Tips for Writers: Just Do It!

No, this isn't a Nike commercial. It is, however, somethingof an endorsement of NaNoWriMo (that's National Novel Writing Month, for theuninitiated). Because I am beginning a new book now, I figured I might as wellparticipate in NaNoWriMo this year. After all, the book I just finished, andthat I have high hopes for, began as a NaNoWriMo novel several years ago. Ittook awhile to turn that heap of words into something readable, but eventuallyit worked. (And the reason for it taking years is that I was working on something else in the meantime.) So I am merrily writing away again, just spewing the words, aimingnot for the normal goal of 50,000 words, but a rather ambitious 75,000. It'smostly crap, of course, but that's fine.
In fact, that's sort of the point. This is the "shitty first draft" that Anne Lamott wrote about in Bird by Bird. Without the first draft,there would be nothing to refine, to shape into a better second draft and,eventually, a good last draft. I don't always write like this. When I'm writinga short story, I generally take more care. I write almost as if the first draftis the last, although I know perfectly well that a story will go through many,many drafts. And with flash fiction I'm more careful still. I write everysentence as though I'll never change it (although I do).
With a novel, though, if I wrote each sentence that way, I'dnever finish the damn thing. If I edited as I went, I'd be paralyzed. And while I doubt this is true for every writer,allowing the words to flow freely from my brain, through my fingers, and ontothe page, helps to unleash creativity. In other words, I'm trying hard not tothink too much about what I'm writing. Not yet. I've set the stage. Let theplot take care of itself.
Is this good advice? I think it might be, if you're writinga novel. Don't worry about the writing so much. Don't think about art. Don't edit as you go. Justwrite. Get to the end. Pat yourself on the back. And then start over.
Published on November 04, 2011 04:00
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