How to Prepare for NANOWRIMO

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For those who are interesting in National Novel Writing Month

http://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/how-to-prepare-fo...

Direct Link to the site
http://nanowrimo.org/

-Elsbeth

Comments

NANOWRIMO

Elsbeth's picture

I'm thinking about trying. I attempted this a number of years ago but didn't finish. A friend of mine a Romance Novelist actually got her first book published after writing most of it during NANOWRIMO.

-Elsbeth

Is fearr Gaeilge briste, ná Béarla clíste.

Broken Irish is better than clever English.

I highly reccommend it.

Puddintane's picture

They also have challenges for screenplays, and a grab bag of prizes donated by various sponsors if you finish, which is a challenge, but not at all impossible, since the idea is to get words and ideas down on paper and save the editing for after the contest closes.

CreateSpace is offering five paperback copies of the finished novel (undoubtedly in hopes you'll buy more eventually), and there's a discount on several writing programmes, among which is Scrivener, which is very decent for the Mac. I enter every year, not that I ever publish what I've written, but I might this year. (I always say that...)

You have to do fifty thousand words, which is one thousand six hundred and sixty-seven words per day for thirty-one days, roughly five and a half typewritten pages a day in a normal font.

If you're a touch typist, and type thirty-five words per minute, that works out to about forty-eight minutes of straight typing each and every day of the month. Your mileage may vary, of course, but the key to success is not to get "anal" about the writing. Leave that for the rewrite and just pound on the keys. If monkeys can write all the plays of Shakespeare using this technique, almost anyone can write a novel.

There are also tricks that boost one's word count without much effort, such as spelling out each and every number under one hundred, which is a good idea in any case, and makes one's writing look more professional. I use a little tool for the Mac called Typinator with a set of macros that automatically expand arabic numbers into words, so I can type 99 and the application turns it into ninety-nine. Professionalism without tears. See my blog on numbers, if you'd like to learn more about what style books usually advise on using numbers. If you feel compelled to write "sesquipedalianism," write "likes to use big words" instead, five words for the price of one, and only a few more letters. Never back up to spell a word correctly, just plough on and let the letters fly where they may. Hide your dictionary, avoid making sure that your facts are right, and never bother about consistency. All that can be taken care of in the editorial and rewrite stage.

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Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

How to Prepare for NANOWRIMO

I have a story idea or two, but am not paying an entry fee as well as post a story,

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

NaNoWriMo Doesn't Charge a Fee!

Puddintane's picture

There is no cost whatsoever to enter, although they do mention that the activities of the organisation are supported by voluntary donations in their on-line literature.

In fact, even if one had to pay, it would be pretty much of a net wash, since the donation of five free copies of your finished novel (and you have quite a bit of time to turn your rough draft into a finished novel) is worth quite a bit more than their "suggested" levels of voluntary donations, which they freely admit will cover the costs incurred in supporting many writers.

To quote their web site:

National Novel Writing Month and Script Frenzy are both projects of the Office of Letters and Light, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization based in Oakland, California. All donations made to National Novel Writing Month and Script Frenzy---in the form of cash and in-kind donations of helicopters and lavish chocolate fountains---are tax-deductible.

Most of their support comes in the form of their volunteers, who manage fora, support groups, "meet-ups," and other activities meant to encourage one to write.

They also supply deasktop apps which help you track your progress, present you with an electronic certificate suitable for printing out and framing, if you complete the challenge, as well as icons which one can install on one's own web site, if one cares to do so, or give to a local tattooist as a model if one desires a more permanent memento... That last bit won't be free, of course.

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Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style