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#14
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Suzerain of Sheol
Desolation Denizen
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I've known about NaNoWriMo for years, but I've never even considered attempting it. I am a frighteningly slow writer -- most of the time due to a lack of motivation to work, but also because I'm an obsessive "architect" when it comes to planning a novel. I need to spend months or even years outlining the plot and ironing out any issues that crop up before I even consider putting pen to paper. I'm also hyper-conscious of word-choice while I'm writing, which slows me down even more.
I do speculate sometimes on what would happen if I disconnected myself from the internet, took away any distractions, and just left myself with writing to occupy myself, since I do waste a lot of time deliberately not working on things. I just know for a fact there's no way I could write a novel in a month. 50,000 words in a year is good for me.
And, no I've never actually completed a novel (well, one, but it doesn't count because I had no idea what I was doing when I wrote it). I'm 50k words into one right now, 20k into another, and have a trilogy on the back burner simmering, but they're all a long way from finishing.
Speaking generally as a writer (I'm much better at talking about writing than actually doing it) I really don't see much promise in the exercise of writing a novel in one month (not that 50k words is really a novel...) There's really not much of a chance of anything good coming out of it, and working at that pace will leave a nightmare of editing behind. I understand the sentiment of getting in the mode of writing every day, and I do think that's a good thing, but I also think it's a waste of writing time in most cases since the finished product has a very low chance of being satisfying to anyone, least of all the writer.
(In case it isn't obvious, I do not at all support the "just write" mentality. Writing is a craft, one that talent is only one aspect of. And like any craft, time and care are rewarded. Rushing isn't a good idea. But, I suppose NaNoWriMo has always been about quantity over quality, anyway.)
And I can babble endlessly about this (English major/Creative Writing minor). Going to stop myself now. :p
Edit: Also, if find some of those tips you linked to rather questionable. I very much advise to *not* turn to RPGs for inspiration for a plot. Even in the context of absolutely-needing-a-plot-and-I-can't-come-up-with-anything, that strikes as a terrible decision. RPG stories, for the most part, are not compatible with the storytelling required for a successful novel. Such books are almost inevitably the lowest common denominator of (usually) fantasy literature and aren't going to impress anyone worth impressing.
(I know that makes me sound like some ivory tower elitist, but I swear I'm not. I actually have a huge problem with "literature" and prefer fantasy above anything else, but only because I have faith that the genre can be more than what R.A. Salvatore makes it to be.)
Cold silence has a tendency
to atrophy any sense of compassion
between supposed lovers.
Between supposed brothers.
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Posted 11-02-2011, 11:04 PM
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