At least I am making a go of it. I’ve tried starting books before, but this is the first time I have ever really felt a connection to a story and been excited about the time I have set aside for writing each night. So I think that there is a good chance I will be able to finish this one.
I’m still revising my NaNoWriMo from 2004. I doubt that I will try to get it published, however, since the situations are close enough to what I have experienced since that is easiest to write, it would be very easy for people to assume that I have the attitudes and issues of the protagonist (is there a term for the opposite of a Mary Sue?)
I’ve been working on it for a year now and I’m about 3/4 of the way through the first draft. It’s huge-- I probably have about 700 pages already. In the last few months I’ve hit sort of a lull. There are some things that need to be redone and I’m not quite sure how to go about it. Since I’m not working on a deadline, I’m waiting for inspiration to strike rather than “forcing” it.
Whether I ever get it published or not, I’m still pretty proud of it.
I’ve “started” two, one a treatise on the Bible as a tribal myth, the other a novel. I have a couple of characters for my novel and a situation I’ve gotten my hero into that I can’t yet figure a way out of. But considering that both of these “works” have been sitting on my computer for several years with a paragraph or two attached every so often, I wouldn’t expect to see them published in my lifetime . . . unless I live to be about 236.
If you’re lazy and you know it. . . just sit there.
I am. I’m about 3/4ths done a young adult novel, and I’ve recently started one for adults…because I deal with writer’s block by starting new projects. I’ve written other novels, but haven’t published them. These, on the other hand, I am still hopeful about
I’ve written six, varying in length from 150 pages up to nearly 700, all set in the Shadowrun RPG world. All of them are posted on my website. I’ve had some fiction published in official Shadowrun stuff (the opening story in the Shadowrun 4 core rulebook is mine, and I wrote the first full-length published SR 4 adventure) and I’m hoping very strongly that I’ll get to write an “official” SR novel one of these days.
Two finished manuscripts, third one needs top-to-bottom rewrite, plus blockbuster masterpiece in outline and sketch form. I don’t actually hope to ever get anything published, but it’s cheaper getting rejection letters to paper the walls with than to buy paint. And it keeps me occupied on those cold, cold nights when I say something really stupid to the little woman.
Not a novelist, but I’ve published one and have one more (plus a shorter booklet) currently at the printers. The first one is on bird conservation in Panama, the second is a guide for birdwatchers visiting the country.
Just finished the first draft of my sixth (how did that happen!) book, to be published in aught-seven, and am trying to lay the groundwork for the next.
My GQ question today was concerning my <counts on fingers> sixth book. I have a seventh one in first draft, and an eighth that’s just a synopsis. I’m rewriting the last third of that sixth book because an agent said she’d look at it again if I made some suggested changes.