Now, visualization is a useful skill. It can really help with writing setting descriptions and action. But it’s just one of many tools an author must master to reach the pro level. Over-reliance on visualization makes the whole book read like someone reciting the plot and action of his favorite movie. If you see the narrator taking over the characters’ jobs, this is the reason. The only solution is to adopt a whole new way of thinking about writing.
How to tackle this challenge? The only answer, as always, is hard work and lots of it.
In writing, as in all things, you have to walk before you can run. Nobody fully appreciates how hard a major undertaking is until he’s elbows deep in it. The public has been propagandized for decades to think that being a novelist is easy. Authors as a whole do a poor job of informing aspirants how hard building professional level writing skill is. Well, have a seat, because I’m going to tell you.
Remember all the time and effort you put into reaching pro level at your current job? Now you need to do that again, but this time as a writer.
To be a writer, you must read. Movies, TV shows, and even comics don’t count. You must read novels in your genre, and you must read them voraciously. Go to Amazon. Look up the top 100 currently best selling novels in your genre, and read them all. Twice. First, read them for pleasure as a reader does. Then reread them as a writer. That means reading with an eye to the tools the author used to elicit an emotional response. Whenever the book delivers a good gut punch, stop and read that part again carefully until you understand exactly how the author achieved that effect. That puts his tool in your toolbox. You will need a well-stocked toolbox before you go pro.
Then repeat the same process with the books in Appendix N.
To be a writer, you must write. When you can write 2,000 words per day, every day, you will have reached a professional output level. Write daily until you have written one million words of fiction. At that point, all of the bad writing will have drained out of you. You will then be ready to begin.
No, that’s not a typo. I meant begin.
Because the idea isn’t just to write. It’s to sell what you write. When you’ve read your 200 books and written your million words, you will have sufficient knowledge of your tastes and abilities to offer your work for sale.
My reaction to hearing this same advice ten years ago was, “A million words!? That’s ten 100k word novels. I’m supposed to write ten books’ worth of prose fiction and just stuff it in a trunk?”
Yep.
Hard and fast writing rule: First novels always suck.
Every author begins with a millions sucky words in his head, and he has to get the suck out. Selling the suck to readers would do them and the author a grave disservice.
Here’s the good news. Just because your first novel falls within those first million words, it doesn’t mean you can’t come back to it. I did. You should read the first draft of Souldancer sometime [Editor’s note: I will never let you read the first draft of Souldancer]. That book accounted for fully a third of my first million words. I stowed it in the trunk until I’d finished off the other two-thirds, wrote a prequel, then came back to it and won a Dragon Award.
You need only patience and discipline to do the same.
I put in the time and improved with each book. Read the results for yourself!
Yep! Which is why when I am done with my series? I am gonna go back with new skills and craft an even more refined cake of words. Delicious!
What if one only has a couple of stories in ones mind that one truly wishes to tell, and they are not enough to fill out that one million word count? Just keep writing anyway and hope you come up with some more ideas underway? Would you consider writing fanfiction to be a legitimate way to work towards that one million words of practice or should all of it be original content?
"What if one only has a couple of stories in ones mind that one truly wishes to tell, and they are not enough to fill out that one million word count?"
It's a sign that the person in question either a) has not read widely enough in & out of his genre to accumulate the necessary influences, or b) is a hobbyist who's not cut out to write fiction professionally.
There's nothing wrong with b. The fact of the matter is that working painters don't have just a couple of subjects they want to paint, nor do architects have just a couple of building designs.
Any fiction writing one does counts toward the million words. No writing is wasted.
Thank you! I am a terrible dilettante and harboring a belief that I can be a writer is just one of the interests that clutter the attic of my mind. I'll put it on the curb with learning Italian, song writing, and sushi making.
The Stuff White People Like blog warned me this years ago, but I didn't listen. https://stuffwhitepeoplelike.com/2008/01/23/21-writers-workshops/
BTW, that defunct blog is even funnier today than when it first popped up.
Prego.
I guess writing that one million word super novel that will never see the time of day on book shelfs is out of the question. Or is it?
It would get the suck out.
Mr. Niemeier, do you have any advice-blogger friends or other learning aide recommendations that specialize in getting into visual media/video/scriptwrighting?
Cause you seem to keep having to repeat that your author advice isn’t compatible with that, so maybe you’ll have more luck in offloading that reader demographic onto somewhere else.