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Why NaNoWriMo Is a No-go

NaNoWriMoI admit I’m tempted. In one week, at the stroke of midnight on November 1, writers buzzing on Halloween candy will be grabbing their computers or their pens and their wits and diving into the challenge of writing a 50,000-word novel in 30 days.

Last year, over 310,000 people took part in the National Novel Writing Month (affectionately known as NaNoWriMo). I wasn’t one of them. And I won’t be this year either.

It would be a cool thing to do. Here’s why I’d like to take part:

  1. To barrel through the first draft of my next novel and get the darn thing done.
  2. For bragging rights.
  3. To connect with others facing the same challenge, and especially forge bonds with those in the Kootenay district.

Here’s why I won’t take part:

  1. I’m not ready.

It’s as simple as that. I know the basic premise of my next novel. I know the main characters. But I don’t know them well enough. I could conceivably write a 50,000-word novel about them, but it wouldn’t be a good one. It would lack depth. It would be a mess.

I don’t like messes. I’d rather plan carefully and do minimal cleanup after (or so I fantasize) than plunge in and have to sink or swim. Each time I pick up a novel by someone else, I’m flooded with ideas: An unreliable narrator? That might work. A ghostly presence? Hmm, perhaps. Raw, honest emotion? You bet. Current events snake their way in. The weather on a particular day inspires.

I’d lose these nuances if I rushed. Or at least they’d come as afterthoughts, rather than part of the underlying structure.

If I were 100 per cent prepped, I’d grab the bull by the horns. But I’m not—and I’d rather go with the flow of my muse and my usual butt-in-chair schedule than the pressures of a random, currently inconvenient deadline.

(Besides, if I dedicated myself exclusively to my novel, how could I capture my flood of ideas for the Kootenay Literary Competition?)

Are you planning on completing NaNoWriMo? I’d love to hear how it goes!

Read previous posts.

About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.

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The Calm Before the Storm

stormyseaI’ve been thinking lately about the suspended state I’m in. I’m waiting for my agent to find a publisher for my young adult novel. I’m waiting to be accepted into a creative writing MFA. I’m anxious and checking my email and Googling my name in case some sort of result is being published online before I’m actually told about it and re-checking my email and stalking my online grad application status. None of which is making anything happen any faster.

At the same time, I’m thinking I should probably enjoy this state. I have no demands right now, other than self-imposed ones. When I wake early to write, I can pick my activity: update social media, create a new blog post, continue character sketches for my next novel, thrust a finger at my alarm and sleep an extra hour if so desired.

Once I get answers, life won’t be so simple:

Scenario 1: My agent does not find a publisher. My free-to-be-me state continues, but with an overhanging (though temporary) sense of doom and gloom and worthlessness, and a renewed drive to do even better next time.

Scenario 2: My agent finds a publisher. It’s exciting and amazing but exhausting: edits, deadlines, publicity, readings, reviews—generally a million new ways to be kept on my toes.

Scenario 3: I do not get accepted for the MFA. My free-to-be-me state continues; repeat the doom and gloom and worthlessness.

Scenario 4: I get accepted for the MFA. Yay me! But now to do the work and find the time and pay the tuition.

Of course, I desperately want scenarios 2 and 4. I don’t care about the effort they’ll entail. They’ll be more than worth it.

But what will happen will happen. Maybe for now I should enjoy this gentle, undemanding float, knowing my ship will be hitting stormy seas—for good or bad—soon enough.

What state are you in now? What are you waiting to happen?

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About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.

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The Grass Is Always Greener

MyCommute (250x250)I’m jealous. On her blog, Tanya Lloyd Kyi, an accomplished BC writer, has listed the six writer-related events she’s involved in in the next couple of weeks, all within the comfort of her own city.

In my small town, I have precisely…none.

Okay, I lie. There is one workshop I could attend, but it’s about poetry and poetry’s not my thing. Other than that, my in-person writing-related options are currently zero.

Living in a small town far from everywhere can be hard. There are a kazillion things I miss out on, from checklists of events, to the ease of shopping (especially books!), to the thrill of a subway ride.

And then there are the kazillion things I gain. An acreage instead of a zero-lot-line home. Sheep and donkeys and cows and llamas as neighbours. My children having unprecedented freedom, watched over by a town-full of people who know them. A four-minute commute to work. Bears that pick our cherries. Chores accomplished by foot in a six-block stretch of downtown.

There will always be trade-offs. And when I lived in a city, did I really take advantage of the myriad of events/workshops/readings anyways? Not at all; there simply wasn’t time, money was an object, transportation and parking was a hassle.

So now I have less to choose from—but each activity I do choose is infinitely more precious. Living in a small town suits me just fine.

What do you think are the pros and cons of city vs. small-town life?

Read more about literary events I’d love to attend.

Read previous posts.

About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.