So you want to write a new novel this year?
I know the feeling. Life gets busy, and you just never find the right moment to begin that project you’ve been thinking about for months.
I’ve written before about how it’s possible to write a novel in a single month. I just did it, actually! My twentieth novel, a YA thriller called Fear of Water, I started on June 3, 2019, and finished on July 3, 2019. 31 days, a single month, to write 81,000 words.
I’ve always been attracted to writing novels really, really fast because novel writing takes up so much of my mind while I’m deep in the process that I actually find it helpful to reach THE END as soon as possible.
This isn’t always the case, however. Two summers ago I spent 10 long weeks writing a super intense thriller novel that nearly sent me into a depression by the end of the process because it was such a dark story, and spending week after week in that mindset was getting to me. Finally reaching the end of that particular book was like emerging back into sunlight!
So, yes, when the time is available, I prefer to write first drafts of novels really, really fast. Last December/January I wrote a 60,000-word middle grade novel in 24 days. In 2014 I wrote a 63,000-word MG novel in just 21 days, just three weeks! Still my all-time record.
But writing an entire novel in a month might feel too intimidating. Three months? Now that’s do-able!
The problem with writing books in just 30 or 31 days (or shorter) is that, yes, you need to have big chunks of the day available for you to write. That new novel I just wrote I spent on average three hours every day working on it. Some days I went as long as five hours.
And for most of us, that time just isn’t available. You might have an hour totally free to work on your novel. Maybe even two hours. But three or more? Forget about it!
So unless you’re really, really fast and know exactly what you want to do in your novel, you’re probably going to need more than a month.
It’s only July. There’s still lots of year left to go. If you want to complete a novel by December, take it from me: you can do it! You have no excuse to not complete your first draft by December. You know why?
Because you can write the first draft of your novel in three months time.
Three months can often be the perfect amount of time to write a novel. Three months is actually what Stephen King recommends as a solid span of time to write a novel in his craft book On Writing, and I agree that it’s a short enough time to keep you constantly focused on your book while also long enough to let you only write a little bit with each passing day.
Let’s do the math again, shall we? Let’s say you decide you’re going to write your novel in three months. Let’s keep the math easy and make that 90 days exactly. 90 days to write the first draft of your novel.
If you’re writing a young adult novel or an adult novel, you should aim for at minimum 70,000 words in your first draft if you can. 70,000 words is a fantastic word count goal if you’re just starting out!
If you want to reach 70,000 words in 90 days, that’s 777 words a day. Just 777 words! I’d bet if you could find just one hour a day to put all your focus on your drafting, you could probably reach that amount every day.
And what’s cool about that small amount is that you could always aim for 777 words… and then go longer! Aim for 777 words and if you really get going, maybe you’ll reach 1,000 words or more.
That happens to me all the time. I’ll aim for 2,000 words and end up writing 2,600 words. There’s nothing ever wrong with going long!
800 words a day for three months is 72,000 words. A fantastic length for a first draft.
900 words a day for three months is 81,000 words, the exact length of the YA novel I just finished.
If you want to aim for 90,000 words in your first draft, that of course would be 1,000 words a day. Although that amount of words might be intimidating at first, it’s a whole lot more do-able than 2,000 words or more!
You can write your novel this year! Don’t let anyone else tell you differently.
I very much believe in the practice of creating a writing schedule for your novel writing and then keeping to that schedule seven days a week. I don’t know about you but I find it much easier to write a little bit of a novel every day than write a lot of a novel just one or two days a week.
On the last five days drafting my latest novel I was averaging about 3,500 words a day in four or five hours time, and I soon got severely burned out. To the point where I needed to step away from the laptop for a considerable amount of time after I finally reached THE END. Four hours or more staring at a screen trying to write your novel might sound like fun but eventually it does become super exhausting.
But 777 to 1,000 words a day? You can totally do that in an hour. Maybe two hours. When you get started, the end of the novel might feel like a million days away, but then a week will go by and then two weeks will go by, and you’ll suddenly find yourself making significant progress.
And after those three months end, you’ll suddenly find yourself with a completed novel.
Start today and not tomorrow. The earlier you begin, the earlier that novel will get done. Just believe in yourself, believe in your story, and get started.
You can do it!
Great post, Brian, very inspiring! It took me far too many years to realise that writing a novel can be done fairly quickly (at least the first draft), when one doesn’t procrastinate all the time! Your tips here are very inspiring and positive, and I’m sure others will think so too!