My writing efforts in June.

graph of words written per month this yearI wrote more words of my novel in June than May, even though I started using Facebook again. I had a rule of not logging on to Facebook until I had written at least 500 words. So, on some days, I did not even log on to it. However, I developed the habit of stopping writing not long after I hit the 500-word mark so that I could play on Facebook. On 26 days during the month, I achieved my goal of 500 words; only on two days did I do more than 600 words. My best day was 1089 words. I wrote 15,488 words for the month—an average of 516 words a day.

I have written about 102,000 words of the novel and am about halfway through the fifth and final part. I had hoped to have finished the first draft by now, but I have decided to expand the final part. The decision to do that came about because previously I have read novels with characters on a physical journey arriving at their destination and then the novel suddenly ends, with a disappointed me wanting them to explore their destination more thoroughly. So, I have decided to satisfy a reader like me by doing the exploring.

I had pictured the novel as a stand-alone, but ideas for a sequel set 20 years later keep popping into my head, so there will be a sequel. But first, I have to re-draft this manuscript. Before that, I want to write a short story for a Christmas anthology that is being put together by one of my writing groups. A first draft is required by the end of August. Now, I just have to come up with an idea.

Critiquing.

Once again, I critiqued a story a week for critters.org during June. I read a story from a writer on the Australian Writers Forum, intending to critique it, when technology problems intervened: my internet was slowing down and dropping out. I am still unsure what caused the issue, even though I was reasonably systematic about trying to fix it. First, I replaced the splitter, which didn’t work, and then I replaced the long telephone cable with a shorter one, but the web dropped out just after I connected it. Then I bought a new top-of-the-range router/wifi thingy, as my router was about seven years old and the wifi about five. But the new router/wifi would not even connect to Westnet/iinet, my ISP.  I rang them and spent two hours on the phone; it still didn’t work. They said they would try a few things and asked me to keep my old router and wifi connected. They said they would ring back in two hours or so. Two and a half hours later, I got impatient and reconnected to the new router/wifi. It worked. Five days later, it has not dropped out and is slightly faster than before it slowed. iinet did ring back the next day, 26 hours later. They said they had fiddled with things, but I am none the wiser about whether my new router/wifi is more stable or something they did made my connection more stable.

Reading.

I did not do much reading during June as I was too tired at night. Fortunately, that tiredness has receded in the past week or so; I have no idea why. I am about two-thirds of the way through Amnesia, Peter Carey’s very enjoyable romp through 20th-century Australian politics and history. Its narrator is a very committed writer who is using an old portable typewriter to type even though he burnt his fingers trying to retrieve a manuscript thrown into a fire by its pissed-off subject.

Hopefully, some of his commitment will rub off on me, enabling me to finish the first draft of my current manuscript in July.

One Response

  1. That's dedication and discipline. Well done. I'm a little green.I hope you get that first draft done and then get onto the editing part.It's very satisfying to finally get to the point where 'you're done' though I still give older novels a new doing over now and then so perhaps they re never really done.be great to see how you go with publishers etc. Be nice if someone I knew managed to crack those bastards.Congrats mate.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Share the Post:

© Copyright Graham Clements 2024