Quality versus Quantity

Read a fascinating post by Vacuous Minx yesterday and had some time to mull it over. Just gathering my thoughts here, possibly not completely coherently or convincingly, but I'm mostly thinking out loud, with audience.



Lack of quantity does not equal skill

There's a curious argument that all quickly-written things are necessarily crap. I've seen a great many authors who can't write worth a damn and who labour over their fantasy trilogy for fifteen years. It's still crap, even with the hand-drawn cover, and even though mum said she loved it. Honest.

So, skill level. A hack can slave away for ten years to write their debut, and it's still crap.

An accomplished, skilled author can write a quick book and it's a solid-to-good book. I've seen amazingly talented people crank out a novella in a week. (Personally, if I write a novella in a week, I'm dead for the three weeks after and the Muse sits in the corner and is only good for playing Gears of War, but there are authors who can do this and you won't notice the difference).


Self-editing is even more important for fast authors

Even if some people manage to write a novella in a week (hey, I've done it), self-editing is as vital a skill as editing. In the rush of excitement, things get mixed up - it's almost impossible to stay completely internally consistent if you're doing 10k a day. Worse if you have a co-writer. Then you have two minds that can get muddled in the rush. Pacing is one of those things that are hard to keep track of - at that speed, everything is kind of a blur. There are people that just pile up words and scenes with no regards to whether the story needs it. That "flab" or "fatty tissue", as I call it, needs cutting before the book hits an unsuspecting reader in the brain. But self-editing is a skill. It's hard-won, and many authors never get there at all. Even if you're a decent self-editor, getting a good outside editor on this is extremely important (a good editor can tell you when a chapter stinks, and will).



Publishing fifty shitty stories a year is not a career plan

I could amend this into "publishing twenty mediocre stories a year is not a career plan". Editing takes time. Even brainstorming takes time. I have more ideas than I can ever hope long enough to turn into books. How do I know a story is worth writing at all? I sit on it for a week. (Yes, the time it would take some authors to WRITE the damn thing). If it's still compelling after a week, wakes me up at night, and my life would be poorer without it, I'm likely to have hit gold. Something that speaks to me beyond the flash of "oh, awesome, wouldn't it be cool if..." But usually, I examine the idea for a few days at least. Ideally, I'm examining the idea while I'm wrapping up the current project, so that gives me a few weeks, even months.

So far, my best ideas (just talking of solo published stuff here) were those with staying power. Counterpunch robbed me of my sleep for two months before I did it. Scorpion had a good start (I was on holidays and bored and should have written the other book, the one I've been mulliong for more than two years now), after twenty thousand words, it stalled, I was about to give up. Several months later, the idea hit me again, HARDER this time, and I finished. The WWII novel I'm writing? Six months. The OTHER WWII novel? Two years and counting. Dark Soul? Twenty years. These are ideas that electrify me and keep me going. And they take as long as they take. And I think they were worth the wait and didn't actually weaken while my mind wrestled with them. If you fight with an angel, they harder you fight, the stronger they become.



Yes, there is pressure to publish more

I have readers clamouring for sequels/prequels/spin-offs to, in no particular order: The Gorgon Series, Special Forces, Dark Edge of Honor, Lion of Kent, unnamed WIP of 2008 I shared in a forum, Risky Maneuvers, Dark Soul, Scorpion, Counterpunch, Country Mouse. I can write sequels and prequels to all of them, and I might, but I can only write so much, so working through the list may take ten years. Or five.

I used to feel the pressure (I like to keep my readers happy, I do, you guys allow me to overpay my mortgage, too!) - it's moral pressure, and it's fun to be wanted and to have people jump up and down on the internet and swoon all over the writing - but I can't allow it to dictate how many words I write a day.

I can use this to be more disciplined ("people are waiting, so get off your arse and sit down and write!"), but I can't use it to write more per session or not write when I really can't and have no clue. Writing when I'm "written out" or when I really don't feel like it is torture, and writing's supposed to be fun (at least when it's not torture by itself). There's a difference between "motivated to write more often" and "churning out shit so you hit 10k/day". I'm trying very hard to stay on the former side of this. Because I want to give my readers what they want, but I want to give them good quality rather than badly-composed shit I wrote because I felt I had to. The expectation creates a huge obligation - I know they want a good book when they want what they want. They don't just want any book. And my readers? Are a discerning lot. They can tell the difference when (if) I try to pull a quickie. Nothing will do but me at the top of my game, because they will call me out on it. They are keeping me honest. And I'm grateful for it - many authors don't have that kind of back-up and quality control.

(I love you, guys/gals!)


Good writing, like good wine and cheese, takes time

A good parmesan takes time to mature. There are lots of people who are happy with just the fresh milk. And all power to them. There are many readers who can't tell the difference between a first draft that's been comma-checked (and with many publishers in our tiny cottage industry, not even that!) and a well-edited book that's been thought through by the author and then edited to a high standard.

BUT - producing anything "vintage" or "artisan" takes time. Personally, I'd rather read one Erastes book a year that's been painstakingly put together than fifty books by Effluvia Writesalot that are all crap. Yes, there are people who can't tell the difference between the goey plastic on their pizza and an artisan cheese. There are people who think the goey plastic stuff IS cheese and they eat so much of it that they wouldn't recognize a good Manchego or Parmesan or Cheddar as cheese if it jumped on their bagel screaming "eat me! I'm cheese, too!" But I don't think they are the majority. And if they are, the people who know their stuff are still enough to make it worthwhile, financially and critically.

Personally, bad prose and a badly edited book feel to me like a cheese-grater on my exposed brain. I can't read it. I can't finish it. And I'll never, ever, buy it (I read samples, a lot of samples, thanks to my Kindle). To me, a badly-made book is like a do-it-yourself lobotomy. Thanks, but no thanks. So to everybody who makes artisan prose - please do not stop, because my sanity needs you. I need you so bad and I will buy everything you do and tell all my friends about you. Please do not throw away your Manchegos and Parmesans to make plastic cheese. Please.


Authors have the right to slow the fuck down

I'm productive. I also like to think that, even if I write fast, I'm a decent writer on the technical level. One of my friends describes me as a critically acclaimed mid-list author (and she's right, which means my reviews are strong, but my sales do not reflect that), but I can't live off writing. I likely never will. I could likely produce (note the word choice) twice as much as I currently do. I've written 500k in 2.5 years, that's 200k a year, or three full-sized novels. Right now, I'd say I'm at about half that, or maybe 60% (I did write Dark Soul in about six months, and change). In the last months, I've slowed down. I'm writing a historical novel, which for me is slow work. I'm weighing options. Scenes. Individual sentences. I'm checking my facts. I'm aiming for 500 words a day - that's about two pages. The WWII novel is 1/3 done, and I'm expecting to finish this in the next 2-3 months. We're talking another 50k here. And editing. Lots of editing and fact-checking and testing, and then query-writing, which is an art that will likely meana few weeks of work (just writing a half-page letter).

From being incredibly prolific for a few years, I've realized the toll it takes on my life (I did nothing else for years), on my partnership, my health, my sanity. I've written books that I literally cannot remember writing, as I was so desperate to "make my mark". It's led to lazy writing habits, low standards for self-editing, and frankly, I wish I hadn't done it, and I've spent the last 8-10 months just repairing the damage I've done to my craft with that. I've stopped being lazy. I'm working really damned hard on everything I do now. There are books I'm not proud to have written, because I could have done a much better job if I'd thought them through, if I'd actually thought about them while I wrote them. I wish I had. I feel guilty for them. Mortified, even.

Writing more slowly (disciplined and hopefully every day, but slowly), I'm finding the prose I write is more intense, like I'm focusing that "energy" or that "voice" much better. What I write is better. I like to savour a book while I write it. I want to remember to have written it, too. I want to ruminate on it. Let it resonate in my soul. Believe in it. Make it totally real for me - and that just takes time, and growth, and internal and emotional work that cannot be rushed.

I'm at my best when I'm laser-focused, but that focus is tough like hell to maintain, and some days I write a thousand words and am mentally and emotionally exhausted afterwards. Maybe I'm a delicate little flower who's simply not tough enough to write 10k a day. I know authors who can write 5-10k a day and write beautifully and cleanly, or authors who produce the same amount in first draft and then self-edit themselves within an inch of their sanity - nothing I write here is meant to diss you guys, and you know who you are.

I, for one (and I'm just speaking for myself), am better when I'm slow-ish. And "slow-ish" means - two novels a year, which is 0.5 novels more than Stephen King says you should write, if I remember him correctly. I'm more sane, more healthy, more intense, more focused, I have time for my partner and my house and my full-time job and my publisher and for exercise and good food and movies. Small price to pay for being "slow". I am trying to do a short story or novella "in between" to show people I'm alive and working, but I'm never going to rush a piece of writing again. Writing them - really feeling them - is too much fun, and I'm simply a better writer that way.
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Published on June 07, 2012 04:16
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message 1: by Brenda (new)

Brenda Cothern Aleks,

I always find it interesting (and sometimes downright scary) when I read some of your blogs. Sometimes it is like you are in my head! I speak on writer panels at several conventions a year and am constantly telling aspiring authors the importance of editing and to slow down! Everyone is in a rush to see their name on a cover and they forget that it should be about a good story. I can't tell you how many authors I have met who tell me they are "editing" (usually it's a relative or close friend) their first book and going to sell it on Amazon "because nothing like it has been written before." I pick their brains about the many other aspects of being a writer, especially a self published writer, and it no longer surprises me that they have not done their homework because they were in such a rush to publish.

Great to be sharing "head-space" with you on another blog :o)

Brenda

P.S. I think your muse has been whispering to mine! Awhile back I wrote almost 15k in a week and haven't heard a peep from her since on Destiny. But, that doesn't mean I am not working. It just means that Destiny has currently stalled. Can't force these things, as you know.


message 2: by Aleksandr (last edited Jun 07, 2012 07:16AM) (new)

Aleksandr Voinov It's maybe my pre-ebook self speaking, but I think the skills acquired in print publishing (patience, self-editing, polishing, polishing, polishing, humility, patience, focus on craft, editing, polishing) are skills that the Brave New E-World desperately needs.

I love e-publishing, I started an e-publisher, but I think slow-ness and deliberation lead to better books than crazy NaNoWriMo dashes. There are a few speedfreaks (and I'm using the word affectionately) who can produce good books at that speed - but I can count them on 1.5 hands. :)

Yes, tell them to slow down. You can only ruin your repuation once, and an awful book will do it.


message 3: by Isa (last edited Jun 07, 2012 07:55AM) (new)

Isa K. I'm with you on the 'write the ideas that will not go away' bit. I usually wait for two or three ideas to get married in my head *lol*

But I think for most writers the speed game is less about not caring about quality and more about the tradeoff: write a few great books no one reads, or lots of okay books some people read? Quantity does increase exposure, which also increases the likelihood of an actual reader or two.

I think there's plenty of room and technology to satisfy both concerns. I'm a big fan of serialization: publishing the first draft online one chapter at a time as I write it. It keeps me motivated, helps me figure out what's working before I've committed 20K words to it, and gets a little bit of exposure to leverage later. Then when that's done I can go back and take my time revising and rewriting to "publish" for real. You did the same with Special Forces, right?


message 4: by [deleted user] (last edited Jun 07, 2012 08:51AM) (new)

In theory (and occasionally in practice) there are writers who can put something of quality out quickly. I'd never say there weren't. But I had the impression VM's post was directed more at what's actually on the table at the moment--an increasingly tall stack of barely digestible (or frankly indigestible) stories that do read as though they aren't much more than unedited first or second drafts.

Without editors to tell authors they aren't ready to publish (or with editors who've caught on that some stories don't need polishing to make a million) it's becoming a challenge to find something worth reading, unless you're a completely indiscriminating reader. Of the dozen excerpts I've read just in the past week, I couldn't make it past the first couple of paragraphs because the writing was so new-writerish. To be honest, a lot of it reminded me of my writing when I first started out (and thank god I was rejected roundly by every publisher I sent it to. If any of it had gone into print, I'd just cringe today to look at it. The same way I cringe at a lot of stuff that's currently in publication.)

The case can be made that bad stuff has always been published. I've read some 19th century novels that were pretty dreadful but very popular with the masses. But I think the lack of gate-keeping and the growing prevalence of editors willing to trade quality for quantity (or a chance at the jackpot with one-note, wish fulfillment recycled fan fiction) is burying us alive in some really unappealing and unreadable stuff. :(


message 5: by Johanna (new)

Johanna Aleks wrote: "I'm more sane, more healthy, more intense, more focused, I have time for my partner and my house and my full-time job and my publisher and for exercise and good food and movies. Small price to pay for being "slow". I am trying to do a short story or novella "in between" to show people I'm alive and working, but I'm never going to rush a piece of writing again. Writing them - really feeling them - is too much fun, and I'm simply a better writer that way."

This was wonderful to read. I'm so happy for you, Aleks.


message 6: by BlackTulip (new)

BlackTulip It's always very interesting and a pleasure to read your posts.
I think that I recognized myself when you allude to the sequel of The Lion of Kent ... !
I certainly don't want to put any kind of pressure on anybody. I'll always admire your work even if no sequel is written !!!! Your three medieval historicals were the first m/m novels I ever read they are the very best, and I mean that !
Just LIVE and ENJOY life first ... "Apres tout, on ne vit qu'une seule fois" ! We only live once !


message 7: by Ilhem (new)

Ilhem There are books which are consumer products and there are books which are gifts to the reader : those are worth the wait!


Lisa Arbitrary - AttentionIsArbitrary M/M Blog A vicious circle when you write well. The more demand for you to write fast.


message 9: by Morgiana (new)

Morgiana Aleks, that was cool to sharing with us how you write and what is in your brain when you are writing:)
Kept on his pace for your sanity - and for us, I think lot of us read rather a 'parmesan' than a plastic cheese, right?
*winks*


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