It’s the half way point in NaNoWriMo and our Prompt-a-Day project is also half way through, hopefully inspiring you to look at your writing and characters in a new way.
Writers in the Grove now has 10 members participating. One participated last year, so this is a huge leap and we are so proud of everyone.
Because our group is so diverse in writing subject matter, age, and skills, we’ve made a few adjustments to the NaNoNoWriMo guidelines. Those that are willing to stick with the word count as a score card are continuing to do so, report in to NaNoWriMo’s check in for the region. Those who are intimidated by such accounting have committed to write for a minimum of an hour a day.
The same challenges that face the word count writers face the timed writers. What to write, how to say it, self-doubt, self-worth, and the dark cloud of wonder about how this will ever amount to something. The challenge is to let all of that go and just write. Edit on December 1, but for November, just write and see what happens.
We’ve heard from several people that their goals of plotting first went by the wayside as their characters took over. Now they are pantsing it, just writing by the seat of their characters’ pants, as one described it. “I just hang onto my keyboard and hope they take this thing somewhere.”
In the Portland region, we are getting closer and closer to 16 million words for those keeping score. That’s amazing.
To keep the momentum going, we’ve put together some guides and helpful resources and wanted to share them with you.
Novels aren’t written by muses who come down through the ceiling and shoot magic through your fingers and out onto your laptop’s keyboard. Before NaNoWriMo, some teensy part of me still believed that because writing is a creative act, it should feel easy. But fairies don’t write novels. They’re written with one simple equation:
Time + Work = Novel
Stephanie Perkins on NaNoWriMo Blog on the rewards of not giving up on your story
NaNoWriMo Survival Resources – To Get You To the Half-Way Point
The following articles and guides should help you get to the half-way point, or help you through the rest of your month long writing experiment. It is an experiment. Sometimes you know where you are going, and sometimes you have no idea, and sometimes, both are true. Edit on December 1 but keep writing through the month and see where it takes you.
Along the way, hopefully the following will help, inspire, and motivate you.
Prompts and NaNoWriMo Ass Kickers
- National Novel Writing Month – 10 Prompts to Get You Out of a NaNoWriRut
- NaNoWriMo Pep Talk from Gene Luen Yang
- Don’t Quit! 5 Ways to Recharge Your Writing
- Check Out Your Imagination… Discover Real-Life Characters
Scene Writing
- How to Make the Most of a Scene – Jami Gold, Paranormal Author
- Elements of a Scene Overview Form and Checklist – Jami Gold, Paranormal Author
- Fiction University: Rule of Three: No, the Other One
- Tameri Guide for Writers: Conflict and Suspense
- Writing The Perfect Scene: Advanced Fiction Writing Tips
- 10 Tips on Writing Strong Scenes For a Novel or Story
- How a Scene List Can Change Your Novel-Writing Life (includes screenshots of famous writers’ scene and plot outlines)
- 7 Essential Elements of Scene + Scene Structure Exercise – Jane Friedman
- How to Structure Scenes in Your Story (Complete Series) – Helping Writers Become Authors
Character Development
- National Novel Writing Month – 4 Questions to Ask About Your Supporting Characters
- 8 Ways to Write Better Characters – WritersDigest.com
- Five Traps and Tips for Character Development
- Character Writing Tips for Fiction Writers – Writing Forward
- How to Craft Compelling Characters – WritersDigest.com
- What is Character Development? – Writers’ Digest
Plotting and The Anatomy of a Story
- Writing Tools for Writers – Angela Quarles – Geek girl romance writer
- NaNo Wrap-Up: Beat Sheets 101 – Jami Gold, Paranormal Author
- Are Beat Sheets Intimidating? Cut through the Clutter – Jami Gold, Paranormal Author
- 1 – Advanced Writing – Better Storytelling Blog
- Beat Sheet Basics 101… Plus – Storyfix.com
- BubbleCow – See How Easily You Can Write A Novel Using The Snowflake Method
Dialog
- 5 Tips On Dialogue, Part One by Droemar on DeviantArt
- 5 Tips on Dialogue: Part Two by Droemar on DeviantArt
- The 7 Tools of Dialogue – WritersDigest.com
- 8 Tips for Writing Dialogue in Fiction – About.com Fiction Writing
- My Dialogue Sucks: Tips For Improving Dialogue In Your Novel – The Creative Penn
- An Editor’s Six Tips for Better Dialogue – Writing.ie
- 5 Tips on Writing Dialogue – NY Book Editors
Worldbuilding
- 5 Tips: World-Building Template by Droemar on DeviantArt
- Tips on World Building for Writers — How to Make Your Imaginary World Real – WritersDigest.com
- 7 Deadly Sins of Worldbuilding
- Fiction Writing: How to Create a Believable World for Your Characters
- 25 Things You Should Know About Worldbuilding « terribleminds: chuck wendig
- How Much of My World Do I Build? – Holly Lisle: Official Author Homepage
- An Impatient Writer’s Approach to World Building « Victoria Strauss, Author of Fiction for Adults and Young Adults
Tools, Checklists, Spreadsheets, and Forms for Writers
- Scrivener Writing Software – Mac OS X – Windows
- Worksheets for Writers – Jami Gold, Paranormal Author
- 5 Tips: Character Template by Droemar on DeviantArt
- “Book in a Month” by Victoria Lynn Schmidt
- WordCounter
- Cliché Finder
- Imagination Prompt
- Readability
- Tools andf Resources for Writers – Poets & Writers
- Writing Tools, Forms, Guidelines, and Charts – Writers Helping Writers
- The Creative Writer’s Toolkit: 6 Tools You Can’t Write Without
- Write On! The 10 Best Online Tools + Apps For Writers – Brit + Co
- 20 essential online tools for writers – Articulate
- 7 Free Tools to Become a Better Writer – The Muse
- Fifty (50!) Tools Which Can Help You in Writing
Time + work = novel… that’s an equation that doesn’t work. It’s missing what might be the key ingredient. The real equation is this: time + work + craft MIGHT EQUAL novel. Writers can labor for decades without ever seeking, or grasping, or applying the core principles of the craft of writing a good novel (they’re out there, in many forms, most of which boil down to the same basic truths and understandings), and nothing happens for them. Anyone can finish a novel. Your seven year old can “finish” a novel. It’s craft that makes the difference, it’s the key to everything, and once you have it in your head, then the “work” and the “time” elements become empowered parts of that equation. Your characters, who you might believe talk to you, will never teach you the craft. Rather, you need to bring it to them.
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Thanks for the shout outs to my posts! I hope everyone doing NaNo is doing better than I am. LOL!
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And while I agree with Larry for we’re looking to publish or share with others, having a well-crafted novel is not necessarily the goal for every NaNo’er. Many just write for fun, some use their NaNo novel as a “zero” draft, where they explore and discover an idea to develop into a first draft later, etc.
So, no, there’s no wrong way to do NaNo. 🙂
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Completely agree. As a writing group, all we can do is offer suggestions and tools like your site and Larry’s books to help our members get through the NaNo process. The final draft-to-book process is, as they say, another story.
You are both right, and I love your passion and commitment to the craft.
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