Taking on NaNoWriMo... Again
Oct. 24th, 2020 11:56 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
After promising years ago never to do NaNoWriMo again, I’m now planning on taking part again, starting in a week’s time. (I can see you rolling your eyes in the back of the room
millionreasons.)
I have a novel I’ve been writing off and on for 10 years – a novel I started with NaNoWriMo then abandoned, only to pick it up again in 2015 when I returned to London after my year off in Brazil (when my mom first got diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.)
I ended up living in a narrowboat in 2018 as part of my research for this novel, but work on it continued to be very scattered, when I felt like it. Finally, thanks to the pandemic, I buckled down and was able to focus every morning (between 7am and 9am) on it. I now have plenty of material and a good roadmap. I’m going to use NaNoWriMo to generate a skeletal structure I can work from and finally put together a first draft.
Quite a few friends – some who are successful published authors – have offered to look at the novel and “future revise” it, i.e. look with an eye keener on what the novel promises then on where it fails. This has been hugely encouraging; it makes me feel as if I have a supportive choir willing to guide me to the story’s best possible version. It also helps that I have all the patience and time in the world, and that I’m still interested in my story.
In this photo, I’m sitting in my bed with Paçoca on my lap, reading the final chapters of Barging Round Britain, which I read as part of research.

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I have a novel I’ve been writing off and on for 10 years – a novel I started with NaNoWriMo then abandoned, only to pick it up again in 2015 when I returned to London after my year off in Brazil (when my mom first got diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.)
I ended up living in a narrowboat in 2018 as part of my research for this novel, but work on it continued to be very scattered, when I felt like it. Finally, thanks to the pandemic, I buckled down and was able to focus every morning (between 7am and 9am) on it. I now have plenty of material and a good roadmap. I’m going to use NaNoWriMo to generate a skeletal structure I can work from and finally put together a first draft.
Quite a few friends – some who are successful published authors – have offered to look at the novel and “future revise” it, i.e. look with an eye keener on what the novel promises then on where it fails. This has been hugely encouraging; it makes me feel as if I have a supportive choir willing to guide me to the story’s best possible version. It also helps that I have all the patience and time in the world, and that I’m still interested in my story.
In this photo, I’m sitting in my bed with Paçoca on my lap, reading the final chapters of Barging Round Britain, which I read as part of research.

no subject
on 2020-10-26 11:08 am (UTC)no subject
on 2020-10-26 12:08 pm (UTC)Thank you!
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on 2020-10-27 11:21 am (UTC)no subject
on 2020-10-27 11:35 am (UTC)May the heavens hear you! 🙏🏼
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on 2020-10-30 03:36 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2020-10-30 03:46 pm (UTC)Thank you my friend! Do you think further down the line you might have time to be its beta reader? I completely understand if not!
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on 2020-11-01 09:41 am (UTC)no subject
on 2020-11-01 07:18 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2020-10-30 08:18 pm (UTC)This is so exciting! Also I don’t have anything I want to write but I bought a desk to see if I could try.
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on 2020-10-30 08:40 pm (UTC)That’s awesome! Let’s add each other there - wish you the best of luck and I’m always open to pep talks if you feel you are faltering.