Archive for the ‘Writing’ Category

Writing Tips From Naomi Novik


06 Nov

One of the things I love about the crew over at NaNoWriMo is the amount of support they give the participants in the month of crazyness.  They send out regular pep talks and tips & tricks.  Since there is no subscription cost for this amazing benefit I don’t mind sharing them with you.

The latest is from Naomi Novik, and it rocks.

Dear NaNoWriMo Writer,

The single most important technique for making progress is to write ten words. Doesn’t matter if you’re badly stuck, or your day is completely jam-packed, or you’re away from your computer—carry a small paper notebook  and write a sentence of description while you’re waiting on line at a coffee shop. I think of this as baiting a hook. Even if you have a few days in a row where nothing comes except those ten words, I find that as long as you have to think about the novel enough to write ten words, the chances are that more will come.

The rest of this advice comes out of my own bag of tricks for getting those ten words and then turning them into many. It may well be that only some of these or none at all will work for you; they may not fit into your life or your own mindset. But if these don’t, try and come up with others that do work for you.

Remove distractions. The internet is a phenomenal research and communit y tool without which you might never have started the novel you’re working on right now. It is an equally phenomenal tool for procrastination and wasting time. Unplug your connection. While you’re at it, put down that book, turn off the TV, shut down the Wii. Make scrambled eggs and salad for dinner. The dishes can wait to be washed. Ideally, get out of your house filled with your stuff that you like and go somewhere where you have nothing better to do than write.

I like writing longhand a lot for clearing jams and rapidly generating new scenes. I don’t generally try and write complete scenes when I am writing longhand, I do more of a pencil-sketch version of a scene, all rough and scribbled, drifting in and out of outline form, full of shorthand and initials and incomplete sentences. This is also a easy way to get some polish in without losing speed—when you transfer the longhand to your computer, you’ll almost without thinking improve the sentences. And it’s fun having a physical artifact to commemorate the work—get one of those nice journals from your local bookstore, and if you are the kind of person who hates to waste money, spend enough on the journal that you will then feel bad if you don’t finish the novel.

If characters aren’t coming clear, play casting director. Instead of trying to invent a character from scratch, mentally cast someone in the role and try to imagine how they would do it—their physical mannerisms, their vocal tics, the way they hold themselves. The nice thing is, as the casting director of a novel, you are free to cast actors who are booked elsewhere, too young or too old for the role, not actually actors (your next-door neighbor will never know), dead, or fictional (a writer of my acquaintance once cast Madame Bovary as a character in his modern-day novel).

If you’re finding a scene boring to write, cut it and skip to the good part. Set something on fire. Have zombies a ttack. Note that boring is not the same as hard. Really great scenes can be very hard to write and take a long time, but if you’re sitting there going “god, when will this be over,” make it be over. You indeed have that power. It’s your novel.

Have fun with it.

Naomi Novik

The thing about  “ten words a day” is utterly true.  The hardest part in writing, for me, is starting a writing session.  The rest is much easier.  Keeping to a goal of just writing a sentence, or two every day does not sound like much, but that simple practice almost inevitably leads me into a full session.  And, if I can write at least ten words, every day, then I can go to sleep at night knowing that for that day I was actually working toward my dream of being a professional fiction writer.  Simple steps are best, and this little gem takes the cake.

Google Homepages Make Me Happy


23 Oct

NaNoWriMo is just barely around the corner! In just eight small days I will plunge myself back into the highly-kinetic, hyper-active, low-sleep-quotient world of finishing a 50,000+ word first draft of a complete novel. Pray for me!

This will be my third year, and the routine is becoming quite comforting. Mid-September I realized how near November was getting and put in my email address on the NaNo site for a reminder when this years registration was open. Early October I registered for this special form of insanity I so love. I had no idea what I was going to write this year. A week later a seed of an idea got randomly planted. A week after that my idea was losing steam to the raucous pleading of four other ideas I have had percolating in my writer’s notebook (Moleskine, of course!), along with a new comer that refused to sit still. I began to doubt my own sanity, and the very meaning of life. Then, after a gentle prod from my beloved Wife, the original idea sprang back into place complete with outset, outline frame and end point. Whew! I know what I am going to be writing this year. And, one of the fun bits is that scenario has been more, or less, the same for the last two efforts.

In 2005 I crossed the finish line with just over 50k on paper. In 2006 my count was just past 57k. I hope to continue the trend this year and get over 60k. Wish me luck.

One of the things I am discovering about my own writing method is that all I really need to get rolling is a character I find engaging, a vague sketch of an initial situation, and an end scene. The middle bits seem to work themselves out just fine. No matter how many interesting scenes, and pieces of character development I note down in what I call an outline (and most people would call an ungodly messy pile of half articulated scribbles), I get nowhere without an end to write towards. The end might be different once I get there, but I still need a target, no matter how much it moves. That’s what works for me, anyways.

Okay, back to the original point. Google Homepage. Of all the things that Google has produced over the years, their personalized homepages are my favorite, with a close second of Gmail. I have a number of tabs on mine, and on is (you guessed it) dedicated to my NaNo effort.  Google Homepages allow you to customize the content with widgets designed inhouse, or through there API engine.  I have widgets for research bookmarks, writing prompt, notes, a RSS feed of official NaNoWriMo announcements and a NaNo word count progress meter.  The notebook is especially useful as I can jot down items as I peruse the research links and read my source books.  Other tabs of my Homepage have been customized with my blog feeds, website projects, financial information, news, general writing, and my ever important online comics.  Since a good deal of my life is spent working (and playing) with online content, I have found this resource invaluable.  Now, if only there was a way to back it all up.  ;-)

Death to the Modern Work Week!


14 May

Leo, of ZenHabits, knocks one out of the park again with his latest contribution at LifeHack.org. Minimize Work: Cut Your Work Week in Half in 6 Steps. Thanks Leo! His six step process is well thought out, complete, difficult, and I believe well worth an attempt (to one degree or another.) In a nut shell -

1. Become super valuable. If you’re not already one of the top performers in your company, or an expert or extremely knowledgeable in a valuable area, this will be your first priority. You must become extremely valuable.

  • My first thought is that this is easier in highly technical fields, Database Administration, Network Infrastructure Management, Website Maintenance. But, really, all this means is that you have developed a skill that others value, to a high level.

2. Work for yourself. Once you’re super valuable, you’ve got what it takes to quit your job. Why give all this value to a company when you could be giving it to yourself? Cut out the middleman and hire out your services directly.

  • Leo, also gives an interim step, which is to build a side business. That’s my particular take, having made myself more valuable at work lately, I have less worry time after work and can devote more time to the things that matter to me; writing (with a subset of blogging), Aikido and spiritual study. The first two lead to income, the third is just a good idea.

3. Raise your rates. In order to support your lifestyle on half your work week, you’ll need to make the same (or more) money while working fewer hours.

  • Your increased rates should map to the increased value of step 1.

4. Know your biggest ROI tasks. Which are the tasks that will really make you money, that will make a name for you, that will give you the most bang for your buck?

  • This is part of the 80/20 rule now popular in self-organization.  In this particular usage – 80% of your profits come from 20% of your tasks.

5. Set your hours. OK, you’ve done a lot of work to get to this step, but you’re now at that beautiful stage where you can control your work week.

  • Whee! This is part of the true failing of the modern work paradigm. It is simply a fact that different people have different bio-rhythms and are more productive at different times.

6. Focus. OK, you’ve set your dream work week, and you know what tasks you should be doing during those hours (your MITs), and you’ve set a pay rate that’s high enough to support you financially. Now you just need to do the MITs within the hours you set.

  • If you want to get all your money making done in half the time there is no way around this step.

One thing to keep in mind about the above plan is this – Do you really want the type of work life it entails.  You may not.  I, myself, would love this kind of life.  But, whether such a plan is for you or not, Leo has done a grand job of laying out a very clear way to get there.

Top 5 – Group Writing Project Day 4


11 May

Here it is folks. The last batch of entries in Darren Rowse’s Top 5 – Group Writing Project. Today’s bunch of articles is the end of the contest, and tomorrow Darren will announce the winner. It’s been an amazingly productive project, and I am very glad to have been a part of it. Woot!

(more…)

Some Pyramid Schemes are Nice


10 May

I am a total newbie in the game of blogging for profit. This will be my 90th post on this blog, and this blog is the 4th one I have started, but the second with any advertisements, or web 2.0 social linking aspects. But, I am terribly excited by the process and have had a wide-smiling time learning the ropes. Take what follows with the above in mind.

Blogging for profit is a Pyramid Scheme. (Well, blogging for profit doesn’t fit the definition exactly, but it’s got several important similarites.) But, is is one with a kind heart, mostly. My own process for entering the world of blogging for profit went something like this: Participating in the 2005 NaNoWriMo blew past some of my major blocks between me and my child-hood dream of making a living as a writer. Then, on a random spin one day I came across a post on Steve Pavlina’s site – How to Make Money From Your Blog. That article gave me the courage to decide to make real, sustained effort toward leveraging a blog for supplemental income. Dreams of avarice were tempered by Steve’s advice, and the advice of Darren Rowse over at ProBlogger.net. Darren’s encyclopedic archive on what is reasonable to expect from blogging for profit, and how to get the most out of it gave me more fuel for the push and helped keep my expectations sane (my dreams are another story.) Soon after I encountered LifeHack.org, which turned out to be an amazing resource for general tools and tips and is often a source of article inspiration. Then I came upon Leo over at ZenHabits.net and got further fuel for my fire.

As I stepped into the blogogsphere I used posts from the above sources as starting points fro some of my own posts, and of course did my share of being a considerate member of the community by spreading the link love, linking back to source posts and quotes and adding folks to my blogroll. (The above paragraph being an obvious example). What that means is that any traffic I get will lead to traffic back up the chain. Site traffic is one of the major foundations of ever making a profit from blogging and hence: Pyramid Scheme. (Oh, and by the way, this post itself was most directly fueled by a cool blogger I recently found, Paula Neal Mooney and her excellent post A Make-Money Web Site…Turn Your Blog Into One That Pays.)

The most current example I have goes back to ProBlogger.net. Darren runs content building contests sometimes. His most recent is the Top 5 – Group Writing Project. The basic thrust is write a “Top 5″ post on your blog, whatever that means to you, send the link to him and he posts all the links he gets everyday. At the end of the week one random entrant gets $1001 from one of his sponsors, Chikita. The result? Lots of extra traffic. Darren gets a significant flow to his site, and each day folks read his stuff and click through. I put my own post into the mix yesterday and the result is that today is already my 3rd highest traffic day ever, and the day is barely half over.

In keeping with the ethic of link-love several bloggers have reposted Darren’s list and the result is that I have numerous trackbacks feeding back into my site. Joy! I would be remiss in my duty as a good little blogger if I did not do the same.

So, here are the links this far in the super-mega-awesome Top 5 – Group Writing Project!

Travis Eneix

Dedicated to looking at the self.