Picture by Marion Lindsay for Cat Magic |
Were they the best, most
considered words? Nope. Does that matter? Not a bit in a first, scribble, draft. Those 10,000 words can become
polished and honed later - what I have got now is a much better knowledge of my
characters (including one who had a minor part but is now a major player) and most
of the crucial scenes written.
Here's how I did it:
Here's how I did it:
Friday 10 am - stared at my book writing schedule calendar and realised that writing I,000 words a day would not get my next book finished by mid-January.
10.30 am - went downstairs and told husband, Eric, my concern.
11 am – nearby Travelodge booked for the weekend.
12 pm – Eric buys food and drink that only needs a kettle (at the most) to make. I pack some clothes and my work and make sure the dogs will be OK.
4pm – arrive at Travelodge and make ‘proper’ coffee using aeropress (more details of everything I used on my website.) Just make sure you screw the bottom on really well or you might end up with coffee everywhere like I did.
5pm – start writing by longhand using my Echo pen that can convert handwriting to text.
7.30pm – first 2000 words written.
Saturday and Sunday… Write! Write! Written! 4,000 words done each day.
Tips to make your writing weekend go smoothly:
Tips to make your writing weekend go smoothly:
1. No TV – I
pulled the TV plug out and plugged my computer into the socket instead – the TV
didn’t get turned on once (although I did watch a DVD on my computer about the
subject I was writing on.)
2. Use the internet only to check emails and do
absolutely necessary research. I was also in contact with my husband 3 or 4
times a day via Face Time. The dogs were
also very interested in me chatting to them via the screen at first but soon
got used to it. Loved how one of them kept tilting her head from side to side
as she looked at the screen. (I did worry it was cruel initially but they got
used to it pretty quick and made me laugh when one went and got a toy and
brought it back.)
3. Be in the mind zone to write and pumped up to
get on – this is exciting! Having nothing else to concentrate on besides writing
meant I could write like the wind and I did. What writing in this speedy fashion meant is that now I can dip in and out of the book, secure that I like how it’s working and growing. It's a good feeling. Prior to taking this action I usually manage to write about l,000 words a day - so 4,000 a day was a bit of a jump!
Three other new things I’ve tried recently:
1. Not listening to other
people’s opinions unless I want to:
I used to get upset by the odd bad review
but now find I’ve
reached the stage where I can shrug them off. I even managed a smile at an
email from an irate American reader recently who’d spotted a grammar mistake in my adult
book, The Puppy that Came for Christmas' and wrote a back-handed compliment of: 'If a good writer like you can make a mistake
like this what hope is there for the world.' Indeed.
On the reverse side I had an email from one of my editor’s this week saying she’d been so busy reading my manuscript on the bus she’d missed her stop – a very nice compliment from a person whose opinion I value highly.
2. Being Vegan:
On the reverse side I had an email from one of my editor’s this week saying she’d been so busy reading my manuscript on the bus she’d missed her stop – a very nice compliment from a person whose opinion I value highly.
2. Being Vegan:
When I said I was going to take part in
November's World Vegan mouth some people reacted with horror. ‘What are you
going to eat?’ ‘How will you survive?’ I was asked.
The
truth is being vegan wasn't any hardship at all and in fact it was a pleasure.
I got to try lots of yummy foods and made friends with some lovely new people
and blogged about it here:
3. Re-visit from my first book:
creative writing students saying I hope one day to read their first book) but I certainly didn't expect to hear much more about it. But in the past few weeks I've had first one email and then another and another from English language students in Argentina who are studying the book and it's been great. I'm so glad that there's life in the old book yet and it's being enjoyed again somewhere. One of the students even became my first newsletter subscriber.
Megan’s book 'The Great Escape' has recently been
shortlisted for the East Sussex Children’s Book Award. She writes as Megan Rix
and Ruth Symes and her websites are www.ruthsymes.com
and www.meganrix.com
2 comments:
What a heroic effort! Congratulations on achieving all those words!
Wow! I am in awe. I aim for around 1,000-2,000 words a day. 4,000 is most definitely heroic. Well done.
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