Having been a teacher, coach, editor—and, of course, a novelist—for the past couple of centuries, I have heard it all from wanna-be writers about how difficult it is to make themselves sit down and begin writing a book, which at the least should be 70,000 words in length. I can empathize with these folks, because that’s exactly how I started out. More on that shortly.
During the ’90s I taught a multi-week writing course at a community college. The fee being only a couple of bucks, I’d usually start out with anywhere from forty to seventy students. At first I thought, This many people are writing novels? Then, I learned that up to half of them had never put word one down on paper; they were just checking out what the process involved. For a couple dollars and a few hours, why not? So I’d start my lectures, and by the second or third week the class would be reduced by a third, a half, even more. This remained consistent through all the years that I taught at the school. Most people are just not prepared to make the commitment to write a book—and a big commitment that is.
Consider this: all of the great ideas in the world, all of the great storylines, all the desire, the ambition, and everything else won’t mean a freaking thing unless you actually sit down and start putting those words down on “paper.” This may be one of the hardest things to deal with, and not only for the wanna-be writer, but even for someone who has written for a while. (See my post on Writer’s Block.) The key word here is DISCIPLINE, and without a doubt it deserves our attention.
I related my own story in a different context once before, but it is logical to expand upon it here. I spent the first half of my life knowing that I was going to be a writer, even saying that I was a writer…and in all that time I hardly wrote a damn thing. Looking back now, I think a great deal of this had to do with FEAR. Most writers I know, me included, deal with buckets of fear—the fear of not being able to follow through and finish a full-length novel, the fear of ridicule, of rejection if and when the book does get done. It can paralyze you.
So for years I came up with every excuse I could to not start writing. “How can I write today? The goldfish died.” Or, “Can’t start tonight, there’s a great truck ’n tractor pull on the tube.” Or, “I was gonna start this weekend, but the surf’s up!” (Not valid for those living in Iowa or North Dakota.)
Yeah, there’s always a “next day” to get started. But my “next day” came for real in the late ’70s with a simple New Year’s resolution. No, it wasn’t, “This is the year I’m going to write something.” I had been there and done that, and it didn’t work. The resolution I made: “This is the year I’m going to get my first rejection slip.” That sounds negative, but consider this: in order to receive a rejection slip you must send something to somebody. And in order to do that, you first had to write it. So I wrote an awful suspense/ghost short story and sent it off to Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. Back it came with this little form rejection postcard. Success!!! That postcard still hangs over my desk.
With that barrier broken I wrote my first novel, an adventure fantasy story titled, The Master of Boranga, and I never looked back. Even with a long hiatus in my writing career for personal reasons I have written over thirty novels, with more to come.
WHAT ABOUT MAKING TIME TO WRITE?
Good question. It was easy for me back then—at least for a while—because I could do it full time. But before long I found myself racing toward the poverty line and had to get real, which meant getting a job. Still obligated to write a novel under contract with Zebra Books, I would go out to my portable office (a beat-up old Ford Pinto) in the parking lot and write during my lunch hour. Did that amount to anything? Since I kept an ongoing word count it was easy to check, and when I completed the book some months later I discovered that I had written over 30 percent of it during lunch. Does every hour matter? I think so.
I became interested back then in what kind of schedule successful authors kept, and here is some of what I learned. Stephen King wrote from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. every day of the year except Christmas, the Fourth of July, and his birthday. Judy Blume wrote for a couple of hours in the morning, the same in the afternoon, and then she read her output in the evening. Danielle Steel wrote eighteen-twenty hours a day until her book was done. (I once kept that kind of schedule.)
Through time and circumstance, their schedules might be different these days. I know that mine is. Now that I’m semi-retired and have more time, the schedule goes like this: I take a long walk in the morning and then start writing about mid-morning. Late in the afternoon, four, maybe five o’clock, the “creativity” button in the brain shuts off, and I stop. The usual output is 1,500 to 2,000 words. (You’re right: I’ve always written fast.)
But most of you don’t have all the time in the world, so why even get started, you may think. First off, having a job, a family, a life, does not deter the most dedicated writers. (See my post about passion, “Writers Are Amazing.”) I’ve worked with writers whose books have taken two years, three years, even longer to write. They never gave up, because of that passion.
Perhaps this formula will put it into perspective and get you started. At my peak I could write anywhere from 500 to 700 words an hour, and even recently, having slowed down most aspects of my life, I’m writing 400 to 500 words an hour. But let’s cut that way down for you. A standard, double-spaced manuscript page averages 250 words. ONE PAGE. If you found one hour a day to write one page, at the end of the week you’ll have written 1,750 words. In forty-two weeks, LESS THAN ONE YEAR, you will have completed the first draft of a 75,000-word manuscript.
Doable? Indeed. Just think about writing a novel in smaller increments. Happy writing!
SWORDS & SPECTERS: I mentioned my first novel, The Master of Boranga, which launched the Ro-lan adventure fantasy series. The third Ro-lan book, The Sorcerer of Mesharra, will be available for free Kindle download for two days, Friday, April 12th and Saturday, April 13th. Enjoy!
And even if you can’t get the time to write because of health problems, taking care of family members, working two jobs, whatever, keep a notebook. Don’t let those ideas escape. That notebook will be there like a faithful old friend, and it will help you kickstart your craft once more. And the simple act of jotting down your notes means you are doing what you’re supposed to be doing: writing!
I assume you speak from some personal experience, Mark! Good advice.
Saw your profile on a oneanna65 comment. Glad I popped over here to check this out. I also am semi-retired (read: the funding ran out on all the projects I was working on) and started blogging last year. Have been writing daily since 11/1/11 (nanowrimo) and average 1,000 – 2,000 words a day between it all.
I’m thinking by next year I’ll be ready for my first rejection slip.
I wish you were around here so I could take the course. I’ve never taken any kind for writing … and the local “Go 60” program is not … well … if no other real students take all the seats in the course … and if I want to arm wrestle a 70 year old on the off chance there is one seat left in the class this coming fall … I might be able to take the class.
Off to read your Writers Are Amazing post …
Holly, thanks so much for exploring my blog, and WAY TO GO on writing every day! I haven’t taught that class in quite a while now, but I do hope you find one that works for you. Hopefully that 70-year-old arm wrestler will be having a bad day. 🙂
As always, you give great , and timely, advice. For five years, you could count on the fingers of one hand the days I didn’t write. This was despite health problems, job issues, and just plain life. I was the picture of dedication and discipline.
Then, after barely putting my toes in the “publishing water”, I got a few rejections and am embarrassed to say I let that get the better of me. Since the beginning of this year, you can count on the fingers of one hand the days that I have worked on my own projects.
The “rule” that you absolutely must write every day, no excuses, reinforces its own momentum. Once you let that slip, for whatever reason, it is really hard to get it back. My two cent’s worth (from unfortunate experience) is, once you get into the groove, never let it slide. It just isn’t worth the cost of getting it back.
You nailed it, Kate. Thanks…and keep on writing! 🙂