 words a day, give or take a decimal point.
I did my first (and only) NaNo in 2018 while we lived in Porto during our sabbatical. I had written 30,000 words of my (then) WIP, and I set myself the goal of finishing the manuscript during NaNo. As we were on sabbatical and I didn’t have any contract work in November, I could dedicate myself to full-time writing. I smashed it. 75,000 words in three weeks.
I had an online support group — NaNo encourages community — and a group of young Portuguese writers who I got together with once.
Only once, because the in-person group weren’t really working towards getting published. One of the gals I met was doing her 12th NaNo. She looked so young , I jokingly asked her if she’d done her first one when she was ten years old. No, she’d been eleven. She’d written eleven manuscripts eleven years and none had seen the light of day since. The others in the group were the same — for them, NaNo was about the community, putting pen to paper, or fingers to keys, and letting the stream of consciousness flow.
For me, NaNo was about writing a novel I could get published. (The novel I finished last November, That Night in Paris, is being published in March by One More Chapter, an imprint of HarperCollins. Watch this space — literally.) I gave these young writers online support for the rest of the month, but as we had very different goals, they weren’t really my writing tribe.
Flash forward to July this year. July is ‘Camp NaNo’ with the more achievable goal of 30,000 words in 31 days. I had an idea for a Christmas book and got 35 000 words in. The biggest difference between NaNo 2018 and Camp NaNo 2019 was that this year, I have a full-time job. I was happy with my Camp NaNo word count, and the manuscript — another ‘watch this space’ for Christmas 2020.
The intensive NaNo approach seems to work for me, so surely I am doing NaNo 2019?
No. NoNo NaNo for me this year.
And, as soon as I made that decision, I felt like I could breathe again.
Because, I’ve got enough to get on with in the next few months. Finalising edits for That Night in Paris, then handing over structural edits for the third book in my travel romcom series, then finishing my Christmas book.
I am already at capacity, and I already have the motivation I need to get the work done.
So this year, I will be championing my writer friends from the sidelines. You got this. You’re amazing. Practice self-care. And write, write, write.
Sounds like you’ve made the right decision, Sandy! I’ve never participated in NaNo, mainly because I never have a new WIP to write when it comes around. I’m eternally in editing mode 😅.
🙂
I’ve never done NaNoWriMo because I’m not really one of those people who responds well to pressure, but I’ve heard it’s fantastic for those people who do rise to the challenge.
Definitely – likely not for everyone, but certainly can be an effective motivator.
My first novel was released in August of this year. With my second novel coming up I thought NaNo might be a good idea.
By the end of October I passed. It’s not the kind of style of writing I like to do. Especially the first draft. I’m happy for those who succeed but I think I’m happier on the sidelines.
I hear you! And congrats!