Friday, August 3, 2012

Weekend warrior -- mowing, exercising, and writing 5,000 words

Okay, I admit it. I published my first novel, CLAIMING MOON, on Kindle a few days ago and I’ve checked the sales reports for it about a million times. I’ve tweeted about it, posted on Facebook, let a few writer friends know, even sent out a couple of e-mail blasts to a list of folks supposedly (hopefully) interested in my writing.

In the midst of holding down my fulltime job, watching the Olympics, doing a few things around the house, and all of this “marketing,” guess how many words I’ve written on new work?

Zilch.

I was afraid this might happen. Other writers have told me it would. You, as a writer, get so caught up in the work you just published, in marketing and talking about it, in finding potential websites to do a review of your published novel, that you lose focus on what’s most important – continuing to write.

I’m going to remedy that right now.

I’m leaving work sometime between 7 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. I don’t work this weekend, so these are my plans, my to do list, what I have to accomplish between the time I leave today and when I return to work on Monday morning.

First, I have to mow the yard.

Second, I have a couple of trips to make to the gym – one tonight and another either Saturday or Sunday.

Third, whatever else it is my wife has on my list.

Fourth – write 5,000 words on my novel-in-progress.

Yep, that’s right – 5.000 words.

I got the inspiration to do this while perusing Brian Keene’s website. I came across a blog post from July in which he talks about writing 80,000 words in a weekend. A single, three-day weekend.

That’s astounding. Far beyond what I can manage at present.

I don’t have the advantages he had – I’ll not be alone, but instead surrounded by my wife, my five kids, boyfriends of the two oldest will no doubt be making a few appearances, maybe even friends of the younger ones will be running around the house.

Still, I’m going to do this.

I’ve written little over the past week. First, I was spending time formatting my novel for Kindle. Then I was spending my time fixing screw-ups in the formatting. Then I spent time telling everyone about it. All totaled, I’m guessing I actually wrote 1,000 words on my novel in progress.

For the whole week.

This is not how to make a career as a writer.

So, from the time I arrive at home tonight, somewhere between 7:30 and 8 o’clock, and the time I go to work Monday morning, I’m chasing down 5,000 words.

I’ll let you know how it goes.

5 comments:

  1. You go John! I hear every word of that post, and I agree. A really good day, between all the imperatives from the so-called real world, is 2,000 words. I'm ecstatic on any day I manage that (rough it, write it out, polish it once).

    I recall reading that Maxwell Grant (who wrote The Shadow) and Robert E. Howard (Conan et al) steadily wrote 5,000 words a day for YEARS without a break.Imagine. And for maybe 2 cents a word- and their publishers held them up on payment!

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  2. I would respond, Will, but then people would know I'm online and not writing.

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  3. Oh, wait, guess that secret's already told.

    My personal goal at present is 800 a day. There was a time just a few years ago I routinely did about 1,500 words daily, but there are just too many things going on right now for me to do that.

    Five-thousand? Wow...although I have to say, I'd love if I could do this fulltime -- I'd sure give that 5,000 a run.

    Thanks for stopping in and leaving a comment1

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  4. I relish days like today, when I'm marginally caught up with life and can devote myself to cranking out some words. So far, so good today.

    If only I could bring myself to go out and mow that damned lawn before it swallows the house.

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  5. Ah, yes, those days do seem to be harder to come by. As for the lawn, I struggle with that myself. Sorry I can't offer any words of wisdom there.

    Thanks for stopping by and commenting.

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