All right, let’s revisit my ongoing
examination on the birth of a novel. When we last left my NaNoWriMo project, Rerun, I’d ended NaNo at nearly 59,000
words, then trimmed 15,000 when I found myself trying to regain focus. And I
wasn’t upset about it, I’m still not, although I’m sort of missing those 15,000
words now.
So I started off again with a
renewed sense of direction and almost 44,000 words completed. Experience told
me I was halfway done. That was by word count. Reality and experience are not
pals, however, something I learned last week.
I finished my first draft of Rerun, finishing at 67,404 words. I was
not really happy about this. My experience (again! You’d think I’d learn) told
me that I was going to lose some of that in editing and I prayed that rough
edit I did in December took care of that problem.
Maybe, I’m not sure yet. I did a
quick clean up: fixed some dates, checked for consistency, took care of all but
one of those “Look at this@@” research notes, and handed it to the alpha
readers. All 67,128 words of it. I was so relieved I didn’t lose more I can’t
begin to tell you. Of course there will be more editing.
Alpha readers sort of have a fun
job. They read it and just give an opinion. Well, kind of. I put mine through
the third degree. Let them read the first chapter then I quiz them: who do you
think will do xxx? I want to know if the end is going to be a surprise and, if
not, at what point they guess or how close they get. Beta readers get the same
treatment, but worse. I don’t expect alpha readers to pick apart plot
consistency; check my physics, history, or math; or catch plot holes small
enough for them to step over. They’re kind of your average reader and I just
want feedback.
Beta readers – I require work. I’ll
actually edit it and have it short of sending to my editor before handing it to
beta readers. I send it to them, all formatted and pretty, with the implied
request “Please pick apart this novel and leave me lying in the gutter,
twitching. Thank you.”
Handing Rerun to alpha readers is fine, they’ll let me know if I’m on the
right track and then I’ll fix what I need to. But I’m still having some nervous
twitches about a couple of things. First: I expressed concern before I was
venturing into unknown territory and I cut 15,000 words in part to get me back
on track. I’m not sure it worked. This isn’t a romance. It’s closer to chic-lit
than romance. Okay, not what I was shooting for, but I’ll live with that.
My second concern is: I’ve never
written anything this short. I think the shortest novel I’ve completed to date
was somewhere around 78,000 words. It is a novel, I haven’t ventured into the
novella range yet. I actually had to go double check, but Writer’s Digest
(among some other resources) still counts everything above 50,000 words as a
novel. I’m on the fence at that 50k line, but I’ll go with it. And it shouldn’t
matter, there’s nothing wrong with novellas. They’re the trend, they’re
popular, some people prefer them to full-length novels. I’m just a little
skiddish because this is so much shorter than I’m used to. I’m not going to pad
it just to inflate my word count into my comfort zone. The story is complete as
it stands, and I’ll wait and see what feedback I get before decided whether to
permanently shelve my apprehension.
For the record, I don’t write short
stories either. I can’t. I used to, back in junior high and high school, but I
seemed to have lost the ability. Everything I have now that is a short story is
actually a cut chapter, although that seems to work.
We’ll see what happens to Rerun as it progresses past the alpha
and beta readers, revisions, and an editor. I’ve never timed a book from beginning
to end, or tracked the steps, so this should be interesting.
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