NaNoWriMo!

As many of you surely know already, November is National Novel Writing Month.  In its tenth year, NaNoWriMo continues to inspire tens of thousands of potential novelists worldwide with its message of speedy imperfection. image The goal of NaNoWriMo is to write a 50,000 word novel in a month. One month.  It breaks down to an average of 1,667 words a day, and obviously it’s absolutely insane.  But.  The point of NaNoWriMo is to get the words down, to write more than you ever thought possible, to get a solid first draft (or even a really terrible one) down on paper so you have something to work with in your second and third drafts. 

I love NaNoWriMo.  I love the convergence of so many voices telling their stories. I love the celebration of writing and creativity and caffeine-fueled enthusiastic madness. I love a massive group deadline (second only to April 15 in this country), and the chance to share your deadline-induced misery with 89,999 other people. I love posting wordcounts and feeling like someone other than my own prone-to-excuses lackadaisical conscience is holding me accountable for my productivity or lack thereof. I love reading what my friends write. In fact, I wish that ALL my friends would write at least one novel, particularly if that one novel is a thinly-disguised memoir. Even better if everyone in my family wrote a thinly-disguised memoir, and then let me read it. As long as it didn’t lead to prolonged discussions of commas, punctuated (ha!) with claims that “that’s what the nuns told me to do,” I think that reading novels written by family members would be wonderful.

Will everyone reach 50,000 words?  Of course not.  But the point is to WRITE, and even 10,000 words in a month is 10,000 more than you might have written otherwise. 

If you’re doing NaNo this year – or even if, like us, you’re doing a modified version we like to call “If I’m Writing Thousands Of Words They’d Darn Well Better Be On My Current Novel-In-Progress” (the acronym’s a little trickier) – then you’ll probably need to catch up on your wordcounts by mid-month, and we have just the thing: our November Write-a-Thon, Saturday November 22, 2008. We’ll open the Studio from 9 am to 9 pm, and provide tons of snacks, coffee, soda, tea, and good company, not to mention a fantastic writing space and free wifi, to help you write your heart out. 

posted November 04, 2008 authors, contests, events, fiction, nanowrimo, writing life   |  0 comments