Three Novels, One Novella and a Screenplay
It
was a hot summer night in a cool downtown condo. The air was electric with anxiety, hope and
raw ideas not yet formed into anything widely sharable. I had taken an "Intro to Novel Writing" course at George Brown College and a few of us keeners had kept in touch
to continue writing and critiquing in a writing group. At the start four of us wanted to write
novels, the other a screenplay. One
novel changed to a novella and members dropped out and others joined through the
progression of different writing courses.
And
now two of them have finished and published their books! Woot! The first
book is always the hardest to write, toughest to edit and the one that you are
supposed to just get done, and quickly. This allows you to move on to the next, which will be markedly better
according to everyone who says they know. I've certainly already failed at the getting it done quickly part.
It’s
not a simple feat. Those without a trust
fund or a financially supportive partner that are trying to write while maintaining a job and a life might give up on
sleep, relationships/friendships, TV, or any kind of social life. I even know some writers (Not me!) who use
their slow office hours to pound out some pages on the keyboard.
For
these two ladies, there are some key things that I take from their experience,
which can really translate to any goal you want to attain.
The Fantasy Novel, Eve's Return, by Crystal A. Bourque
Crystal
is a truly talented writer. I know this
because I generally hate reading fantasy novels and I love reading all of her
writing. It is just so good. Her first novel, Eve’s Return, has a
kickass storyline, kept me on the edge of my seat wanting more chapter-to-chapter, was full of characters that were real enough that the impossible
actually seemed possible, and was well researched and
appropriately detailed.
For
Crystal to get it all done, it’s about discipline and making time. Writing is literally her second job. She finishes her day job, has some dinner and
then starts writing for the successful blog she’s developed, and for her
novels. She is disciplined and sticks to
this schedule, even when it means she has to sacrifice other things she may
want to be doing with her time.
This
would be hard for just about anyone. Lucky for Crystal her husband has come on board and also works with her
on the blog. It’s a labour of love in so
many ways.
The Novel turned Novella, Erin, Girl by Sandra Cunha
It
is perfect. Succinct, and entertaining, with
a great message and moments of realization. A quick, fun read, with great writing and a fun character and voice that
falls in line with the best chic lit.
Sandra
herself is focused. She eliminates
anything from her life that might provide a distraction. For a while, she had an amazing blog (theme here: get a blog following, which both of these girls did, and readers might follow
you to your first book and so on) called Living Lagom, and eliminated everything
from her life that was not essential. Freeing up space and energy to focus on what she loves, writing.
She
is firm with herself to get what she wants and needs. Instead of constantly complaining about grey
cubicle walls that come with working in a corporation (can we please just get
rid of these wretched grey cubicles? – no one likes them), she cuts back on
spending to the point that she doesn't have to make extra money to keep up with
her spending or maintain a regular corporate job.
She
also just bore down and got to the writing. Using the template of The 90-Day Novel by Alan Watts, she wrote
until it was done, without big breaks in between. That strategy likely
resulted in the crispness of the Novella. Not a lot of spare words or stray storylines to distract the reader.
Getting it Done
Both
of these amazing writers had to cut other things out. There is no reward without sacrifice. They remained focused on their goal and
didn’t waver.
I
remember for one New Year’s resolution post, balance was my watchword. But I try to balance too many things and it
all gets out of whack. Sacrifice and
compromise are also two things that are essential in reaching goals, but they
are not the easiest in real life. As you can see from the above examples, you
really have to implement discipline, prioritize what is important to you, and
sacrifice some of those things that fall to the bottom of that list.
Here’s
hoping the rest of us wannabe published writers have a success story to tell
one day!
Keep
on writing on…
Afterthought: Sandra even acknowledged us in her novella with this:
My former writing group members: Ariel Balevi, Carrie Oreskovich, Hardish Dhaliwal, and original member, Susan Regular. The story has changed since we first met as a group, but I finally finished it. And as we promised to include each other in our acknowledgments if we ever published our books—consider yourselves acknowledged!
Comments
Although you think my book is perfect (hooray!), I most certainly am not. I'm focused half the time, unfocused the other half. Eventually, I get something out of it because I keep going.
I look forward to reading your book. It's just a matter of time.