You can pick this kit up in the official store, and I'd highly recommend it if only for the little gold stars and 'Novelist!' badge it comes with! For those who didn't buy it, I thought I'd share the handy little daily tips it contains. They have helped me, and hopefully they will help you too.
***
Day 1: The first day. A blank page. And a slight panic about starting the book of on the right foot. But you know what? There are no wrong feet. Take a tip from freewheeling graphic design guru Bruce Mau on the subject of beginnings: "Not knowing where to begin is a common form of paralysis. Begin anywhere."
***
Day 2: Writing a novel is like working with clay. You first create a rough shape, then massage that shape into something beautiful, such as an ashtray or a fearsome army of worms. Unlike potters, though, who can simply buy clay at the art supply store, novelists have to pull off the supernatural feat of creating their clay with their minds. It's an amazing accomplishment, really, and it's also why postponing judgment of your work until the end of your first draft is so important. What you started producing yesterday is novelling clay - valuable, essential, and variably lumpy. It's beauty will grow as you work it.
***
Day 3: One o my avorite books is called Rules of Thumb 2. Te volume oers thousands of guidelines for any number of essential day-to-day activities, such as properly estimating a submerged crocodiles length and surviving a pistol duel. The dueling int was submitted by historian Jim Barber, wo writes: "When dueling with firearms, always aim lower tan your opponent's vital area- to pierce the heart, aim at the knees." This is something you'll do well to keep in mind in these early days of Week One.
Abandon the stultifying notion of brilliance and aim instead for the low mark of completion. It'll take the pressure off of you, which will allow your writing to become looser and more ambitious, paradoxically raising the quality of your book. It's Barber's law: Aiming low is the best way to suceed.
----------




7,645 / 50,000
Nov 2, 2009 - 23 41
Err... remind me to spell check these tomorrow! <_<
7,645 / 50,000
Nov 3, 2009 - 23 50
Day Four:
Demographers have been noting the decreasing size of families in industrialised nations for decades. They pin it on everything from rising education rates among women to the decrease in family farming. But I know the real culprit: With a skyrocketing number of baby names to pick from, would-be parents avoid having children because they can't decide what to name the things.
As you birth your cast of characters this week, you can reduce your naming stress by simply borrowing monikers from the Great Library of Character Names. It's published annually by your phone company; look for the large white book on your shelf next to the Yellow Pages.
7,645 / 50,000
Nov 4, 2009 - 23 52
Day 5 - Borrow Mercilessly:
One of the best ways to learn to do something is to emulate those whose work you admire.
The treat (and task) for today is to drop by the bookstore and pick up a novel by an author whose voice you've always loved. Read the first few pages of your purchase before you start writing, and pick out the methods the writer uses to create the mood you find so appealing.
Is it the folksy vocabulary and informal writing style? The electric buzz of clipped, declarative sentences? Or the poetric, lyrical style of flowing sentences and sensual adjectives? Whatever it is, borrow the elements you love and use them thoroughout today's writing session.
7,645 / 50,000
Nov 5, 2009 - 23 45
Day Six - Go Wild!
Weird fact: Before Jerry Springer launched his brawling freak show on daytime TV, he was a serious progressive politician and highly respected mayor of Cincinnati. In his heyday, many Ohioans even saw him as a likely candidate for the U.S. presidency. As you begin worrying that you might be pushing the bounds of believability for some of your characters, remember Jerry and the countless other real-life stories you've heard that make the wildest fiction pale by compariosn.
Don't be afraid to leverage the power of unlikely coincidence and unbelievable occurences. Nothing could be more true to life.
7,645 / 50,000
Nov 7, 2009 - 04 13
Day 7 - Skeletons in the Closet
So many of the things we take as a given in everyday life were actually the result of a bitter struggle between two opposing forces. Take, for example, the custom of saying "Hello?" when answering the phone. It seems like a natural extension of a face-to-face conversation, right? If telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell had had his way, though, we'd all be saying "Ahoy, ahoy" when our cell phone rings. He thought that the nautical salutation was more fitting, and he was disgruntled that the plainer "Hello" suggested by inventor Thomas Edison caught on instead.
Today, use part of your writing session to explore a given about your protagonist's life or personality and reveal one of the suprising struggles that brought him or her to their current state.