Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Novelist at Work


My new novel has taken up most of my time now, and I’m called to duty.

Writing a novel, to me, is not only more time consuming than blogging, it also burns a lot more brain cells. Blogging is closer to writing a diary. You blog about your personal thoughts, feelings, experiences and observations of life. You can express them in any free form that serves you best; but once you’re done writing a post, that’s it. You are done. Not with writing a novel. You’ll never get done writing it till you write THE END. And that can be many, many moons away.

So here I am, a novelist at work, who enjoys each creative moment to the fullest, just for the sheer joy of writing. In fact, I never care much for what’s called ‘word count’ or ‘quota’ for each day’s writing progress. Many writers do that because they want to enforce a rule on themselves, which they call discipline. I for one believe in discipline only when it means a self-imposed measure to get the work done. So I’m true to that. I write every day. Yet I don’t care how much I can write. I ask myself, ‘Can you write a thousand words each day and make it your daily writing quota?” I say, yes. You can write a thousand or two thousand words a day, if you must. Only to see that you scrap two-thirds of them the next day when you reread them. No, you can’t force yourself to write when you’ve run out of juice. So, just write!

Another thing is I read a lot between writing. Reading while you’re at work on a novel recharges your battery every day. So I read voraciously while I work on a novel. This time around I will be blogging occasionally whenever my brain, between writing my novel, isn’t so depleted with ideas.

So, I’ll send up a smoke signal now and then—not a SOS, but more like a campfire smoke: Time for a campfire story.

5 comments:

  1. I've tried to write many novels – all science fiction. They never really went anywhere.

    This blogging thing was supposed to be about my fiction. Now it's what I write.

    Good journey to you, on your latest novel, Khanh.

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  2. Thanks, Sang, for dropping by. When you've found your voice in the genre that best suits it, don't look back. And your writing is crisp, refreshing.

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  3. Reading is good! I thought I already left a comment on this post???

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  4. Yay. Novel uses a different set of skills. Blogging is actually akin to conversation. Things just flow.
    Anyway, good luck with it. Surface from time to time!

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  5. Oh, by the way. I'm sending over a young man who wants to write a book. I think he needs to just start, rather than worrying about hiring a co-author. I think he'll get a lot out of reading this post.

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