Journals of Journeys Journals of Spiritual, Emotional and Life-Altering Journeys

13Nov/08Off

A Day Off And Day 12

Being well ahead of the game with three more write-ins scheduled for the remainder of the week and knowing that with the kids off from school, I wouldn't get much writing done anyway, I took yesterday "off."  I even spent some time on the novel in progress that I had set aside to take part in this year's NaNoWriMo.  No, I didn't write.  The kids and I drove up into the mountains and took some snapshots of the colorful array of leaves (not as rich as I would have liked seeing that I apparently missed the window and the drought made it less than breathtaking.)  I'm hoping to use some of the snapshots for the cover of "Olly, Olly Oxen Free" the working title of the book. 

(c) 2008 All Rights Reserved My nature quest didn't stop there.  I went spelunking today.  Virtual spelunking, that is.  Apparently not all caves are alike, or so Mira Beck, the protagonist of my current NaNo novel, has learned.  And so she had to take me along to a few good sites where I could learn more about some caves.  The Oregon Caves to be specific.  It was definitely not something I could just make up, but it was well worth the trip and something I look forward to actually doing next summer when the caves open again. 

Which brings me to a point for novice NaNo'ers.  While it's helpful to know what you're talking about as you write your novel, be careful how much time you take doing such.  Get down the points that are pertinent to the story, know that you are writing fiction so you can always make up a place, thing or person and fudge a little bit.  You can flesh it out later (make it your mantra, there's always NaNoEditMo in the spring to work on editing your novel.)  It's easy to get caught up in the more finite parts of the novel so you have to be firm with yourself and set limits.  Say you have two hours to write and are getting stuck, spend 15 minutes max doing some surfing and then move on whether or not you have what you were looking for.  You simply have to keep plugging away and moving toward the goal of 50K words (you might even find that you're not finished with your novel by 50K and that's okay, too!). 

After tonight's write-in, I'm up to 28,326 transcribed words and estimate I have about 34,866 words written longhand.  Not too shabby, although I know there have been others that have already reached the goal (what a shock that was to learn!)

Write on!

Bookmark and Share

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook

About Kathie

Regular participant in National Novel Writing Month (November). Write 50,000 words in 30 days. Winner in 2003, 2005 (x's 2!), 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010. Entrant in 2004. For more about the author, visit the web page here. To return to the main page of eJourn.net, click here.
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0)

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Trackbacks are disabled.

Site Navigation

Slideshow

Posting Calendar

September 2010
S M T W T F S
« Aug    
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Comments

Bigger They Are, The More Said

2008 2009 accident all rights reserved brain injury brain trauma california Chico copyright copyright protected Family fiction fire firefighter firefighter's son funny head injury head trauma humor ICP induced coma injury Journals Kathie Kathie Leung kids NaNoWriMo Pie Dudes positive thought positive thoughts prayer prayers ry guy School Sean Short Story skateboard Summer support Thoughts trauma Video word count Writing z-dude

A NaNoWriMo

Blogroll

Book Currently Writing

Bookshelf

Buy Books

Important

Links

Wish List

Categories

Bookmark and Share

Spam Blocked

Stats



© 2000-2010 Journals of Journeys All Rights Reserved -- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright