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No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
Right, October is already upon us, and November is fast approaching- which can mean just one thing, its time to get ready for National Novel Writing Month.
For the uninitiated, National Novel Writing Month (or NaNoWriMo for short) is a challenge to write fifty thousand words of a novel during the month of November, averaging to 1,667 words per day.
This next month is particularly important for any participant who finds it useful to have a plot for their story, but can also be used for purposes such as filling your house with more energy drinks than the local shop, or for clearing any and all dates in November, whatever you think will help you to write. Also, October can be useful for convincing other people you know to participate- because writing in the company of other people trying to do the same is so much more fun than writing in the company of other people who aren't trying to do the same...
Feel free to point me in the direction of any resources that would be useful to be linked in the first post, and I can add them (though if we reach november first, I may be too busy writing to add stuff to the first post).
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
I may or may not be participating in this. Even if I don't, I'll be writing a novel of sorts anyway once I finish doing all the research for my massive setting that I'll be setting the story in. I admittedly have never done this before, so I'm not fully sure what I'll be getting myself into if I do actually decide to go for it instead of writing at my own pace. It does sound like fun, though.
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
Sure, I'm in! For once, I don't have school project crunch mode this November, so this'll be my best bet for making it :smallbiggrin:
I'm considering writing a novel in an already-created universe, to get a feel for it before I start the actual story the universe is made for (Mercenary Pen will know which one). Just gotta find an angle or character to focus on.
Probably gonna go the "energy drink" route for October. I have another novel to complete before November starts, so I'm kinda busy :smallwink:
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
I'll give it a shot, though I have no shot of success.
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
Wooo! Now, I've been meaning to do NaNoWriMo for like, three or four years, and never have, for one overly busy reason or another.
I won't be doing it this year either.
Fortunately, this is because I'm in the middle of a novel. :smallbiggrin:
So while I may not be doing NaNo proper, I am going to be trying to write a lot in the coming months! Maybe not 1700 words per day, but a lot! And maybe I'll do a proper 50,000 in one month rush sometime later this year, after I'm done with Another Turn of the Wheel. Because why not, it's good practice, and it's not like I'm going to run out of novel ideas!
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ravens_cry
I'll give it a shot, though I have no shot of success.
That's defeatism talking- I wouldn't count yourself out any time before late november, especially considering I've heard of people managing the 50k words within a 3 day period on some occasions...
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mercenary Pen
That's defeatism talking- I wouldn't count yourself out any time before late november, especially considering I've heard of people managing the 50k words within a 3 day period on some occasions...
Hah! I've done that in a non-NaNoWriMo context. 100,000 words in two months. That was crazy.
So, yeah. I very much agree with Mercenary. No need for pessimism here - you can do amazing things if you want to, and inspiration strikes! :smallsmile:
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National Novel Writing Month
Only 19 days before the start! Got a plot or general idea yet? (I don't.)
For those who don't know, National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo for short) is a challenge to write a 50,000-word novel during the month of November. So 1,667 words a day on average. You write for yourself, without necessarily wanting to publish, and you don't take time to edit; you just put words on paper. It can be any type of novel.
Last year I made it to 40,000 words, with the added difficulty that I wrote my pirate novel in English, which isn't my first language. Unfortunately I never finished my novel, as the motivation was gone after Nov 30; I estimate I was about two-thirds of the way through. I hope to do better this time.
So... who's in? Any past experiences you'd like to share?
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I plan on taking part. Hopefully this year I wont end up hating my protagonist and turning him into a minor character while I turn my antagonist into the new protagonist.
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
I've never done NaNoWriMo before, so if I end up with the time to try it I might actually give it a shot this year. Now... I guess having an idea of what to write would be a good start. :smalltongue:
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I keep meaning to take part in this. I think I can put about 1,500 words a day in during my free time, but only if I can make myself sit down and do it.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Last year, I put down one sentence, gave it a long look, then gave up because I had no idea how to continue. And never looked at it again.
This year, I'm trying to come up with a plot idea first, but I can't think of antyhing.
Maybe I'll finish that story about the Zombie Noir detective. Though I'm not sure that will ever be longer than about five pages.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I haven't thought about plots, though I might just browse through my musings files and see what comes up. I will definitely try to take part though, even though my workload is theoretically more than last year.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
May be good excuse to put my **** together and finish my work I started this month.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I'm gonna write a book about a scientist and a rescue attempt and a betrayal and there are dragons. (I will probably not write this book.)
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
You know I have always wanted to take part in this, but November is rather consistently one of my most busy months of the year and this time looks no different. But good luck to you lot who are participating.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Damn, I just realized something. I'll be hopped up on painkillers for a good bit of November.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I don't have the self-discipline for this. But if I did, I think it'd be interesting if, after I was done, to put it aside for a year and then look it over to see how awful it would be.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I have some ideas. One was a world in which humans primary export in the Interstellar market is mercenary groups. Other races consider themselves too 'civilized' to fight directly, so hiring muscle, us, is what they do instead.
The story follows one such group.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ravens_cry
I have some ideas. One was a world in which humans primary export in the Interstellar market is mercenary groups. Other races consider themselves too 'civilized' to fight directly, so hiring muscle, us, is what they do instead.
The story follows one such group.
Kinda reminds me of the Classical Greeks, where Sparta and other cities would rent out their heavy infantry so they could afford lighter troops (which they couldn't train at home due to their culture).
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Re: No plot, No problem- the NaNoWriMo thread 2012
Wasn't too sure whether I would, but I'll likely give it a go then end up failing as I normally do. I have an idea for a setting to tell stories in, and will probably try lots of short stories in one setting rather than a 50,000 word story straight off. Might be better for my attention span.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I feel like talking about my idea.
The world is an animistic one where all magic is done by invoking contracts with relevant spirits. Like say invoking a contract with a spirit of fire or heat to create a fireball, or a spirit of health or water to purify water. The exact nature of the spirit and the contract will of course have huge effects on the magic.
The story revolves around a group of refugees founding a settlement in a wild untamed land. They must deal with the local spirits forging permanent contracts that the settlement will need to survive: Protection from supernatural threats, clean water, protection from disease, abundant harvests, and similar things.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Browsing through my random ideas I came up with an interesting one. Essentially mass teleportation becomes easy, quick, and cheap so the world slowly evolves to be incredibly lazy, with no one ever having to do anything. Then one day it stops working, people have to do everything themselves. I'm not sure what I'd write about there, but there are a few interesting concepts.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I will be doing it this month. I'm pretty excited.
My story will be centred around a girl who can't die (super healing factor or something), and is targeted by the criminal organization in the city. The crime boss wants to live forever and wants to figure out why she can't die and how to replicate it. So she teams up with a group of friends who are petty criminals, and they end up using her unique skill to make a lot of money and buy themselves a way out. The leader of the group's father was in with the mob but was suddenly killed, and he's trying to find out why. On top of all this, there is a detective trying to piece together just how this girl is connected to this city wide criminal empire and how to bring them down.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
The Extinguisher
I will be doing it this month. I'm pretty excited.
My story will be centred around a girl who can't die (super healing factor or something), and is targeted by the criminal organization in the city. The crime boss wants to live forever and wants to figure out why she can't die and how to replicate it. So she teams up with a group of friends who are petty criminals, and they end up using her unique skill to make a lot of money and buy themselves a way out. The leader of the group's father was in with the mob but was suddenly killed, and he's trying to find out why. On top of all this, there is a detective trying to piece together just how this girl is connected to this city wide criminal empire and how to bring them down.
Neat! That's a pretty awesome concept.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I always feel weird talking about my novel ideas because everyone here has such high concept ones and I generally don't. My novel last year was about some students at a boarding school in rural Pennsylvania and my most developed idea this year is about a college student who studies abroad in Spain and tried to figure out what to do with his life (so original).
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raistlin1040
I always feel weird talking about my novel ideas because everyone here has such high concept ones and I generally don't. My novel last year was about some students at a boarding school in rural Pennsylvania and my most developed idea this year is about a college student who studies abroad in Spain and tried to figure out what to do with his life (so original).
I'm interested in how this turns into a novel actually. I guess I just have trouble righting a lot about a little, in that all my stories have a relatively small word count, and something like this with no real plot I just couldn't do. I mean I enjoy reading these kinds of things, but just have no idea how to write them.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raistlin1040
I always feel weird talking about my novel ideas because everyone here has such high concept ones and I generally don't. My novel last year was about some students at a boarding school in rural Pennsylvania and my most developed idea this year is about a college student who studies abroad in Spain and tried to figure out what to do with his life (so original).
Honestly, I almost admire you a bit for that. I write my stories like D&D games. A bit like Play-by-Post, where I try to run the characters while also DMing. So, I can't really do aynthing other than small-scale fantasy.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tvtyrant
Kinda reminds me of the Classical Greeks, where Sparta and other cities would rent out their heavy infantry so they could afford lighter troops (which they couldn't train at home due to their culture).
It's also like how the many of the Italian city states of the Late Middle ages and Renaissance would hire foreign mercenaries to do their fighting for them, if I remember correctly.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ravens_cry
It's also like how the many of the Italian city states of the Late Middle ages and Renaissance would hire foreign mercenaries to do their fighting for them, if I remember correctly.
yah..the Swiss were particularily sought after..also, it wasn't an uncommon career path of choice for lesser italian nobility.
that's how the Swiss Guard in the Vatican kind of came to be.
also, Eddings has used this idea profusedly in his books.. with a couple of populations/tribes being noted for making a living through fighting for otherrs.
anyhoo..last year, at my first attempt, I was way ahead..with over 30k words after around 10 days..
then work caught up with me and I had to stop altogether.
I think this year I might try it again and just continue where I left off last time.
a fantasy plot..
something low-magic, around a couple of artifacts.. with as a development the rediscovery of higher magic.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Goodness, I wish I had the self-discipline for this. Last time I tried writing, I gave up around the 7,000 word mark. I also have the same PbP-style problem as Eldan. Nonetheless, I'm trying anyway.
My current concept is one in which a group of people wake up in this mysterious area filled with deadly monsters and hazards. They find various weapons and hone the strange powers they have been somehow granted in order to defend themselves. They eventually find out that the only way to escape is to find the powerful artifacts guarded by the aforementioned monsters and hazards. The only catch is that there are only five artifacts, which means only five of them can escape. The narrative will examine not only the characters' struggles against the challenges they face to get the artifacts, but also the alliances, betrayals, and rivalries that are created amongst themselves.
Although the concept is pretty much finished, I'm still trying to think of specific characters and monsters, as well as a good magic system.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raistlin1040
I always feel weird talking about my novel ideas because everyone here has such high concept ones and I generally don't. My novel last year was about some students at a boarding school in rural Pennsylvania and my most developed idea this year is about a college student who studies abroad in Spain and tried to figure out what to do with his life (so original).
The Catcher in the Rye was about a boarding school student fooling around in NYC. The Great Gatbsy was about rich people partying on Long Island. The Sun Also Rises was about American and British ex-pats drinking in France and Spain (primarily Spain). Yours are actually the "normal" literary concepts that are seen in "mainstream" literature.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
The first time I tried this was 2010. I wrote one sentence, re-wrote it six or seven times, then gave up.
If I manage to think of a cool idea and have a few things sketched out in time, I might give this a shot this time around.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Contrary to all of you, I don`t plan to work on a 50,000 word novel, but I might not be able to resist the temptation to try (and I would most likely fail).
My plan is to focus on short stories - finishing unfinished stories and starting unused ideas. I think it would be much easier to reach the 50,000 word mark that way, but that`s not the point - I want an excuse (I`ll keep track anyways).
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Sanguine
The world is an animistic one where all magic is done by invoking contracts with relevant spirits.
I thought on a similiar idea for a world I plan to sometime use for some RPG system. Humans can cast very specialized magic after much effort and training, but to cast spells of many types you have to somehow convince a magical being to give you the initial power. You can train your powers normally after that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Dumbledore lives
I guess I just have trouble righting a lot about a little, in that all my stories have a relatively small word count
I actully think it`s a good thing. I take a minimilist approach to writing, I don`t like when plots and descriptions stretch, but I do tend to take it too far (which makes this challange even harder for me).
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
lesser_minion
The first time I tried this was 2010. I wrote one sentence, re-wrote it six or seven times, then gave up.
If I manage to think of a cool idea and have a few things sketched out in time, I might give this a shot this time around.
Go on, do it:smallamused: I think Castaras is considering it, and I'm doing it for definite, so there's always the possibility of a UKitP End-of-NaNoWriMo party on November 30th:smallwink:
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mercenary Pen
Go on, do it:smallamused: I think Castaras is considering it, and I'm doing it for definite, so there's always the possibility of a UKitP End-of-NaNoWriMo party on November 30th:smallwink:
Surely a UKitP end-of-nano party should be planned in the UKitP thread?
In any event, maybe. I can't write much if I don't have the faintest clue what I want to write.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
akma
My plan is to focus on short stories - finishing unfinished stories and starting unused ideas. I think it would be much easier to reach the 50,000 word mark that way, but that`s not the point - I want an excuse (I`ll keep track anyways).
Is that allowed? In that case, I might go for short stories as well.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
*revs engines*
Here goes nothing. My hour-long bus commute shall not go to waste.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Eldan
Is that allowed? In that case, I might go for short stories as well.
Technically it is probably against the rules, but I think the spirit of thing is to intensively write fiction for a month. Being ineligible for the minor prize they give out isn't really a big deal.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Technically you can be eligible for their minor prize by copying wikipedia articles until you get your word count and then replacing all the letters with Q. Which is kind of missing the spirit of the thing. You can enter your short stories as long as added together they reach 50,000 words.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
snoopy13a
The Catcher in the Rye was about a boarding school student fooling around in NYC. The Great Gatbsy was about rich people partying on Long Island. The Sun Also Rises was about American and British ex-pats drinking in France and Spain (primarily Spain). Yours are actually the "normal" literary concepts that are seen in "mainstream" literature.
Well, right, but it seems that trying to write those kinds of books is seen as pretentious, and it feels weird talking about those kinds of ideas when everyone else is writing about very imaginative science-fiction or fantasy type stories and I generally aim for very small, character-based stuff.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raistlin1040
Well, right, but it seems that trying to write those kinds of books is seen as pretentious, and it feels weird talking about those kinds of ideas when everyone else is writing about very imaginative science-fiction or fantasy type stories and I generally aim for very small, character-based stuff.
It might be because a good portion of those books are semi-autobiographical. Many young people, for example, have had the thought of writing a novel about their college years cross their minds. I know I did--until I realized that my college exploits might not be that interesting, and I probably can't write a novel :smalltongue: . However, if you are a budding Fitzgerald (This Side of Paradise), you can pull it off.
Still, most of the great novels are based off of ordinary people and are character-driven. That's because the authors are writing about what they understand. S.E. Hilton, for example, didn't know anything about Elves or Spaceships, but she did understand classist bullying in her high school, so The Outsiders was born. Anyway, the last thing the world needs is another fantasy or sci-fi novel :smallbiggrin:
So write about what you understand.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mauve Shirt
Technically you can be eligible for their minor prize by copying wikipedia articles until you get your word count and then replacing all the letters with Q. Which is kind of missing the spirit of the thing. You can enter your short stories as long as added together they reach 50,000 words.
We don't want that kind of post-modernism here!
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Hmmmm. On the one hand, first semester of college. Crazy.
On the other hand, I already have a story flailing about and wanting out.
On the third hand, I'm on a slumph where I can't seem to write profusely.
On the fourth hand, holding myself up to a stringent standard might help with that.
On the fifth hand, again, college. Crazy. Time management is still fuzzy.
On the sixth hand. NaNoWriMo. I did it twice and both times won, I can do it again.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raz_Fox
Hmmmm. On the one hand, first semester of college. Crazy.
On the other hand, I already have a story flailing about and wanting out.
On the third hand, I'm on a slumph where I can't seem to write profusely.
On the fourth hand, holding myself up to a stringent standard might help with that.
On the fifth hand, again, college. Crazy. Time management is still fuzzy.
On the sixth hand. NaNoWriMo. I did it twice and both times won, I can do it again.
As I recall it, freshman year of college isn't that bad. Cut loose, have fun while you still can and aren't working full-time. Do it while you can still pull all-nighters. :smallwink:
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Another idea I had was a mystery novel set aboard The USTPS*: Persephone, a former cargo cruiser turned into a parole ship for rehabilitating criminals. Travel between stars can take weeks or even months and communications with a ship in FTL is impossible, so once they set out they are on their own.
*United Solar Territories Parole Ship.
Characters include a robotic chef who killed their former owner in self defence after the owner tried to kill them the day robots received equal rights with organics.
A former scam artist who finds himself in the position of acting security chief after his superior and parole officer is murdered.
An overly officials executive officer whose past holds certain secrets that could p rove vital to the case.
A Cyclopean pseudo avian who seems to fear everything.
And ,well ,I'll have to find my notes, but that's what I got so far.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raz_Fox
Hmmmm. On the one hand, first semester of college. Crazy.
On the other hand, I already have a story flailing about and wanting out.
On the third hand, I'm on a slumph where I can't seem to write profusely.
On the fourth hand, holding myself up to a stringent standard might help with that.
On the fifth hand, again, college. Crazy. Time management is still fuzzy.
On the sixth hand. NaNoWriMo. I did it twice and both times won, I can do it again.
what manner of creature are you?..and do you have a hand free for food and beverages?
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Eldan
We don't want that kind of post-modernism here!
Well it's not really post-modernism. They want you to obfuscate your text when you submit it to the website. Plagiarism and all that.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
NaNoWriMo are one of those things that I absolutely love to bits and desperately want to participate it, but I just don't manage. I guess that's what t's good for; getting over that grind that actually sitting down and writing the words present. That's the achievement here, and it's certainly something I want to achieve.
I have tried before, but I've never gotten over 5,000 words.
Now, unfortunately, in Novemer I'll be writing an essay for my literature course, and I assume that will take all the time and energy I can devote to writing already.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Weimann
NaNoWriMo are one of those things that I absolutely love to bits and desperately want to participate it, but I just don't manage. I guess that's what t's good for; getting over that grind that actually sitting down and writing the words present. That's the achievement here, and it's certainly something I want to achieve.
I have tried before, but I've never gotten over 5,000 words.
Now, unfortunately, in Novemer I'll be writing an essay for my literature course, and I assume that will take all the time and energy I can devote to writing already.
ahem.. that essay you are going to write..
it has words in it, yes?
doesn't that count?
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Well, I have been kicking around this concept of a tutor/attempted reformed white-collar criminal, the evil mastermind he essentially brought up, and how he learns to betray her. I'll give it a go, maybe. Heck, as it's NaNo, I can even continue to call him Sam Tailor without worrying.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I want to try but I doubt my ability to actually do much of anything worthwhile. I've never written much. And I don't think I can do dialogue. Or plot. The only thing that I would consider myself good at would be ideas for somewhat creative settings. Other than that I don't think that I will do very well at all.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Grytorm
I want to try but I doubt my ability to actually do much of anything worthwhile. I've never written much. And I don't think I can do dialogue. Or plot. The only thing that I would consider myself good at would be ideas for somewhat creative settings. Other than that I don't think that I will do very well at all.
My advice is to use this as a learning experience... even if you only write three thousand words, that could well be three thousand words more than if you hadn't taken part- and from my experience, doing it along with other people will spur you on to even greater efforts.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mercenary Pen
My advice is to use this as a learning experience... even if you only write three thousand words, that could well be three thousand words more than if you hadn't taken part- and from my experience, doing it along with other people will spur you on to even greater efforts.
This.
NaNoWriMo is an excuse to get yourself writing. The key to becoming a good writer is to write. If you don't write, then you can't learn to become better. Who knows? Maybe you'll find out that you enjoy writing? Or maybe you'll find out like me that every word I put down is torture and the only proper way to do NaNoWriMo is after a couple drinks so that my internal editor sits down, shuts up, and lets me write.
Also, I found out that cursing every other word leads to completely unreadable text that I wouldn't show my mother, but is an enjoyable way to reach my word count for the day.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Thank you. I tried to write a novel once before and got around 7000 words in. It wasn't very good as far as I know. At least this time I have a somewhat solid idea for what to write about. Might as well share it.
First it will be some sort of fantasy. I don't want to do a lot of research. The basic plot will be an innkeeper deciding to go kill a tyrant because he thinks himself to be a good person and good people don't watch others suffer. Other than that I don't know a lot of what will happen.
Also any advice for creating names?
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Grytorm
Thank you. I tried to write a novel once before and got around 7000 words in. It wasn't very good as far as I know. At least this time I have a somewhat solid idea for what to write about. Might as well share it.
First it will be some sort of fantasy. I don't want to do a lot of research. The basic plot will be an innkeeper deciding to go kill a tyrant because he thinks himself to be a good person and good people don't watch others suffer. Other than that I don't know a lot of what will happen.
Also any advice for creating names?
Make them up. Put syllables together until it sounds like something that someone might say. Pick a letter, think of names starting with it, then twist a syllable or two, or don't. Names are easy and don't matter, you can always find and replace if you find one you like better.
One other thing, a good fantasy novel will require a ton of research. Heck any novel requires a ton of research, though for NaNoWriMo it is less required, though nice. If you worry at all about getting anything accurate you'll want to look it up, even a cursory glance at the Wikipedia page. This leads to more delving, more googling, and eventually you spent an entire day finding out about chickens. Not a random example, I did it once. I mean the story was about chickens but the point stands, research is key and almost impossible to avoid, though you will make mistakes.
I figure any writing is good writing though, so don't give up just because it seems like a lot, any amount is progress. Personally I'm awful at writing anything more than maybe 10 pages, and even that is a stretch, I do best with collections of inter-related stories, but I'll try something different, try to write one story just to see if I can.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
I will be taking part. My story takes place in an alternate world where Greece lost the second Greco-Persian War, Africa is a bunch of tiny islands, and the Aztecs live in the Arabian Desert.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Grytorm
I want to try but I doubt my ability to actually do much of anything worthwhile. I've never written much. And I don't think I can do dialogue. Or plot. The only thing that I would consider myself good at would be ideas for somewhat creative settings. Other than that I don't think that I will do very well at all.
NANOWRIMO doesn't leave you in the lurch just like that
there are forums dedicated to whatever genre you decide to write in, and dedicated to asking for help when you get stuck..with people sharing and exchanging ideas and ways out.
also, you can join a smaller group on a chat..and have timed challenges... basically you agree with others to write whatever comes to your mind within a set timeframe..can be anything from 5 minutes to an hour or so..and then compare how many words you and the others have written..it's a great challenge and spurs on your "speed-writing".. making it easy to overcome hurdles and such.. and it doesn't matter at all if what you write in those minutes makes sense or is correctly phrased.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dehro
NANOWRIMO doesn't leave you in the lurch just like that
there are forums dedicated to whatever genre you decide to write in, and dedicated to asking for help when you get stuck..with people sharing and exchanging ideas and ways out.
also, you can join a smaller group on a chat..and have timed challenges... basically you agree with others to write whatever comes to your mind within a set timeframe..can be anything from 5 minutes to an hour or so..and then compare how many words you and the others have written..it's a great challenge and spurs on your "speed-writing".. making it easy to overcome hurdles and such.. and it doesn't matter at all if what you write in those minutes makes sense or is correctly phrased.
Exactly. The problems you're facing are exactly the problems NaNo is designed to overcome: you're afraid that anything you write will be crap, so you never write anything.
NaNo's solution to that is to not worry about the quality of what you're writing. You're pounding out 50,000 words in a single month, everyone's novel is probably going to be crap. But don't think of it as having written something bad, think of it as having taken the first step towards writing something good. Once you have a first draft, you can go back and revise and edit. The second draft will come much easier than the first, because you can watch your masterpiece improve with every change you make.
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Re: National Novel Writing Month
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dehro
ahem.. that essay you are going to write..
it has words in it, yes?
doesn't that count?
I was under the impression that NaNoWriMo had to be fiction?