create your own

How to Write a Novel in Six Months: One Writer’s Journey

82
rate or flag this page

By Lela Davidson


Photo: nuanc,Flickr
Photo: nuanc,Flickr
 

Most of us who write on a regular basis (and many people who've never used a pencil for more than a grocery list) have the same dream: to write a novel. I'm no different. This fall I'm attempting [again] to write a novel, and this time I've enlisted my entire writing group to join me. As if that weren't enough accountability, I've decided to share the whole experience with HubPages fans, along with anyone else who's interested.

I'll be sharing the ups and downs, tricks that work for me, and resources I'll use along the way in a week-by-week format. Check back here often for new links. This is meant to be a glimpse into my process and I to help you on your own. Wish me luck that maybe come New Year's we'll have a new series called How to Publish a Novel!



My Personal History as a Novelist, or How Not to Write a Novel

I came to the writing life with a bang. One day I was watching Oprah and pouring Cheerios on a high chair tray and the next I was plotting out the next biggest thing. I exploded into writing trying every exercise, reading every book, and of course I jumped right into my first novel. One thing you have to learn if you want to reconcile your yearning to write and your sanity is that writing is a very personal and time consuming process. Not only are there no short cuts, but no one writer's process works for everyone. For me, the writing life has been full of trial and error, stops and starts, and wild fluctuations in confidence and self-esteem.

That first pass at a novel was fueled by a wonderful book called The Marshall Plan, which takes you through a very structured and analytical approach to planning out a novel. The accountant in me loved every bit of it, especially the part where I created spreadsheets to track my the detaila of my scenes. I still think Mr. Marshall has an amazing plan. The problem was I hadn't gotten my fingers limbered up enough to benefit from all the information. Novel number one was abandoned after only a few scenes.

Yes, You Need a Plot

My second foray into noveling (yes, I do make up words) was inspired by Chris Baty's November Nanowrimo and the book, No Plot, No Problem. No offense to Mr. Baty, but not having a plot is actually a very serious problem IF you want another person to read your novel. In fact, the plotless novel I wrote was not only unreadable to anyone else, but fairly painful to read back to myself. It's especially disturbing to come upon a scene starring the town football star I'd killed off a couple of chapters back. Oops.

However misguided I was during the writing of that work, I'm so thankful for it. It gave me the confidence that I could create scenes and characters, and more importantly, that I could type the number of consecutive words it takes to fill a book. That, plus I have a two-inch stack of paper on my shelf that somehow qualifies me to call myself a writer and playdates and cocktail parties. This method is amazing for freeing you up to put words on paper. I would recommend this method in a heartbeat. I just won't personally do it again.


Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

starrkissed profile image

starrkissed  says:
17 months ago

Best of luck!!

Feline Prophet profile image

Feline Prophet  says:
15 months ago

Gosh....I am impressed. I would never be able to think of a plot and characters and dialogue and all the other necessities of a readable book...it seems like an impossible task and I wish you all the best. Let me get on with reading the rest of your hubs now. :)

Myles54 profile image

Myles54  says:
2 months ago

Im so excited for you! i see all the other links are live, so i suppose you've made it! but, avoiding a ruined story, i will go week by week, and hopefully your journey will inspire me, and help me on my own! on to week 1...

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working