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Three
years ago, I came across a book in my local library: ‘No Plot? No Problem.’
Little did I know it, but my NaNoWriMo journey had started.
That
first year I signed up to the National Novel Writing website with excitement -
after all, I was about to write a best
seller. In a month’s time people would be banging down the door to publish
it. I picked a username and a profile picture and then I got scared. I had a
novel idea plotted out. What I was worried about, however, was the finish line.
Not the thirty day deadline, but the end of my novel.
You
see, I am pretty good at starting novels, but had never finished one. Ever.
So
that first year came and went without a word being written. Every day I checked
in and read about everyone else’s progress. Each day I became more disgusted with myself. Next year would be
different, I told myself.
A
whole year went by. I didn’t really think about NaNoWriMo until the following
October when I borrowed that same book from the same library for a second time.
I tried a slightly different approach this year though - I jumped blindly over
the edge of October and hit the ground of November 1st running.
I
had no plot. I also had a major dancing competition in December. There was
little time to spare. Having just finished reading ‘Twilight,’ I decided
vampires would be my genre; after all, everyone was writing about them. I
announced on Facebook that I was writing a novel in a month. And guess what? There was no choice but to finish it now.
With
the threat of public humiliation, I actually finished the novel three days
early. I also came second in Australia for my dancing level.
The
second year was easier. I had a plan for the storyline growing. It had been
blossoming in my head for several months. I wanted to see what would happen
when I had both a plot and motivation (read: public humiliation again via
Facebook).
What happened was magic.
The
first day I sat down and poured my heart out onto my keyboard. I wrote for
twenty five days straight. Some days only amassing 500 words, and others over
3,000. On the twenty sixth day, I started to wonder if this story would ever
get finished. I had hit 50,000 words early and there was no finish line in
sight. Worry set in. Not only do I believe you should reach the word count
quota, but the story should also have a beginning, middle, and end.
What
did I do? I set up a song list on my media player filled with both inspiring
(think Amazing by George Michael) as
well as scary (Marilyn Manson and Nine Inch Nail singing Like a Virgin) and wrote over 5,000 words in one sitting.
So, my story got finished - then
what?
I
gave myself a month off before editing. Along the way I started to send out
feelers on Facebook. Other authors were doing the same thing. I entered my
manuscript in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Awards
(ABNA). More discussion ensued there. Along the way, I got dropped from ABNA on
the first round, but made a random comment on a Facebook friend’s page about
how I was interested in self-publishing. That comment received another from a
woman called Alison De Luca who was signed with Fantasy Island Book Publishing. She suggested that I submit my
manuscript to her publishing house.
Fantasy Island Book Publishing is a new form of publishing. You could call it
co-operative publishing. Each author can involve themselves as little or as
much in the whole publishing process. If you have no idea how to design a
cover, then someone else will step in and help out. If you want to give book
trailer videos a go, then great. It is an individual process. Personally, it
has given me a greater satisfaction than if I had just handed over my
manuscript to a bigger publisher and therefore ending my creative input there.
The
rest, as they so often say in the movies, is history!
Now tell me your stories! Ever published your NaNo novel? Ever tried to? What are your plans after the finish line? If I can do this, you can too!!!
Rachel was born in Melbourne, Australia in 1974.
She has worked in several different areas including hairdressing and banking.
Currently she is a stay home mother of two. Besides writing, she enjoys living
a sustainable lifestyle by growing edible plants and raising chickens in her
suburban backyard. Emeline and the
Mutants is her first novel, and she is currently editing her new work, Indiana Meets A Vampire.
Rachel is active on Twitter (@mrszoomby), and you
can find her on Facebook. Her
main character, Emeline Hart also has a Facebook following. Rachel can also be found on Google+. Her NaNoWriMo username is
barefootgardener.