January 18, 2022

How NOT to Write A Novel In One Day

Daily Writing Blog, How to's and Tutorials for Writers

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On the internet, we’re all supposed to be super-success stories, our Bugatti Veyrons lined up in the 5-Star restaurants we’re taking our supermodel girlfriends to so that they can meet our billionaire friends.

Also, the internet is the place to blog about how you succeed. Never about how you fail.

So I’m breaking the mould here a little. Apologies for that.

Today I’m going to talk about how I failed to write a novel in a day.

The Plan

I don’t do so well with long term projects. One answer to this might be to work on that. That’s why this year I worked out a publishing schedule.

The second way that I’ve found to deal with the fact that I hate long term projects is to make what would be long term projects into short term projects.

I like writing fiction, but since the Kindle Unlimited 1.0 gold rush is over, short fiction isn’t all that profitable. (Well, actually it can be – but that’s another project for another day.)

Novels fall squarely into the “long term project” category. So there was nothing to scratch my fiction-writing itch.
Then I read about a pulp writer from back in the day. Said pulp writer wrote a novel in three days …just because.
If I’d have lived in the 1920’s, I would have been calling that guy up to see what the trick was. Alas, I didn’t live in the 1920’s, but there’s a lot more stuff out there to help. So, I decided that I was going to write a novel in three days.

Then I ran the figures. I worked out that if I used dictation software, spoke really quickly and used Plotto and some of my own templates, I could spend a couple of hours planning, five hours writing and the rest of the day editing.

In short, I wanted to write a novel in one day. This wasn’t an idle day dream either. I’m sitting right next to a breakdown of chapters, locations and characters. I’ve got a stopwatch to time precisely how long each chapter has taken to write so far.

But the one day novel is like the four minute mile. It’s a figure that I know is achievable, but I am nowhere near it.
The rest of this article is a catalogue of my errors.

How Not To Write A Novel : The Case Of The Untrained Dragon

The first major hurdle I’ve had with this project is the untrained Dragon. I wrote about training Dragon NaturallySpeaking earlier in the week. That’s because I was learning as I went. I thought I could talk into my dictation app and then just leave my computer to transcribe forty chapters worth. Not going to happen. I have to, with barely trained Dragon NaturallySpeaking, budget to spend as much time editing as I do writing/dictating. Not good.

How Not To Write A Novel In One Day: Not Knowing What Your Story Is About

The sound you hear is the sound of H.M.S. Obvious coming into port. Normally, when you write a piece of fiction, it ruminates in your mind. Your characters get life, plot knots sort themselves out and you gradually inhabit the world you’re writing into existence.

When you’re budgeting ten minutes a chapter, if it takes you five minutes to work out what the hell is going on, you’re already doubling the time it takes you to complete your work. You don’t have time to build a story on the fly, so you really have to realise the world and plot before you start writing. This is doubly true if you’re dictating everything.

Speaking of which…

Dictating Weird Stuff

If you’re speaking aloud your work, dictating as opposed to writing, then you’re going to come across a snag if you’re writing anything interesting. You might not think you care about transcribing a murder scene or a sex scene or a great Shakespeare-style confession of love, but it’s a whole different ball game when you have to speak it aloud. Also, clunky passages are more painful when you actually hear them.

Editing

I have a whole big topic on editing to come at some point (probably tomorrow  EDIT: It’s Up) but when you’re writing a huge amount of words really quickly, editing takes a slightly different form.

For instance, developmental editing has to occur before you start writing. Otherwise you’re not going to make that twenty-four hour deadline.
When you’re writing quickly, you need to edit in more than take stuff out.

Sequels

Don’t even think you’re going to write the script to the movie spin-off or worry about the sequel to your book. It’s irrelevant, it can wait.

Characters and World Building

One of the reasons George R.R. Martin cannot finish his series is extra-curricular world building.

When you’re reading, you want a fully fleshed out world. You need those indicators of a wider universe to feel like you’re not following the lives of cardboard characters.

The problem is that excessive world building slows you down. Readers don’t want a thousand characters across nine different continents and a fully fleshed out religion that rivals Hinduism in complexity.
They want a real-feel. That’s all.
When you’re trying to write a novel quickly, you don’t have any time to flesh out the wider world. So you have to be deliberate with what you’re putting in. You need to pick those details that make the Universe, get them in a few times so its enough to stick, and then leave it.
Think of it as façade building as opposed to world building.

Closing Thoughts

These are just a few of the pitfalls I’ve come across in the past two days. By the end of today, I’ll have written twenty-seven chapters out of a planned thirty five. That’s Day Two. So it’s an utter failure in some ways, but I’m still pushing the pace pretty massively when it’s considered correct practice in traditional publishing to release one book a year.

Like I mentioned above, the one day novel is a four minute mile. It’s achievable, and eventually I’m going to break that barrier.

Hopefully then I’ll be able to write a “how to actually write a novel in one day” article. Until then, back to the laboratory for version two of this ridiculous experiment.

P.S. I’m fully aware that this is going to be endless fun, because after I’ve completed a one day novel, I’ll proceed to try and write a one day novel that somebody will actually want to read.

P.P.S. If any of you have written a novel in one day, let me know in the comments. I’d hate to think I’m rediscovering the Americas with this project.

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