Sprezzatura

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Ann Nichols

Ann Nichols
Location
East Lansing, Michigan,
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I write, I read, I clean up after people and I worry about things. I have a chronic insufficiency of ironic detachment. My birthday isn't really December 31; it's March 22 but it won't let me change it.

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Salon.com
NOVEMBER 18, 2011 9:34AM

The NaNoWriMo Shuffle

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This is not my first time at the rodeo. On my computer and in manuscript form is the spent jet trash of attempted novels: The Restaurant Book, The Family in Maine Book, The Girl Who Works at the Convenience Store and Falls in Love with the Suave Rug Cleaner Book. Their shapes are oddly twisted by the intense heat of re-entry into this atmosphere, the one in which I finally throw up my hands and abandon them as “bad,” and “impossible.” It’s an odd pastime, spending hours creating things that soon depress, frustrate and disappoint me, but I had my reasons. It’s a heady feeling to toss my head and say “I’m writing a novel,” but quite another to study the cold, hard facts about the publishing industry, and accept the facts. Unless one is already famous, or stars on a reality TV show…one is well and totally screwed.

It was, and is, much easier for me to sit down and write an essay about something that bursts in my brain like some topical supernova, making me twitch, and burn, and feel that if I do not write thatveryminute I will probably die. I love that feeling of pouring the words out through my fingers. The beauty of Open Salon, and blogging in general is that there is immediate publication, immediate response, and immediate gratification – the icy solitariness of writing is balanced by the enveloping warmth of readers, connection, and (if I’m lucky) approval. It’s hard to turn away from that; it’s kind of how I imagine a crack addict feels.

After the 500 attempts at writing a novel, I happened into the world of current, Young Adult fiction. I started reading it, both the superlative and the appalling, and I knew I had found my thing. I really am fifteen, in many ways; I can still, for better or worse, tap into the moodiness, romanticism and isolation of adolescence. So I started writing a YA book, and two days later, as if by Cosmic Delivery, I read that it was the first day of NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) in which one commits to write a 50,000 word novel during the month of November. That’s a daily commitment of about 1667 words, and people all over the country play along, participate in writing groups, blog about it, and generally dig in. The completion of 50,000 words, verifiable on the project’s website, is called “winning.” I was fairly skeptical about that denomination; to me, “winning” means that you write a really great book and someone wants to pay you money for it.  Writing 50,000 words of unmitigated swill does not make one a “winner,” or, for that matter, a “writer.” It merely indicates the capacity to type.

I explored the local NaNoWriMo activities, but frankly I would rather chew gum snatched from the underside of theater seats than participate in a “Write In” at a coffee shop. I also shied away from the message boards, “inspirational” posts from established writers, and other bells and whistles. I decided that I would use the NaNoWriMo structure to keep myself on track, and that at the end of the month I would have, not a submittable manuscript, but, as my friend Annie says, “50,000 words in my back pocket.” It would make me write on days when I didn’t feel like it, and it would give me a little frisson of happiness to update my word count and see the bar graph continue its upward climb.

In a shocking turn of events, the same things that had bedeviled me on previous attempts continued to bedevil me. I am good at character stuff, and dialogue, but wretched at plotting. Mostly, it’s because I don’t really care. I am a huge fan of books, movies and TV shows that are character-driven, and I may be one of the only people who actually likes “My Dinner with Andre.” The problem is that in a book for young people, something has to happen every now and then. I have now read enough YA fiction to know that whether a book is an exquisitely wrought story, or a charnel house where words go to die, there is always a plot to keep the young reader engaged. So I have to make things happen, pay attention to the laws of cause and effect, and keep characters doing something pretty much all the time. For me, it is the literary equivalent of learning, applying, and lecturing on the principals of quantum physics in front of an Honors Physics colloquium at M.I.T.. It also turns out that there are still days when I just don’t feel like it. Those are the kinds of days when, on previous attempts, I would have told myself I was “just going to take a break” for a day or two. The break would then have stretched into eternity.  

Yesterday I came across this blog post arguing that writers should not participate in NaNoWriMo.  I seriously considered the thesis that no decent novel could be written in a month, and that if a person really wants to write something worth reading, it takes as long as it takes. Then I thought about all of the writers I know who are religious about a daily writing schedule. It is their job, and while there may be times when they burn the midnight oil clothing their inspiration in words, there are other times, more times when they are uninspired, overtired, and struggling to put something on the page. Sometimes, they actually do have a deadline. It probably isn’t thirty days, but somewhere there is an agent, an editor, a publisher drumming fingers on desk and waiting for what they were promised.

There is value in balls out, burning inspiration, but for me, right now, the priceless commodity is discipline. Every day I struggle against the impulse to skip, or delay “doing my words” and write something else, or write nothing, or go back through what I’ve already written and hack savagely at its tender roots. Every single day. And so far, I have been able to make myself move forward, creating what may be an amorphous and un-publishable blob. Every day that I meet my goal signifies an investment, rather than a frittering of my creative capital, and gets me farther than I’ve ever gotten before. It may be an artificial motivation,  and I have many more months of editing and shaping ahead of me, but I will have gotten farther than I ever did before. To me, that’s “winning.”

 

 

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" And so far, I have been able to make myself move forward ":
Good for you, Ann. I'm taking this as my daily inspiration. And for tomorrow, and the next day...
**It's kind of like baking a cake for the very first time with no recipe. How much of this? How much of that? Flops. Throw it out. Start over. Learn. Change. Threaten bodily harm on all those around you. Taste. Spit. Force yourself to think it's good ... enough. Throw it out. Go back to the trashcan and taste it one more time. A little more that. Less of this. Finally realize that what it really needs is Bourbon. Lots of bourbon. Tada! Masterpiece.** I'm sure that's a quote from Hemingway.
Two things:

1. I, too, enjoy "My Dinner With Andre." Have you ever seen "Waiting for Guffman"? At the very end, in the epilogue, one of the main characters is selling "My Dinner With Andre" action figures. No one with whom I've watched "Guffman" got the joke . . .

2. Every day that I meet my goal signifies an investment, rather than a frittering of my creative capital, and gets me farther than I’ve ever gotten before. This is a brilliant concept. I am thinking of adopting it. After all, athletes train before competition . . . the training itself is an investment in the goal.
I is winning, Annie. The feeling I had when I finally finished my first novel nearly 20 years ago was an exhilaration comparable to precious few other accomplishments in my life. The novel is unpublishable (altho I haven't been back to read it since then) but what I learned about commitment and discipline, especially as it was completely self- imposed, gave me a sense akin to an Army recruit grunting thru basic training to emerge a fully qualified government-issue soldier. It's a metamorphosis that puts you on a higher step of self-determination, a confidence builder like no other.

And I'll let you in on a little secret: what you accomplish on paper might not be publishable as is, but more often than not pushing thru the obstacles and distractions to complete a book-length manuscript will yield some surprisingly good writing, the kind that comes from deeper within than stuff that's been carefully planned. I did learn to outline - something I'd always abhorred - during the writing of that first novel, but only as an act of desperation to keep the momentum going. I rarely followed or even looked at the outline, but it was a comforting safety net I knew would catch me if I ran out of gas and started plunging earthward - which happened a time or two.

Brava, Annie. My very best wishes ride with you on this journey.
Oops, left the "t" off there. Meant to say It is winning...
Irritated Mom's comment reminded me of a quote from Woody Allen from the new four-hour biography of him on PBS coming up soon. I heard a bit of it on NPR yesterday, I believe in Woody's voice, saying how writing something alone you persuade yourself you're creating a work of genius like no other and that when you finally have to expose it to others (movie script, I believe) you suddenly see all of the awfulnesses of it and will do anything - sell your mother to the Gypsies if need be - just to get the damned thing in a form that allows you to survive. I think Woody put it much more eloquently.
Winning indeed, Ann Nichols. Good for you! ~r
I have done this a few years back. It ended up badly, but I learned a lot about myself, my writing and I would do it again. I decided to go simple first, hence OS. Writing like everything is a discipline. I have to cultivate mine apparently. Good on you for this.
Oh, posted to face book.
#winning!

Just remember that most YA readers don't really need complexity of plot. Some kind of saving the day + some kind of finding a kindred spirit = success.

Of course if you wanted to knock out the next "His Dark Materials" trilogy, that would be cool. But really, those books follow my formula above, just in a very complex way.
What you have just described is the very essence and the beauty of NANOWRIMO.
Good on you, dear Ann.
I participate in NaNoWriMo every year and enjoy it each time. I do agree that a month really isn't enough time to write a novel as most of mine have taken about 7 to 8 months to 5 years to write. But there was one that I wrote in 3 days once as well.

For me, the month of November serves as an opportunity to get a novel started, and I'll usually go about 35,000 words before I know where the novel really needs to go, and sometimes I don't finish during that month. But I always have a good start to something I'll finish one day in the future, even if it doesn't end up happening in the month of November.
I know a few girls who fell in love with the Suave Rug Cleaner Book. It never ends well. Maybe once.

Handel wrote the music for "Messiah" in 24 days.
No great novel was written in 30 days, but the shells of many great novels probably were. Finishing the 50,000 words may be adequate for the contest, but I'm sure you'll want to go back and do extensive editing and make it infinitely better and quite readable.

Ann Nichols, YA writer. I had never considered that possibility, but it makes a lot of sense.
Please please please write "The Girl Who Works at the Convenience Store and Falls in Love with the Suave Rug Cleaner"! What a bodice ripper. I volunteer to illustrate the cover for you. The suave rug cleaner will look like Alan Rickman wearing a snug rug cleaner uniform ;-)
P.S. I too adore "My Dinner With Andre". Hmmm. Maybe we'll make Wallace Shawn the lusty rug cleaner man.
As a Successful Nanonovelist multiple times, I feel compelled to speak up on behalf of Nanowrimo.

Granted, 30 days is NOT enough to produce fiction that is ready to publish professionally. I would point out gently that in certain circumstances, 365 days isn't enough time to do that, either. But it IS a good way to make yourself sit down and get started on that rough draft if you've always wanted to try to write a novel but keep postponing even making an attempt. Everyone has to sit down and confront that white sheet of paper or blank computer screen that will become page 1 at some point. It's a good way to find out if you're really a writer at heart and enjoy the process of creating a story, or find out that really, you're not, and you can go on with your life having settled that question.

I've met my current writing friends through Nano. We enjoy writing together so much, we've been meeting every Thursday for four hours for the past five years. That also combats the isolation of writing as a profession. And I find it considerably better than chewing old gum found in questionable places.

To someone who doubts their ability to write anything, it makes them confront their "I think I can't" mindset, and hopefully blast it from existence. And if they reach the 50K goal, the satisfaction is very real. I contend that yes they HAVE won something by refusing to be limited by their fears. I don't care if it's not going to get a kick-ass review by Michiko Kakutani, it's still an accomplishment. Understand that I'm not saying they should take the raw material they've produced and try to get it published without a lot of editing and polishing first. They may not be a ''winner" in your view, but it's not my idea of a "loser" either. It's a thirty day experiment, and sometimes flinging caution to the winds is very freeing.

I'm with Natalie "Feel Free to write the worst shit in the world" Goldberg and Anne "Shitty First Drafts" Lammott. Sometimes, you have to lower your standards at first to get your imagination unfrozen. After you've got your first draft written and you have some raw material to work with is the time to get critical. And if you hate the book at the end of the month, there's no need to do anything more with it. And if you like the bones of the story you end up with, you'll have more than you had on October 31.
Keep at it. Write it in a month. You can always take more months to edit it. ;)

(btw, Mrs. P and I absolutely loved My Dinner with Andre and still watch it every once in a while. *Lots* happens in that movie--it's just all inside your head!)
I think you should stick to what makes you happy, even if it is like a crack addict's immediate hit when you get feedback. You will know when the right story is meant to be told. You do it here and you can do it elsewhere. I have faith in you as do many others on OS. Go Girl!
I think every little movement forward, every sentence, is "winning." Unless you go back and delete them, and the others that follow...but in the end that might be winning as well, just in slow motion!
I love My Dinner With Andre. I've never thought about it, but you stuck the tail on it when you say you are character driven. I have a passion for characters as well. Sometimes I watch just for the one character that fascinates, and when that happens I couldn't tell you the story at the end of the show, or movie, if you put old theater gum to my mouth. It's why I'm not a writer I suppose. Crafting plot, weaving a story in and out, back and forth....belays me. I will say, though, that the plot driven Nancy Drew and The Bobbsey Twins series made their way to the back hammock for a couple of summers. Nancy, Bert, and Nan weren't all that interesting, but the stories grabbed me at that age, so it seems your thinking is on the 'write' path -- discipline, discipline, discipline! Good Luck with that!!
So? Did you get your 50,000 words and your badge of courage? As it happens, NaNoWriMo last year was the way I stumbled into OS. My first three posts (unread, unrated) chronicled the experience "kvetching" all the way that I was going through the motions and notes for a story, not really writing at all. (And that was the truth, though I did log in my daily words -- as an exercise in despair.)

So I have an idea for a story -- but unlike you, I don't have the chops to tell the story, full blooded and full bodied. I'm a sprinter, not a marathoner, I guess.

Best wishes on your novel. I can tell from your posts over the past months that you've been developing the voice of a YA novel. And it's a lovely voice at that.
Epilogue: I finished on time, and just over 50,000 words, The book is not done, and I have a feeling I have a lot (!) of editing to do, but I'm pretty sure there will be a book. Thank you all, from the bottom of my heart, for reading this and caring whether or not I made it.