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Anyone else feel rushed?
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I used to think that way for the longest time. It really takes the fun out of writing. But it's necessary, too, because hey, life's like that. Good luck! :)


Do you edit your own stuff? I got a professional editor for 712.9 because it turns out that I don't know how to grammar. I can't imagine doing all the work for everything.
I usually don't do deadlines either, but with Camp NaNo coming up I just want to be done with this >.<
And I'm going to be in Cape Cod for five days, so I basically need to pump out 8k words a day for the next two days.
Eurgh.

I need help.




That's OK, I don't have the $$ for a proper book cover right now anyway.
In the meantimes, I've finished 2 short stories and gotten drafts done of two novelettes.
But waiting in the wings I've got at least 7 novels/novellas and three more short story/novelettes in the works (not that I've worked on many of them lately).
So I feel rushed only in the sense that I'd LIKE to start some totally new projects but still have a significant backlog of works in progress to complete...and I ain't gettin' any younger (and still have to work full time).

Fiction, I just finished one piece and set Oct 1 as the deadline for the sequel, another 40K novella.

My first book took 8 years to happen and the second took six months. Now, I start to freak out if I can't push out a first draft in two months, which is not healthy. Especially for a plodding writer who can only manage anywhere from 1000 to 3000 words in a day.
My problem seems to be all of the free 'advice' out there telling us that Indie authors need a huge catalog of books to get noticed. While I would love to say I banged out ten books this year, I'd rather have one or two well written books completed. I just need to constantly remind myself of this.
My problem seems to be all of the free 'advice' out there telling us that Indie authors need a huge catalog of books to get noticed. While I would love to say I banged out ten books this year, I'd rather have one or two well written books completed. I just need to constantly remind myself of this.



Feeling a little rushed, but I'm on the back side of the story arc, so I'm hoping things go smooth between here and the end. Only tricky part is going to be setting up some of the foundation for book 3. So far it's been one main character, but things are about to explode, and I'm not sure if I'm technically "mature" enough to carry it off properly. But, going to give it the good ol' fashioned "college try" anyway. (Besides, my editor would shoot me if I let it go without finishing.)

However the number of books before you start to get traction was 4 when I started, but now I have four, it's six. I've kind of resigned myself to it being 8 by the time I reach 6. I take 2 years to write a book, I have elderly parents who live a long way away and a six year old. Neither leaves time nor the emotional capacity for much else so writing is slow and happens because I'm pathologically addicted to it rather than through choice. :-)
I am in awe of these people who lead hectic lives and churn out a book every three months. It's beyond me. Which makes me a piss poor prospect for any publisher. It's one of the reasons I self published.
Cheers
MTM
Christina wrote: "While I would love to say I banged out ten books this year, I'd rather have one or two well written books completed."
Yes, this! I tried the churning-stuff-out thing with a pen name, and I found I didn't enjoy the process. It wasn't that it was a drudgery; it was that I wasn't getting to spend as much time with my stories as I need to. They were here and then gone, like interesting strangers you chat with while waiting for an elevator. And because of that, I felt like they weren't really reaching their potential. Everyone works differently, but time is an important part of the process for me: the first draft goes together fairly quickly (30-45 days), but I need a good amount time after that to see where the story falls short and shore it up.
So my goal is two well-thought-out releases a year, which I'm comfortable with. I won't gain traction as fast as someone who can release four or six books a year, but I also won't be kept awake at nights thinking, "Damn it, I should have had them do this" or "That reaction character X had could have been better supported" or "I missed the opportunity to make this other thing happen, and that would have made it such a better story."
(And I do have deadlines, because without them, I get nothing done.)
Yes, this! I tried the churning-stuff-out thing with a pen name, and I found I didn't enjoy the process. It wasn't that it was a drudgery; it was that I wasn't getting to spend as much time with my stories as I need to. They were here and then gone, like interesting strangers you chat with while waiting for an elevator. And because of that, I felt like they weren't really reaching their potential. Everyone works differently, but time is an important part of the process for me: the first draft goes together fairly quickly (30-45 days), but I need a good amount time after that to see where the story falls short and shore it up.
So my goal is two well-thought-out releases a year, which I'm comfortable with. I won't gain traction as fast as someone who can release four or six books a year, but I also won't be kept awake at nights thinking, "Damn it, I should have had them do this" or "That reaction character X had could have been better supported" or "I missed the opportunity to make this other thing happen, and that would have made it such a better story."
(And I do have deadlines, because without them, I get nothing done.)


1 book per year is much more realistic of the time I can give to finishing the books properly. If I were content to release ARC's first, and then polish them up, I think 2 per year is doable, I just don't want to make that bad first impression from shaky plot elements lurking in the ARC copies.
I'm poised to hit four, but one was a novella and I already had 75% of the content written. I also don't have a pesky day job at the moment, but there is enough other things that still distract me.

Right now, I'm trying desperately to finish the book I'm in because I've set myself up to TRY for the NaNoWriMo competition. I had intended for my current book to be the entry, but it took off and is now too close to completion. So, that means I really need to be starting fresh on the next one. And, with a developing series, I do not do good with writing out of sequence. There are things that need to be seeded into where I am for what is to come.
I never would have imagined writing a series would be this difficult or involved. I love the sweeping sagas to begin with, and now I can appreciate, really appreciate, how much work the writers and authors have put into them to keep them seamless as they progress. Maybe, one day, I'll be able to look at those sagas again and feel like they aren't a goal to reach for, but a goal that has been met. Maybe.
The problem is definitely concentration vs distraction. For example, I'm currently at an outdoor concert and just typing what I'm thinking rather than what I'm hearing is tough. It also doesn't help that I have three dogs with no attention span who still aren't used to me being home. They think my job is doorman.

I can well understand about music being a distraction, too. I just recently changed my playlist from the one I normally use to a wonderful new group I discovered on youtube, and I keep getting lost in the absolutely wonderful music, rather than letting it lift me into more intense writing efforts.


There is a lot in that. There are really too many distractions that are keeping me away from writing. Two of which are dogs that need a lot of attention, but I wouldn't want to be without them anyway. If there is one distraction that I might give up it would be the TV.
Books mentioned in this topic
712.9 (other topics)The Most Unlikely Beginnings (other topics)
So who else is writing under a frighteningly close deadline?