By Debbie Maxwell Allen
November 30th. The
last day of NaNoWriMo. You may have a complete book in your hands, or a good
start on one.
What do you do
next?
Do you send it off
to an agent or editor and sit back to wait for a contract? Do you start the
sequel? Or set up a fan page on Facebook?
Typing "the
end" is really just the beginning.
When I began writing several years ago, I mistakenly thought that finishing my
novel gave me the right to look for an agent immediately. These days, agents
want to see work that is polished,
not a first draft. And seasoned writers will tell you that the real writing happens in revision. It's when words are finally
out of your head and on the page that you can actually do something with them.
There are many
things you can do once you finish your novel, but I've boiled them down to
three essentials.
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Rest. Set your manuscript aside for a month
before you begin. You need a little distance from it. Start brainstorming a new
novel, or take the time to flesh out some of the short story ideas that may
have popped into your head during NaNoWriMo.
Revise. Now it’s time to
open that file. Writing teacher and author James Scott Bell suggests printing a
manuscript out and reading it like you would someone else's book. It's
surprising how much I miss when I edit on the computer. Keep a pad of sticky
notes handy to mark passages that need work. For more tips on revisions, check
this NaNoWriMo page.
Books like Self-Editing for Fiction Writers, Manuscript Makeover, and Revision and Self-Editing can help you know
what to look for in your manuscript. Once you've combed your manuscript several
times, and have improved it to the best of your ability, it's time for the next
step.
Other Eyes. This is where you step out (perhaps with
fear and trembling) and let other people read your novel. Family and friends do not count. It's important to get
honest feedback from people who already know how to write. Your friends will
only be impressed that you actually wrote a novel, and most will think it's
great, no matter how many problems there are with your plot.
No, what you need
are people who are strangers. People
who will share the truth about what works and what needs changing. People who
aren't worried about hurting their relationship with you. You'll win in two
ways: your manuscript will become stronger, and you'll develop the thick skin you
need
for the road ahead. If you're looking for a critique group, Pikes Peak Writers has some excellent
ones to choose from.
Where are you at
with your novel? Resting, revising, or revealing?
I am somewhere between resting and finishing. So close to being done, but a flurry of other submissions, etc. has set the (non-Nano)book a bit further back in line. Now that those are under control, I am committed to finishing by the end of 2012. Then I'll rest it and begin project two, already 1/2 roughed out.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy the revision process, so it'll be hard to keep this first one out of my hands for to long.
I love the part about strangers and developing thick skin. So true!
ReplyDelete