Tag Archives | How do I Fast Draft?

Taking The Next Step: Fast Drafting

As a newbie writer, I completed my first Fast Draft. I was elated.  I even did the happy dance.  I couldn’t believe just how much I learned and of course, I had to share. Plot And Plot Some More!  For me, it was truly a timesaver and stress reliever to have the story plotted ahead of time.  I was really blessed; my friends helped brainstorm the story.  Then I used The Book Buddy to get my thoughts down.  It allowed me to have all the main points of the plot and the character development done before I sat down to write.  It cut down on some of the “blank-screen-staring” that so many writers go through.   At the same time, it still allowed me the freedom to change several scenes and […]

Read the Rest
Continue Reading Comments { 1 }

The Fast Draft – Should you or shouldn’t you?

I’m fast drafting a novel right now. Last night, after dinking around all day, I told myself to “get to it” and blasted out 2000 words in an hour. Give or take a minute or two. I’m near the end of a book so I know a bit of what’s going on. I have a feel for the characters and the story. Those random conversations characters have together started running randomly through my head a few weeks ago. Next week, I’ll end this fast draft and start rewriting. Most of the beginning of the story will change, I already know. The middle needs a lot of tweaking. With that in mind, I hope my ending is the most stable part of this fast, first draft. I’ll have things at the […]

Read the Rest
Continue Reading Comments { 1 }

Finish the Race Well

At My Book Therapy we kicked off NaNoWriMo on the Monday night chat with advice from Beth Vogts. Susan Warren ended the evening with cyber karaoke of Stand By Me. I love these classic words, “I won’t be afraid, no I won’t be afraid.” Part of writing a novel, whether in a month or in a year, is overcoming fear. Insecurities surface. Life interrupts and demands our attention. Two pages into our opening paragraph we discover we’ve already written every great idea we had about the book and now we’ve no place to go! The temptation is to quit. So we never start at all.  As you attempt NaNoWriMo, keep these things in mind. 1. Writing is hard work. Period. Forget what everyone else is doing, how fast they are […]

Read the Rest
Continue Reading Comments { 0 }
MBT Menu