Earlier this year I decided I was going to participate in
National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo).
The idea behind NaNoWriMo is to write a 50,000 word novel from start to
finish all within the month of November.
I didn’t come anywhere even remotely close to finishing. If NaNoWriMo was a cross-country race
from Liberal, KS to Washington, D.C. (1458 miles) I would have only made it 87
miles. Not exactly a stellar
effort. However, I’m still calling
the experience a success, and because I learned a lot about my writing over the
course of that month.
I found out I like outlining.
Generally speaking, there are two types of writers. Outliners and Discovery Writers.
Outliners are exactly what they sound like – people who make outlines. Discovery writers are the ones who sit
down and just let things flow onto the paper or computer screen as they form in
the writer’s mind. I’d only
written short fiction before NaNoWriMo and I leaned more toward discovery
writing. I decided since I had
never taken on a project as big as a 50k word novel, I’d try and outline the
plot to keep me a little more organized.
I searched around the internet for a while looking at
different ways novels are outlined, and I soon learned there are about as many
ways to do an outline as there are writers. Eventually I settled on outlining the book chapter by
chapter and including various scenes I wanted in the book. It was at that point when I learned
that I was definitely an outliner.
Over the month of October I’d sit down at my computer and brain storm
scenes and find out where they would best fit within the story, and I had a
blast doing it. By the end of the
October I had it planned out to be around 20 chapters or so, and I was pretty
pleased with where the plot was going. Getting to sit back and look at the big outline I made
already had me feeling like I had accomplished something.
The story grew bigger than I expected.
Looking above at the section on all I learned about outlining,
someone might think, “Well if the whole book was planned out before you
started, why didn’t you write more?”
Good question. The
thing that really derailed me was that I kept going back and messing around
with the outline instead of writing the story I came up with. The fist day I got off to a great start
and got my first chapter written and everything was great. However, then I started thinking about
other cool things that could happen, and those things sounded way cooler than
what I already planned but wouldn’t fit within my outline. So I went back and started messing
around with the outline more.
This happened constantly over the first week and a
half. In order to finish your 50K
words in the month you need to average 1,667 words a day. After ten days I had 3,000 words
because instead of writing, I was tinkering with my outline. While I was changing the direction of
the story over and over again, I was adding more characters, making some
characters more important than I’d planned, getting rid of others who I thought
would be major impact characters in the story, and debating whether or not I
wanted to work in a love interest into the story. After several days of that, it was obvious that the simple story
I’d originally planned for NaNoWriMo had turned into something that was just
too huge to take on in a month.
Which led me to the next big discovery about the project.
I wasn’t ready for a project this big.
I’ve wanted to write a novel since I was a teenager, and as
I mentioned previously, all I’d written was short fiction. Writing short fiction is great. It’s fun, you get lots of practice
doing different things with plot, character, and language, and it’s something
that you can do over the course of an evening or a week. It was not a good idea for me to try
and write my first novel in 30 days. It was demoralizing when I looked up and saw
that I was 15K words behind schedule.
The funk didn’t last long, but there was definitely a
funk. For a few days I didn’t go
anywhere near my office and I wouldn’t talk about my book with anyone. I kept thinking that I’d wasted so much
time messing around with the outline that I’d never finish. Luckily that self-pitying only lasted a
day or so, before I was able to pick myself back up and re-evaluate what I was
going to do for the rest of the month.
I signed up to learn and have fun. So I was going to keep learning and
having fun.
I came to terms with the fact that I wasn’t going to finish
the book that month. It didn’t
mean that I wasn’t going to finish it ever. I’d had so much fun planning, outlining, and world building
that book that it would be a shame to give up on it. So I looked at what had become of my simple 20 chapter fantasy
novel. I looked at the changes I’d
already made and looked at my notebook where I jotted down changes I’d been
debating. The book became
something so much bigger than I’d ever thought of initially.
So I decided I was going to just go back into planning mode
and not worry about writing another word of the actual story. As I planned I made notes to
myself about characters, plot, and worlds that were going to make up the
story. I identified things that I
need to do a lot of work with, and what kind of research I’d need to do to make
the cool things I added to the story make sense.
In the end, I came up with something epic.
What has come out of that experience is the plan for a big
epic fantasy series that I’m so excited to write. However, because that has become so much bigger than what I
was ready for, I decided to put that idea on the shelf for a while. I still pull it out now and then and
add some cool ideas that I want to try and work into it, but that particular
story is going to wait a little bit for me to get a little more practice.
In the meantime, I’ve started planning an urban fantasy
novel that is going to be a lot more low key. The idea behind this project is to start and finish a novel
without the stress of keeping up with daily word counts. Instead of approaching it like I did NaNoWriMo,
I’m going to follow along with one of Brandon Sanderson’s fiction writing
classes. As I mentioned in a
previous blog, Mr. Sanderson teaches creative writing at BYU. In his class, the project they work on
the entire semester is completing a novel or novella (depending on the
semester). The coolest part is
that the lectures are all on YouTube. (Here is the link to watch the first couple semesters) So to keep myself steadily writing and working on this new book, I’m
going to follow along with the most recent semester that was posted and
approach the novel as if I were writing it for Mr. Sanderson’s class. Any cool writing exercises or side
projects coming from that class will probably be posted on the blog because I
think sharing that stuff will be kind of cool.