What, if anything, do you read while writing? For me, usually nothing. I’m a full-time teacher and mother of a 12 and a 9 year-old. I also have a wonderful boyfriend, serve on the national board of the Mystery Writers of America, am active in Tae Kwon Do, and volunteer in my community. When I add writing a novel on top of that, reading goes by the wayside. However, the young adult novel I’m working on at the moment requires a great deal of research. I find myself writing in fits and spurts, broken up by necessary reading, and it’s driving me crazy!!! I can’t meet my 2000-word-a-day minimum, and I feel like a humongous slacker.
So maybe this post is more about asking how you all make time for writing. I get asked that question all the time, of course. Every writer does. One time, a couple years ago, I half-jokingly (which=embarrassingly true) told a reporter that I have time to write novels because I don’t watch TV, have a social life, or shower on the weekends. That become the two-page, full-color headline for the article, over a photo of me with my 19-year-old cat in my arms: “I Don’t Have a Social Life and I Don’t Shower on Weekends.” This is how cat ladies are born, people. Shame combined with the realization that personal hygiene is negotiable.
Nowadays, when I teach creative writing for MWA-U and am asked how I make time for my writing, I gently correct my students. We all make time for what is important, I say, so the question is not how to make time for writing but how to make writing important to you.
That answer works great as long as you’re not under a deadline, right? I need to get this YA novel done by September 1, the December book in my Murder-by-Month series by December 1, and I hope to have a magical realism novel completed by May 1. I had it all within my grasp, right up until I realized I had far more research to do for the YA novel than I had allotted time for. So I repeat: how do you make time for writing, especially when it requires researching?
On a profoundly unrelated note, last month, my publisher kindly put forth June Bug as a free ebook download. Tens of thousands of copies were downloaded, and even more exciting, the sales of the other five books skyrocketed. You know what else? The entire six-book e-series is still in the top 10,000 ranking for Amazon.com’s Kindle downloads, weeks after June Bug has returned to full price. Thank you to Midnight Ink for their brilliant support and inventiveness, and for allowing me this opportunity.
So maybe this post is more about asking how you all make time for writing. I get asked that question all the time, of course. Every writer does. One time, a couple years ago, I half-jokingly (which=embarrassingly true) told a reporter that I have time to write novels because I don’t watch TV, have a social life, or shower on the weekends. That become the two-page, full-color headline for the article, over a photo of me with my 19-year-old cat in my arms: “I Don’t Have a Social Life and I Don’t Shower on Weekends.” This is how cat ladies are born, people. Shame combined with the realization that personal hygiene is negotiable.
Nowadays, when I teach creative writing for MWA-U and am asked how I make time for my writing, I gently correct my students. We all make time for what is important, I say, so the question is not how to make time for writing but how to make writing important to you.
That answer works great as long as you’re not under a deadline, right? I need to get this YA novel done by September 1, the December book in my Murder-by-Month series by December 1, and I hope to have a magical realism novel completed by May 1. I had it all within my grasp, right up until I realized I had far more research to do for the YA novel than I had allotted time for. So I repeat: how do you make time for writing, especially when it requires researching?
On a profoundly unrelated note, last month, my publisher kindly put forth June Bug as a free ebook download. Tens of thousands of copies were downloaded, and even more exciting, the sales of the other five books skyrocketed. You know what else? The entire six-book e-series is still in the top 10,000 ranking for Amazon.com’s Kindle downloads, weeks after June Bug has returned to full price. Thank you to Midnight Ink for their brilliant support and inventiveness, and for allowing me this opportunity.
Great post. We make time for what is important but it's not all about the big "LIFE" improvement things. After all, Elaine from Seinfeld once noted, "We don't have time to just sit and have coffee?"
ReplyDeleteJess,
ReplyDeleteGreat post! I have NO idea how to make time for that allotted list you coughed up! Holy moly! You sound a little like Sue Ann LOL! I have no advice except that I want you to know I'm rooting you on!!!!
Jessie
.... a 2,000-word-a-day quota???? No wonder you have all those books to your credit. You're a machine.
ReplyDeleteMario, I want time to just sit and have coffee!
ReplyDeleteJessie, it's nice to have you in my corner.
Deb, I've fallen so short of that quota that it's become an embarrassment. Eek!
Jess,
ReplyDeleteWriting isn't just the act of putting words to paper. Solid research is essential to the quality of your writing, not a roadblock to getting things done. Research is working.
Think of all the "research" time you spent growing up in a small town. For me, it is when you capture the authentic small town character (and characters)that hooks me on your books.
Maybe sometimes it is important to sit and have coffee. I try to think about what I will remember about this day in the future. Will I remember efficiently crossing things off my To Do List? Or will I remember taking time to visit with a friend?
Thank you for providing the gardener's perspective, Mara--you can only rush things so much, and what's the point if you don't enjoy them, right? That's something that I need to be reminded of regularly, I'm afraid.
ReplyDeleteI need to keep reading short, realistic "inspirationals" like this, Jess. Currently between books to be written, posts of this type reassure me that I'm not failing myself viciously while going off on reading jags (for both research and fun)
ReplyDeleteI manage to fulfill my writing drive, and soothe my soul in the process, by plastering the web with comments on blogs. Very stoked to have found this one.
I need to keep reading short, realistic "inspirationals" like this, Jess. Currently between books to be written, posts of this type reassure me that I'm not failing myself viciously while going off on reading jags (for both research and fun)
ReplyDeleteI manage to fulfill my writing drive, and soothe my soul in the process, by plastering the web with comments on blogs. Very stoked to have found this one.
Thanks, Frank!
ReplyDelete