631 words in 30 minutes, 1250 WPH. 2404 so far today. Taking a break to make dinner. #amwriting
— Joe Vasicek (@onelowerlight) January 8, 2016
#amwriting through a rough spot. 216 words in 30 minutes, only 400 WPH. Hopefully next session is better.
— Joe Vasicek (@onelowerlight) January 11, 2016
First session of the day: 432 words in 30 minutes, 900 WPH. The rough spot has been passed! #amwriting
— Joe Vasicek (@onelowerlight) January 12, 2016
First session of the day: 586 words in 25 minutes, 1400 WPH. Definitely through that rough patch! #amwriting
— Joe Vasicek (@onelowerlight) January 13, 2016
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about how I plan to achieve my writing goal of hitting 10k words of fiction in a single day. The steps I laid out to getting there were:
- Write first thing every day.
- Write in timed, focused sessions.
- Strive to achieve 2k words per hour.
- Strive to hit at least 6 writing sessions.
- Pre-write each day for the next day.
I’m happy to report that the writing has been coming along very well! Ever since I started timing my sessions and keeping track of how much and how fast I write, it’s been as if someone turned on a switch inside my brain. The words are flowing, the story is coming along very well, and I’m a lot happier and more productive than I was only a month ago.
The main thing that does it is, ironically, forcing myself to stop every half hour or so. When I wake up in the morning and thing of how much I want to write that day, it can be a little daunting. By writing in short bursts, it helps to break the big goal down into parts. When you think too much about all the writing you want to achieve, it’s very easy to get caught up in the procrastination trap. But when you think of it as just a half-hour session of 400-600 words, it seems a lot more doable. And it is!
So things are coming along very well with Gunslinger to the Stars. My goal is to finish the first draft by February 6th and send it out to my first readers shortly thereafter. If things keep going the way they have been, I may actually finish it sooner.
As for reaching 10k words, I’m still a ways off but headed in the right direction. For now, I’m laying the foundation for it: building good habits and hitting a consistent stride. Once I’ve got that laid out, I’ll start to stretch myself, pushing the limits further and further until I’m ready to make the final approach to the summit. No sense in pushing too hard and burning out along the way.
In other news, I’ve sent Captives in Obscurity (Sons of the Starfarers: Book V) off to my editor, and should be getting it back in early February. The cover art should be ready around the same time. If all goes well, the book should be up for pre-order by the end of February, with a release date of May 15th.
I’m not sure when Patriots in Retreat (Book VI) will come out, since I’m still writing it, but as of right now I’m tentatively planning for a release sometime in August. After I’ve finished with Gunslinger to the Stars, I’ll move on to Patriots and see if I can’t knock that out before the end of February. If so, I might actually push the release date up to July.
As for other WIPs I intend to tackle, The Sword Keeper and Edenfall are on the top of the list. The free month for Genesis Earth went a lot better than I had expected, leading me to believe that there’s enough potential to make finishing the trilogy worthwhile. Besides, Edenfall is already plotted out, so if I can keep up the 10k pace it should be a cinch to write. Same with The Sword Keeper.
That just about does it for this post. I intended to write another Self-Sufficient Writer post responding to some of the craziness going on in the world right now, but that will have to hold off until next week. I’ve also got another trope post planned for Monday, so that should be interesting.
In the meantime, I’ll leave you with this video about how many twinkies it would take to power the Death Star. Take care!
Your writing goals really inspire me. I’m trying to do a similar thing in music. It took me a while to settle on a metric. Bars don’t represent equal time. A single bar could last from half a second to 5 or 6 seconds, so 30 bars one day probably doesn’t represent the same duration of music as written a another day. But at least bars line up fairly well with musical phrases. I know if I write 8 bars, I’ve written 1-2 phrases. I have much less an idea how many pleases a minute represents.
Neither option is perfect but I decided to track bars, since I have a better sense of what that metric entails. Right now I’m just in the “gathering data so I can set expectations” phase. Next step will be trying to meet a stretch goal like you’re doing.
So that’s what’s up for my work.
Good luck achieving the writing speed you’re after!
Hey Joseph! Good to hear from you. And yes, it’s amazing how much creativity can grow once it’s been structured. Specific, measurable goals can seem rigid and confining, but ironically they can also be incredibly liberating when they’re implemented right. Best of luck!