Showing posts with label Writing tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing tips. Show all posts

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Day Twenty-Two Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 22: It’s Thanksgiving Day. Maybe you hadn’t planned to write today. But just think: after the big meal, most folks are either going to be asleep or watching a football game or three. Bring your laptop or notepad into the TV room, and write while the game is going on. If you miss a great play, you’ll see it again on the replays or the eleven o’clock news. Postpone your nap for thirty minutes. Get the words done, and then the rest of the day is yours.
Happy writing,
Donna

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Day Twenty-One Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 21: Falling behind? Look at your schedule for ways to increase the time available. Maybe you need to write on a day you hadn’t planned. Spending a lot of time with the kids at the pool or football or other sports? Even if you can’t type on a laptop, you can write the story longhand. Look for reasons to succeed, not reasons to fail.
Happy writing,
Donna

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Day Twenty Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 20: You should be past 30,000 words now. If not, you’ll need to adjust your daily word count so you can meet your 50,000 word goal within the next ten days. That’s okay. I once started NaNoWriMo on the 11th of November and had my 50,000 words by the end of the day on the 30th. My word count was like 4500 a day, and I didn’t write on Sundays at that time.
Happy writing,
Donna

Monday, November 19, 2012

Day Nineteen Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 19: Feel like you’re running out of words? Maybe you are. Just as an athlete has to refuel when in training and competition, a writer needs to refuel the words. Take an extra 15 minutes today and read some of that novel you’ve had at your bedside all month and been too tired to read. Read a newspaper. Take a glance at some research books on your bookshelf. But just 15 minutes. Any more than that and you’ll get so involved you won’t have time to write. Now go and write those words.
Happy Writing,
Donna

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Day Eighteen Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 18: Today I give you permission to read your first chapter, but you must keep your hands in your pockets while you do that, because you aren’t allowed to change even word one. But I want to remind yourself of the excitement you first had when you started writing this story. Then write new words.
Happy writing,
Donna

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Day Seventeen Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 17: Take a few minutes today to jot down some of your main characters’ history. Where they were born, what they liked in school, when they gave their first boy-girl kiss, who broke their heart. All the good stuff that will never make it in your book but is important for you to know. And then write those 1666 words.
Happy writing,
Donna

Friday, November 16, 2012

Day Sixteen Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 16: Find somewhere different to write today, just to break the monotony. Go to the library, a coffee shop, the bus station, a park. If you’ve been writing in your bedroom, write in the living room. Sit in the hallway of your apartment building.
Happy writing,
Donna

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Day Fifteen Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 15: Staying the course can be easy at first and then other things call for your attention, like laundry, cleaning, friends who miss you, family who want to take a picture of you because they forget what you look like. Ignore them all while you’re writing, but know that this month will soon be over and you’ll return to your regular life, so be nice to them. Smile when they stick their head in your writing area.
Happy writing,
Donna

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Day Fourteen Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 14: End of week two. Halfway there!  Take a moment to tweak your plotline a little. For you pantsers—those who don’t outline but write by the seat of their pants—revel in the progress you’re making while the outliners tweak.
Happy writing,
Donna

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Day Thirteen Writing Challenge

Dear Readers,

Today is day thirteen in our writing challenge.

November 13: As you bring your characters through one disaster after another, be sure to show us how the character is growing. What the character once thought was their goal may be changing now as the character changes. So in our romance, perhaps the heroine wanted to get married because all her friends are getting married and she feels left out. However, as she goes through the struggle to meet a man, perhaps she realizes that marriage is not going to make her feel like she belongs unless she does belong. So, she needs to undergo some changes within herself if she’s going to accomplish her goals.

Happy writing,

Donna

Monday, November 12, 2012

Day Twelve Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 12: Today you may well pass 20,000 words. You’re 40% of the way there. What else can you throw at your characters to create tension between them and within themselves? I’ve heard this process described as: get your character up a tree, out on a limb, then saw off the limb. Timber!
Happy writing,
Donna

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Day Eleven Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 11: Okay, so technically today is a holiday. Take a few minutes to thank a veteran and remember those who have given their lives for our country. Then get on with the writing.
Happy Writing,
Donna

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Writing Challenge Day Ten


Dear Readers,
November 10: Today should take you to about 17,000 words. That’s a huge milestone. If you hadn’t committed to NaNoWriMo, you’d have probably spent three months getting this far. Give yourself a pat on the back—after you meet your word count for the day.
Happy writing,
Donna

Friday, November 9, 2012

Writing Challenge Day Nine


Dear Readers,
November 9: By now you should be getting ready for another incident that pushes your hero/heroine forward in the quest to accomplish their goal. Let’s say you’re writing a romance, and the first incident was the hero and heroine meet and she overhears him ridiculing her best friend. She confronts him, tells him what a jerk he is, and huffs off. Since then, all he can think about is this spirited woman who’ll have nothing to do with him, and all she thinks about is the way his eyes captivated her. Your second incident could be she meets her brother and kisses him on the cheek, and our hero sees this and thinks they are a couple. He huffs off and she doesn’t know why.
Happy writing,
Donna

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Day Eight Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 8: So take a deep breath and look over the past week. What has worked for you? What hasn’t worked? Amplify what worked and toss out what didn’t work. Perhaps you’ve written yourself into a corner? Don’t worry. Make a note to yourself to go back and fix that later, and keep going from here.
Happy writing,
Donna

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Not Just the Facts, Ma'am or Sir


Hi,

I am featured on ACFW Colorado's site today.


Not so very long ago, I didn’t think I could write historical fiction. My excuse? I didn’t know enough ‘history’ to write a story set in bygone times.
Then I saw a photo in the newspaper of the police officer who accompanied Lee Harvey Oswald from the courtroom when Jack Ruby shot him.
And I was hooked.

Click here to read more.

I list several tips on how to write historical fiction.

Hope it gives my fellow writers some ideas for their own writing journey.


Donna

Day Seven Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 7: Okay, so you’re ready to pull your hair out by the roots. No matter. You’re settling into a routine of thinking about your story and your characters. Even if you’re not actually typing words, you are actually writing. The more you think about your story, the easier you’ll find the writing will be when you do sit down.
Happy writing,
Donna

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Day Six Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 6: Nearing the end of week one, and you’re doing great. Falling behind? No matter. Squeeze a few extra minutes out of your day. Get up a few minutes early. Write on your lunch break. Delay turning on the television for thirty minutes. Stay up until you finish this chapter.
Happy writing,
Donna

Monday, November 5, 2012

Day Five Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 5: As you arrive at the point where you not only dangle the goal but actually slap your character up the side of his/her face to get their attention, get ready for them to try to convince you to give up this foolish notion of telling their story. They will try, but you will persevere.
Happy writing,
Donna

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Day Four Writing Challenge


Dear Readers,
November 4: Regardless of which genre you’re writing, you want to build some tension in the story. Tension is not just people shouting at each other, or people getting shot at. Tension happens when your characters are not getting what they want. Figure out what the character wants then dangle that goal on a stick in front of them, just out of reach.
Happy writing,
Donna