Monday, May 23, 2011

Welcome New Participants!

Thanks to the power of mass online communication (ie. email) we have now got close to 75 participants for this year's challenge! That's an amazing number of people, and it means that we're going to have a really brilliant community to cheer each other on. ^_^

If you sent me an email yesterday or this morning, you will have your word count widget on the blog and your invitation to join the Google Group by this evening. If you haven't recieved your invite by Tuesday evening, please email me and let me know because it probably means the internet goblins have hidden your details. Darn those internet goblins.

Defeat to the Internet Goblins! 9 Days to Go!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Have you got a plot?

May is flying past at a rate of knots, and the kick-off to 50K in 30 Days is less than a fortnight away! 


I'm always worried that I'll sit down all ready to go on June 1st and find myself staring at a blank page, frantically hoping words will jump onto it. So I've chosen a specific manuscript that I'm going to work on over the month. I'll be writing a Regency romance set near the end of the Napoleonic Wars, and my heroine is a French woman who goes undercover as an English actress to spy on the British war plans. 

If you don't already have something you want to work on, here are some excellent resources to help you plan your novel:

  • Seventh Sanctum have a romance-specific plot generator
    • "This story starts in a tourist town in South America. In it, a brave cab driver falls in love with a religious merchant - all thanks to a theft."
  • The Snowflake method is an interesting take on how to do extremely detailed plotting before you begin writing. You can find it on this site(Though I note they also try and sell you the software - still, good free information.) 
  • Prefer to get your title first and work out a plot that fits? There is an excellent romance title generator here
    • "Fleeting Flames", "A Winter Stranger", "The Nightingale and the Voyagers". 
Anyone else have any great resources that help with plotting? And do you know what you're planning to write this June? 


Friday, May 6, 2011

Countdown to June!

It's back again in 2011, the 50K in 30 Days!

The premise is simple, just set yourself a word count goal for the month of June, and then report back with your word count each week. We'll be having writing sprints in the Romance Writers of Australia chat rooms (join now if you're not already a member!) and blog posts from brilliant authors full of all the motivation, advice and the butt-kicking you need to get writing.

To sign up, just comment below with your word count, or send me an e-mail!

Sunday, November 28, 2010

NaNoNotNow

I'll be honest. This NaNowriMo has turned into NaNoNotNow. Yep. I've failed miserably. So miserably I've even stopped counting. So miserably I don't even recall when I last opened the file. So miserably I haven't even visited the official site for weeks, let alone read the forums. I haven't even been doing my usual forms of Nanowrimo procrastination.

This year I won't be racing to the finish line, because it feels as if I've been running in the wrong direction, and I've lost sight of the racetrack completely.

But I have learned a few things from this particular November:

  • for Nanowrimo to work for me, I need to be working on something new with no fear of how it reads - it's got to be about getting the story down on paper. Fresh.
  • pantsing can work, plotting can work as long as I'm open to stuff happening all by itself.
  • this is not the month to edit or rewrite or worry about finished product.
  • this is not the month to write new scenes and squeeze them all over the place into my manuscript.
  • this is not the month to totally scrap a secondary plot and try to find a replacement that makes sense and works with the primary plot.
  • words don't write themselves especially when I'm trying to beat someone else's score in a game on facebook.
  • you need to stay engaged with your story for the word fairy to sprinkle her fairy dust
  • backing up is good - thankfully the death of my laptop did not equal loss of scenes or words, but it might have if I'd written anything in the last week.
  • taking a week's holiday in November is good for wordage. But alas, I went to work every weekday of November this time.
So what will I do different next year?

I will spend the rest of the year doing the editing, rewriting, submitting, clearing the decks so that June (for 50ks) or November (for Nanowrimo) are clear for the unencumbered outpouring of a shitty first draft. I will be happy to know that it will be a shitty first draft that requires a lot of work, both structural and other editing.

So tell me? Has it been NanoWriteOn for you? Or NanoNotNow? What was your 2010 Nano experience?

Diane

Monday, November 1, 2010

NOVEMBER 1ST ~ NaNoWriMo

November 1st, and so it all begins again. It’s NaNoWriMo time and are we excited? A Little scared? Do you have that nervous energy that bubbles up from deep down threatening to consume you? If you answered to one or all of these question you’re in the right place.

Writing a novel or part of a novel within the month of November along with hundreds, even thousands of other people is an experience well worth sharing. For the RWAus members it is a time for bonding, sharing, encouraging and listening when things aren’t going to plan.

Talking of plans – did you plan, plot and dissect your novel ready to start writing today? Or are you flying by the seat of your pants and waiting to see where your characters or story led you?

Whichever way you go, remember to have fun. Don’t stress, don’t put more pressure on yourself than you need to.



If this is your first NaNo congratulations for joining in and good luck with your first NaNo journey. For those who are repeat NaNoers, welcome back and may November bring you many wonderful words for your novel.





For now:- LET THE FUN BEGIN!!!!

Sandie

Thursday, July 1, 2010

50ks in 30 Days FINISHED


At the beginning of June, we started a journey together. Some had a well thought out plan, while others headed into uncharted waters. Then there were others who travelled this road before, and dived in, boots and all. It doesn’t matter how you started or how you finished up, you started! You pulled up your chair, sat at your computer each day (or most days), and wrote. Some wrote more words in the month than they had ever before, fantastic.


Remember it is not about the number of words you got down on paper, or on your computer, it is about the fact that you tried.


It is so great to see this challenge grow each year, we started back in 2007 with 13 members, now we have 102 members. Not everyone takes up the challenge every year, but you know what, it is not always about the challenge, it is about the support we get from the group. If you’re down, there is a shoulder to cry on, if you get a contract, win a contest, there are cheers and congratulations.

We are a family of writers, aiming for the same thing, to get words on paper. So who reached their goal?



AJ
KARLY
PAM G
SUZANNE B
CAIT (Editing)

CONGRATULATIONS LADIES, WELL DONE!!!!




Okay, our next monthly challenge is November with NaNoWriMo, if you haven’t joined here is the website.


Thanks for a great month everyone.
Sandie

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Badge of Honour

So how are you progressing? Running along at a steady pace? Power-walking or limping towards your next revive and survive break? Or have you already hurtled through the finish line (yay, AJ!)

There are three days left to go until the end of the month and I intend to be sprinting from 8pm every night. I have absolutely no possibility of hitting the 50k marker (but I'm the girl who used to walk the cross country runs, and arrive at the finish line when everyone else had packed up and gone home). Tell me, AJ, did you run those cross countries around the school, or did you dawdle and participate in cow pat fights like me?

I've been sprinting in stops and starts -- but it always helps to have fellow sprinters in the sprint room so that we can cheer each other on. A massive big cheer to everyone who participated in the sprints this time around.

So who will be wearing the badge of honour?


Yes - we have badges! So we can recognise the other crazy 50ks souls when we bump into each other at conference.

I have 25 badges left from the first year so it will be a case of first in, first served ($2 for the badge, $1 more if you need it posted to you). Otherwise we'll arrange for you to pick up at conference.

For the 50ker's who have burst through the 50k goal by midnight 30 June, we have a Winner Certificate. Below is the sample certificate from 2008.


This will be emailed to the 'winners' shortly after the challenge finishes.

Thank you everyone for a fabulous month, and hope to see you in the sprint room over the next couple of days.

Keep on sprinting!