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Three years ago a friend challenged me to turn a
short story I had written into a complete novel. At the time, I remember
laughing at her hysterically.
Me? Write an entire novel? Where would I
find the time? How could I find 90,000 words that link together to form a
novel-length story?
The entire idea of embarking on such a long arduous
journey was too scary to contemplate. What if I ran out of ideas to keep the
plot moving?
That same friend shrugged off my fears and gave me a small
piece of advice: "Each journey begins with a single step."
HA! I
panicked, and for months I wasted precious time, believing that if I took so
much as one step on the WRONG path, it would lead to nowhere. And then, in the
space of one month, the entire novel came flooding out.
Remember, I was
working full-time in an office back then, so a lot of my writing was done before
work, or in the evenings after dinner, so I won't lie to you and say it was an
easy month. But it was sure worth the effort.
Here's how it was
done:
Day 1:
- Buy some manila folders and label each of
them with a chapter number. 90,000 seems like an enormous amount, but achieving
small segments of 3,000 words each is a more realistic goal. - Write a short
outline for each chapter and paste it inside each folder. - Arrange a plot-line
map and stick this on the wall in front of your work space.
Day
2:
Create your character profiles in as much depth as you can. Have
fun. Be creative with their quirks. Invent pasts for them, including family and
friends. Find images or cut out pictures of people who remind of you that
character.
Day 3:
Add your character's intended movements
and actions to the short outlines pasted in your manila folders. Double-check
that the plot is still on track. Start thinking about the background details
that will enhance your fictional world.
--- I'm going to interrupt myself
here, because I hear you screaming: "What about researching locations? That
takes months!" Perhaps, but that isn't the issue here. The task at hand is to
get a novel out of your head and onto paper (or onto the computer, whichever
works for you)
Days 4 - 29
- Switch off your 'internal
editor' and create some spare time to write.
- Sit down and fill in the the
details of those short outlines you made.
- Forget all about expressions and
grammar and background detail. Just write the bare bones of a scene that will
get you from one chapter to the next. If you set yourself a target goal of
writing 3,000 words per day, then in 26 days you will have an 80,000 word first
draft of a completed novel.
Day 30
Celebrate by taking an
entire day to goof off.
Okay, I'll be the first to admit that writing
this way will not result in an instant best-seller. In fact, all you WILL have
at the end of that month is a completed first draft of a novel that will
definitely need a lot of heavy editing and revising.
You will
need to go back through your manuscript several times and flesh out the details,
describe the settings and open up the characters to give them depth and to
create reader empathy. Editing through grammatical errors, and expanding on
scenes to clarify details is a necessary step.
But revision is not
the same thing as free-form creative writing. Revising a completed
manuscript is an enormous feeling of achievement, and it is also a great
motivational tool. But you can't begin to revise properly without first
finishing the tale.
By breaking up an enormous task like writing a novel
into several smaller, more manageable chunks, you really can write a novel in a
month.
Write a Novel in a Month! Copyright by Lee Masterson
Lee Masterson is a full-time freelance writer from South Australia. She is also the editor of Fiction Factor - an online magazine for writers, offering articles on the craft and business of writing, tips on getting published, free ebook downloads, author interviews, paying market listings, and much more! In what little spare time she has, Lee also writes science fiction novels.
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