National
Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) is over. Time to put the computer down and stop
typing! For now at least. I completed my eBook by November 27 and had three
days to take a break and just glance over my hard work and it was hard work! I
have to be honest, I didn’t think that I was going to complete it after a
really difficult week a couple of weeks ago. How did you do? Did you get to the
end?
Don’t Publish Yet!
You may
think that your novel is all finished and ready to be published but it really
isn’t! Remember the whole just write and don’t edit? I admit, I did some
editing along the way – mainly the last three days when I’d finished – but mine
definitely isn’t ready to put up yet. I have at least two more rounds of
editing to do before it is anywhere near ready.
The problem
with trying to write so much in a short space of time is that most of it will
not make sense and will be complete rubbish! If you send your novel off to a
publisher now, it will be sent back with a lot of work needing to be done. So
save your time and look at editing it now.
Take Some Time Away
Because you
have been staring at the same piece of text for the past month, it is best to
step away from the computer and leave it to sit for a while. Start working on
another novel – some people get ideas while writing – or do something else for
a few days, weeks and, for some, months! I’ve just got my Open University
materials for my next law degree, so I’m going to look through them for the
next few weeks, possibly into the New Year, before I touch my eBook so that I
have a completely free mind on the text included.
Don’t Be Afraid to Erase
Before
editing, read through the novel in full. Never be afraid to erase the rubbish
from it – you may find that you cut thousands of words out because of this. If
you find work that you could adapt, highlight it and go back to it after
reading the novel. I use a yellow highlighter for the work that I can adapt or
may be able to adapt, a blue for the areas that I am unsure about and a red for
the areas that can definitely be erased. It lets me go through the piece first
before making any edits at all.
Change the Ending
Did you
abruptly end the novel? Many people do because they realise the month is coming
to an end and they need to prove they have completed the challenge. It doesn’t
matter as you can go back and edit accordingly. Make changes to fit the way
that you actually wanted to end the novel or make some changes in the run up so
that the current ending fits – it is completely up to you. An abrupt ending may
work if you decide to create a sequel to the piece.
My one
important tip is to let it stew for some time, especially if you have written a
fictional novel. This will give you the chance to step away from the world you
have created and then go back in to remove the bad and adapt the not so bad
areas. You may find that the whole novel changes but at least you can say you
completed NaNoWriMo.
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