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B. D. McLaughlin Online

About

B. D. McLaughlin is a published technical author, unpublished fiction author (so far), and a host of other interesting things: you'll find out about most of them here.

It’s easy. Start out by writing a 10,600 word story. Then edit yourself without mercy.

Seriously, I participated in thie NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) “spring training”. Here’s the deal. In November, all sorts of writers join up and commit to write a 50,000 word novel (which is a novella, really). Over at the Relief Writer’s Network, some folks were doing a little practice, and decided to write a 10,000 word story in a week. I thought it would be interesting and fun, and good self-discipline.

Well, I spent the first half of the week writing down ideas I had for a novel (silly me). About Thursday, I realized I hated the idea of not completing something I signed up for. So I cranked out 10,000 words in three days (which was quite satisfying). This week was provided for editing. After printing my story and being ruthless and unforgiving, I cut 10,600 words down to 7,100 (I’ve got a final pass still to go). It was liberating, amazing, and a huge step forward in my writing.

So that’s it. To get a good story, write something about 120% longer, and then edit like you should anyway. :-) I’m sure that others don’t need that process, but it helped me tremendously.

Once the story’s done, I’ll be sure to post it here somewhere.

-Brett

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