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How fast do you write?
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[deleted user]
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Apr 11, 2013 06:20PM
I wrote my first three novels, Till The Moon Falls, Xe-Nophobia and Detroit Daze, in the John Oxman Voyages Trilogy in non stop fashion. Two of three have been praised. It took me a while to write my fourth, Crying Bullets, and although it's sold a few copies, nobody's reviewed it. After nearly a year, I wrote a novella, How to Kill a Literary Agent (Jesus Told Me To Kill Her) pretty quickly but it was short, fun and easy to do and is also getting good grades. But now, I'm trying to crossover into sci-fi and it's taking me longer than anything else before. Part of the reason is that I'm reading and absorbing real time info regarding physics so I don't come off sounding like a complete idiot. But I think there's more going on. I think I'm letting concepts stew in my mind before I put them into narrative form. Has anyone else had similar experiences?
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L.S. wrote: "Well, because I'm looking for a day job, working nights, and working part-time at my writing it takes a year and a day to write anything. But on the other hand without outside stimulation, I don't ..."
No, Linda. I don't make a living selling books but I don't need to and, yes, it is rare. A recent survey revealed that about 50% of indie authors made $500 or less per year.
No, Linda. I don't make a living selling books but I don't need to and, yes, it is rare. A recent survey revealed that about 50% of indie authors made $500 or less per year.

Donna wrote: "My monthly column is written months in advance. Hard to believe that I can remain relevant working ahead of time but these days, the issues never change. As for my scripts, well, just this afternoo..."
Just hang in there, Donna. George Burns said that if you live to be 100 that you've got it made because very few people die after 100.
Just hang in there, Donna. George Burns said that if you live to be 100 that you've got it made because very few people die after 100.


The thing I'm working on most right now is learning to multi-task to where I am already ruminating on the next novel's plot while I'm writing/editing the current one, which is not that easy to do. I think it's going to be mandatory if I want to be productive enough to make it long-term as a novelist, though. It's currently taking me maybe 6-9 months of brainstorming/planning and another 2-3 months of writing to get a novel out, and then maybe another 3-4 months of editing to get it polished up. It would probably be quicker if I wasn't also writing articles to make ends meet.


Fiction? Whew. I love it, but it's so tough. My first (and so far only) novel took years. There's a lot of stepping back and mulling.
Does it take longer for you to write about something you know about intimately, or something that requires a lot of research?
