I currently exist in two distinct hells: Rewrite Hell, and End-of-Term-Grading Hell. So I thought I would repost something I wrote back in 2013 under the title: Writing Efficiency in its Myriad Forms. As a rumination on efficient writing it has aged surprisingly well. As a snapshot of life at Casa Thornton it is definitely a fly flash-frozen in amber. (occasional parenthetical updates in italics are additions/emendations intended for this repost, btw.) I hope you get something out of it either way. See you in two weeks! - B.T.
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In his excellent piece This Year You Write Your Novel, Walter Moseley gives the following advice: “The first thing you have to know about writing is that it is something you must do every day–every morning or every night, whatever time it is that you have. Ideally, the time you decide on is also the time when you do your best work.”
In his defense, Walter apparently has the luxury to plan out his schedule to quite a specific degree.
Along with “Write every day,” “Write fast” seems to be the mantra of this generation. “Writing fast and producing copious amounts of word product is the key to success,” so many “how to” books seem to say.
Bosh.
I’ll tell ya, I have had my share of 2,000 word-count days. Not a one of them came independent of either a hell of a lot of time spent thinking about what I wanted to write that day, or by dint of a whole lot of later tweaking, editing, or outright re-writing.
Put simply, I can write fast, or I can write well. I cannot do both.
This is not to say that such a thing isn’t possible. It is! Just not for me.
I once wrote a pair of 40,000 word books (80,000 words total) in eight weeks. Tight deadline. Unreasonable (and unprofessional, and unhelpful) development editor didn’t make it any easier.
I was an unmarried, kidless apartment dweller at the time. I had (and still have) a day gig that required a fair amount of headspace. So it was work, home to write, bed, rinse and repeat.Talk about a miserable couple of months!
Astonishingly these two books are still in print.
We spent longer on reworking what I’d written into something passable than it took to write the initial drafts, or, for that matter, for me to have written them well in the first place. But that was a different time in my career, and in my life.
If I were to find myself in that sort of situation today, I’d have to give back the advance. Seriously. I’ve got a marriage and a house and a wonderful one (now twelve!) year-old son, all of whom require my time and attention.
More to the point, they command my time and attention. I enjoy the hell out of being married, being a father, and owning a home. I suspect the fact that I was in my mid-forties by the time I experienced any of these pleasures does nothing to lessen them.
Couple these aspects of my daily life with the fact that my day gig still requires a lot of my energy and attention, and I find myself left with the question, “How do I get anything written at all, let alone sold?”
The answer is that for I published my most recent book in 2011. That was also the year in which I collected and edited an anthology of crime fiction called West Coast Crime Wave. I got married and bought my house in 2010. My son was born in 2012.
(I've published a lot of stuff since then, glad to say!)
So there was some adjustment involved in taking on these new responsibilities, adjustment time during which my publishing slowed to a stand-still.
This is not to say that I stopped writing during this time. Far from it. I figure that during the second half of 2011 and all of 2012, I easily wrote 50,000 words on my work-in-progress historical mystery.
I just won’t be publishing any of those words. They were intended to keep my hand in it, if you will, not to be part of the final equation.
And it worked.
You heard it here first: I’m just wrapping the sale of my first short story in years. I’m also nearly 2/3 of the way through the final draft of my current WIP, a historical thriller set in antebellum Washington, D.C. By this time next year, I’ll have this and another novel wrapped, in addition to writing three more new short stories, and publishing them along with some of my previously published canon in a collection.
And I won’t do it by “writing every day” or “writing fast.” With my schedule that’s just not feasible. So I do the next best thing.
I write when I can where I can as much as I can and as often as I can. Sometimes it’s 2,000 words a day. Sometimes it’s 2,000 words a week.
(And some days it's a few hundred words on my phone!)
It takes a while longer to get my head back into the story once I’ve been away from it for a while, but I think that’s a small price to pay for making time to play with my son every day, spend quality time with my wife, and keep the house from falling down around our ears.
For example, I wrote the ending to “Paper Son,” my short story featured in Akashic Books’ Seattle Noir anthology, while sitting in Seattle Mystery Bookshop, waiting for my friend Simon Wood to finish up a signing there. What’s more, I wrote it on my Blackberry smartphone and emailed it to myself.
I’ve also been known to record story ideas while driving. My commute contributes to some terrific “alone and pondering” time.
Plus, I don’t tend to let story ideas fall by the wayside. This is especially true of short stories. I will get an idea, do some research (remember, I write historical mystery/crime fiction, after all), then begin working on it.
This has so far stood me in good stead. So far I’ve published five short stories (soon to be six), all with paying venues, out of a total of seven shorts actually completed.
In fact, the second story I sold to Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, “Suicide Blonde,” was initially rejected. I reworked it, submitted it to the annual MWA anthology contest. They also rejected it.
But I believed in the story enough to resubmit it to Linda Landrigan AHMM, and this time she bought it. What a great feeling!
By the way, I almost never finish a short by working on it straight through. Usually the ones I’ve published have come from months or years of on and off development. Take the story I am about to sell. I first began work on it in 2007.
I guess in the end I don’t really disagree with Mr. Mosley’s excellent advice, at least in spirit. After all, while I can’t really generate new fiction every single day, I definitely do write every day (in various forms), and I believe I’m in complete agreement with the spirit of his advice, which seems to emphasize the importance of establishing a routine in order to help make you more efficient as a writer.
In that regard, I’m doing the best I can. And life is good!
(And it's even better now!)
Excellent piece, Brian.
ReplyDeleteWriting is a personal and intimate act, so no two people do it the same way. I used to write every day, with a goal of 2000 words, but gave that up years ago. Then I wrote a scene a day so I didn't lose the rhythm overnight. I used to outline novels, but not short stories.
Now, I focus on short stories and jot down an idea when I get it, and let it develop for a few days. Then I write a few horrifying paragraphs that will probably be deleted later. I write, stop and revise, then go on from there the next day. It's very different from the way I wrote even five or six years ago, but now it works for me.
I've been doing lots of editing and formatting over the last few months, and it interferes with my "getting ideas," the right-brain side of the process. Now that I've finished a project, I hope to get back to creating new stories again. It's more fun.
That said, I currently have 15 different stories under submission at one market or another. Some are old stories I tweaked to send out again, and several are only a few months old, but now I write when I get an idea and read when I don't.
If you're getting stuff down, you're doing it right. Even if nobody else does it that way.
I write when I can - which lately has dwindled somewhat as far as time devoted to it because of other priorities. (People get a lot of health issues as they age...) But I still get stories done, just not as many. I think we've all got to quit thinking of the perfect formula to write a story or a novel, because let's face facts, that would end up being sooooo boring! And we'd do something else!
ReplyDeleteI did the NaNoWriMo, which worked better than expected. I have a seriously competitive bent, even against myself. I tried it again a couple of years later. That second try… meh.
ReplyDelete