Writing
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(This is a long post that I recently put on Facebook. I thought it might be of interest to this group.) (It really is long.) (But it's about a very long book, so there's some kind of synchrony there.)
Forty or more years ago, I tried to write a short autobiographical novel stemming from what was then a fairly recent episode in my life. I didn't get far with the book, partly because I didn't have the hang of writing mainstream fiction and partly because writing about something that was still raw turned out to be far more emotionally difficult than I had expected. (I had thought that writing the story would be therapeutic. It wasn't.) It also didn't feel like a novel--more like a fictionalized diary entry.
I put it aside and went back to genre fiction. But I kept coming back to that novel, and also fiddling with some other autobiographical fiction. At some point, I merged all the autobiographical stuff together, and the result was something very novel like but also very incomplete and uneven -- different parts that didn't go together well. Dropped it again. Came back to it later. Rinse and repeat.
With each cycle, it got bigger and better but still very emotionally stressful to work on. Also with each cycle, the plot extended more into the past and the future, and the book spread sideways in the sense of adding more secondary characters. The parts that, at the start, had been set in the near future were now set in the recent past. Oops. The near future I had envisioned didn't happen, requiring plot revisions. On and on it went.
I kept putting the novel, now called CHAINS, aside in favor of plot-driven novels I could actually finish in a reasonable amount of time. But I always felt guilty, and increasingly silly and annoyed with myself. CHAINS kept poking at me.
When I started CHAINS, I was in early middle age or late whatever comes right before middle age. Now I'm into old age, and I feel really silly that I haven't finished the book. Each year, I've told myself that I'd have it done by my birthday, which is in October, or at least by the end of the year. Each year, I failed to do that.
On the bright side, CHAINS has become not only much bigger than I originally intended but also much more serious, deeper, and layered than it was at the start. Or so it seems to me, anyway.
Well, my birthday is less than a week away, and CHAINS most definitely won't be done by then. It probably won't be done by the end of this year, either, but after working at the book more steadily this year than I have in years, I'm finally hopeful that it will at least be a real first draft by the end of the year. It has reached the point that it reads like a novel, albeit with gaps and inconsistencies, instead of like of a collection of stuff that doesn't fit together.
That was anticlimactic, wasn't it? Perhaps I shouldn't have posted anything until I had a finalish first draft. But I didn't want to wait.
At this point, the ms. is over 230,000 words. It could end up around 250-260,000 words. That's more than twice as long as anything I've written before. It will quite literally be my magnum opus.

hunter
(40,024 posts)... but it did put food on our table.
She could take a rat's nest of notes written on random scraps of paper and recorded on cassette tapes, all stuffed in a banker's box, and turn it into a coherent book.
And she was damned discrete about it too.
Usually it wasn't the authors themselves who paid her.
I'll confess she did the same with a few of my high school term papers, but those were all my own research, nothing more, nothing less. She used to hear me typing late into the night, tap...tap tap...tappitytappity, tap, tap, tap... and I think it would keep her awake making her more and more agitated until she couldn't stand it any more. Then she'd storm in, push me aside, read through my semi-final draft of chicken scratches, hammer out the paper in a couple of minutes, and go back to bed, all without a word.
In college my poor teachers had to suffer the chicken scratches. On exams I'd fill three blue books for every blue book my classmates required. Word processing on the university computers, namely vi, saved my ass.
My paternal grandfather wrote a novel and I have a section of it my mom edited, including all the edits my grandfather crossed out in anger. He never let my mom see any part of it again. The novel was never published. My mom's edit is good. If he'd been able to work with her something might have come of it.
PATRICK
(12,309 posts)at that semi-final stage, that last stage to the peak of Everest. It would be very hard, or a long time, to get that polished up. Good luck. At least you have those other books behind you. Some books like those I have been writing thirty or forty years and some new idea suddenly sidetracks me.
DavidDvorkin
(20,376 posts)Most of the mountain is behind me, but those few hundred feet are a killer.
I've been studiously igorning the shiny new ideas that keep popping into my head. I do write them down for possible future use, but I have to get the big one done.