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When the writing is easy
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I began doing 200 words a day, every day, and gradually worked up to at least 500 words a day.
So now I can - more often than not - come up with a short piece from nothing like those with comparative ease even though I no longer do the early morning thing.
Quite a few of them are rubbish, of course, but many of them give me at least something to work with.

By contrast, fantasy and science fiction is much easier. If you don't know the answer you can just make it up or hand-wave it.
Star Trek was criticised for its transporter technology. Scientists said that it could never work because of Heisenberg's Uncertainty principle. So the writers of Star Trek casually referred to the transporters have "Heisenberg compensators".
When the scientists asked how the Heisenberg compensators worked, the writers replied "they work just fine."

Sorry Will, but having researched how dragons could possibly fly, the design and structure of oil tankers, how Machiavelli thought, and the role of winds in mythology and science all for the purpose of writing fantasy, I definitely disagree with you!



Like Will, writing an historical novel is what takes the time. It's not just how long does a horse and carriage take to get from a to b, (been there, done that, Will, lots of times 'cos I forget. Have you taken into account their 'pot holes' and changing the wheels and a change of horses and, and, and?) but it's also if certain words were used in those days. They had a much smaller vocabulary to play with two hundred years ago.
But when I wrote my time travel book, the contemporary bit just flew off my fingers. Yet it was the historical bit I enjoyed writing most because I loved all the research. Fascinating. And if I can find a long period of writing time, I can manage about 1,000 words in 5 hours, each day, even in the historical bit and it comes easy and then I can feel it's easy - at last. Those times are rare.
I'm not writing for the loot (just as well!) I write for those lovely times when the writing is easy, the research is quick and fascinating and the results are satisfying. The hard slog is good if it produces first class results...

the research bit is important in this because that particular project is an account of the growth and development of the Carthaginian army between 500BC and 150BC so I've got to get it right.
When I'm writing other stuff such as the jumbled musings of Tallis Steelyard research is not a problem https://tallissteelyard.wordpress.com/


Some of that info might be in The Badminton Library of Sports and Pastimes which had a volume on 'Driving' (as in carriages - published 1889). They're online digitised by Google.
I'm working on one project which needs research, I haven't done a thing with it for a week (other than a bit of reading) and when I do set to I rarely get a thousand words done in a day.
Yet with Tallis Steelyard it just comes pouring out. Somebody shows me a picture or says something and after a short work suddenly everything is in place and I can write a couple of thousand words with very little effort.
Do other people have anything like this, where they can just write?