NaNoWriMo: The Final(ish) Report: 58,490 words. Or maybe 57,357.

Final-ish because I am sure I’ll write more about writing and toss in a few words on NaNoWriMo at some point. Anyway, according to the LibreOffice word counter, and my spreadsheet on which I sliced and diced the numbers, as of 11:55 pm EDT on 30 November 2016, I had the following:

2,116 words written on 30  November.

58,490 words written in the month of November.

127,948 total words in the manuscript.

That works out to just over 45% of the length of the book written in one month. So why the hell did it take me years to write the other 69,458 words?

On November 28, when I “validated” my text (see prev. post) my spreadsheet, working from the LibreOffice word counter, said I had done 54,292 words. NaNoWriMo’s word counter clocked the same file at 53,240 words, or 0.9806 (just a teeny hair over 98%) of the value I got. Multiplying my final count of 58,490 by .0.9806, I got a NaNoWriMo-corrected value of 57,356.6565976571 words. I hope the world forgives me for claiming just over an extra third of a word, and claiming a NaNoWriMo-corrected value of 57,357 words, as that is the number I reported just before midnight of 30 November, the end of NaNoWriMo.

As you might gather, fiddling with the spreadsheets and the numbers was a big part of keeping myself on track, and giving myself a way to burn off nervous energy as I wrote.

ANYway, enough about numbers for now. As I plan to discuss in a later post, there is more to writing a book than getting numbers up on the board. I want to keep the momentum of writing up (if not at quite as hysterical a pace) but I also need to do a bit of stock-taking.

But first, I’m going to take a nap.

All best,

roger_sig

 

“Official” Win on NaNoWriMo

I will of course do what I can to finish out the month and all that, but I have now officially validated that I wrote 50,000 words in November. The National Novel Writing Month organization (NaNoWriMo.org) defines writing that many words as “winning.”

NaNoWriMo does its validation by asking you up upload the full text of your novel to their validator. (Sure hope they don’t keep it and publish it themselves!)  However, I was adding words to an additional text, so — well, why write the same thing twice? Here the top of the file I submitted to the NaNoWriMo validator:

My NaMoWriMo “novel” for November 2016 was actually me working further on a book that already had 69,458 words in it. In order to create this “validation” version to submit to NaNoWriMo’s validator, I used LibreOffice’s Document Compare feature to find all the “new” words written between 1 Nov and 28 Nov (at which point my spreadsheet showed I had done 54,292 words). I took all the “new” words and copied them into this file. That resulted in a files with 56,512 words, a difference of 2,220 words. I did not bother with one-word or two-word changes, or places where I simply replaced one word with another, and I generally ignored nickel-and-dime changes.

Because I cut-and-pasted words from various chunks of the book, (because I did inserts in various places) what follows has somewhat incomprehensible passages that might read like certain spam emails. Because I have written this explanation, the explanation is also adding some words. I have no idea why lifting my “new” words from the comparison is showing 2,220 more words than my spreadsheet, and I don’t want to burn up time chasing this trivial detail. Therefore, I am just going to cut enough words from the end of this file to get the count as shown by LibreOffice down to 54,292, and then submit that to validate my work. I would expect that NaNoWriMo’s word count to be different from mine.

[The file I submitted to the NaNoWriMo validator consisted of the above text, plus just enough of the words I had written in November to get to 54,292. I copied those words and “pasted” them into NaMoWriMo’s validator.]

As it turns out, NaNoWriMo showed me at 53,240, and adjusted things by reporting that I wrote negative 1,052 words today, which would be a neat trick, but what the hell.

As it happens, and this might be in part psychological, the last 37,000 words or so of what I wrote in November was mostly a huge long new scene (which, as discussed elsewhere, I might well end up cutting by three-fourths — who knows). Maybe I was just writing “new” copy because that’s what the rules told me to do — though I doubt it. Even so, that insert did happen to end pretty neatly right after the 50,000 word mark.

In any event I am now back into the existing text of the book, and what I am doing is half writing and half editing on the screen. I am reading along and inserting and editing and tweaking as I go. I will endeavor (endeavour if you’re British) to keep cranking the words out, but they won’t be in one big chunk, but a paragraph here and a sentence there — and maybe not 2,000 words a day. As it stands now, we’re at 123,750, and the way things are going, I’ll be lucky to bring this thing in for a landing at anything under 200,000. And that’s just volume one. (Unless I slice Volume One into two volumes, and then… Oh, never mind. We’ll see how it goes.

Onward, I guess.

roger_sig

50,000 words written in November

As of right now (and I haven’t written anything yet today), the stats are:

Words written on 26 Nov 2016:  2,016

Words written overall for November 2016:  50,121

Total length of manuscript to date: 119,579.

Apparently, this works out to an average for November so far of 1,856 words a day (counting today, when I haven’t written a damn thing).

Well, back to the salt mines…

roger_sig

PS — Yesterday’s excitement, besides a good visit to the National Museum of African-American History, was that an elderly Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) did in fact interrupt itself, somehow overloading with no load, blowing a fuse in our Universal Transfer Switch (which would automatically switch to backup power if need be) which knocked out the internet and left an alarming burning smell. It’s been a good month for bizarre techno-failures.  I need to go order fuses… and a new UPS.

R.

Next Stop (I hope) 40K — but was that a ransomware attack?

As of 5:03 pm EDT, 21 Nov 2016, 2040 words for the day, 39,710 for the month, 109,168 total for the book. That puts me very close to the 40,000- word mark for the month.

I freely confess that, in recent days, I have been bailing out for the day as soon I realize I am over 2,000 words. Part of it is the brain gets tired, part of it is that I have other things to do, and part of (a smallish part) is that if I leave the story when I still have some words in my head, those words will sort of marinate overnight, and be there to get me jump-started the next day.

Today, though, something else had me just a tad rattled. I normally have my main computer’s speaker output hooked up to headphones so that the noise won’t bother anyone in the next room. (Usually there IS no one there, these days, but force of habit has left me doing it that way anyway.) Usually I don’t have the phones on. Some time after I had looked something up on the Internet, I head a faint voice from the phones. I put them on and heard something to the effect “– if you do not, we will have no choice but to encrypt your –” but by the time it had gotten to that point, I had found the hidden-under-everything-else web page from which the audio was coming and closed the window. I did a software eject and pulled the thumb drive with my book on it, disconnected my two network drives, disconnected the computer itself from the Internet and immediately started running Windows Defender. It is still running (and I am on another computer running another operating system, thank you very much) and last I checked it hadn’t found anything. I also popped up the Windows task manager and the start-up control menu and killed, uninstalled, or deactivated anything I wasn’t sure of.

Since I didn’t hear the full dread warning, and I closed the web window damned fast, I am not sure what the hell it was, but I think it was either a spoof page pretending to be ransomware, or an actual ransomware page. (Ransomware either locks up your computer, or else encrypts all the data on it, and then demands you make a payment to get your computer or files back. Sometimes the baddies actually do release your stuff, and sometimes they don’t. In any event, it was a disconcerting moment. I *think* i am okay — but we’ll see. A spot check of files on the computer in question shows I can still open stuff and nothing is scrambled. That, I hope is a good sign.

More fun tomorrow.

roger_sig

(PS — this post about how I stop writing after 2000 words runs to just about 450 words! Oh, well.)

(PPS –further research makes me at least hopeful that it was just a sleazy scam, and NOT actual ransomware. Boy, are there jerks out there. )

We’re Getting There.

Okay, I might get in a bit more work today (as I am coming to a part wherein I know exactly what comes next) but maybe not. But as of right now, 20 November 2016, 6:30 PM EDT:

2,145 words for the day. 37,670 words since 1 November 2016. Total wordcount on the book to date: 107,128.

I have absolutely no idea how many of those 37,67o words will make it into the actual book. I am in a mode where I am using the words on the page to explain things to myself, and that generally results in my saying things more than once, and then later choosing which way (usually the second) works better. But even if I nuke 20,000 of those words, the nuked text is a vital part of the process.  I am producing raw material that I can later edit. Don’t get me wrong — I think I am producing good copy — but maybe some large portion of it does not need to be in the book. Or maybe it does. I know for sure this is exactly the wrong time in the process for me to evaluate my own work.

There’s the old line from Louis B. Mayer, who supposedly said “Without a contract, there would be no basis for renegotiation” or words to that effect. (I might have quote or attribution wrong, but I think I am close. Someone on the internet will correct me.) That’s sort of the way I feel about a first draft. Rather than spend endless hours trying to get every syllable right on the first pass, I feel as if it is a better use of my time, and results in a far superior final text, if I generate text that I can work on later.

Brain is nearing gumbo consitency. More later.

 

roger_sig

PS — Turns out 2,145 was enough words for my brain yesterday. Back at it now.

Oh yeah — Facebook

I am finally getting around to adding share links from this web journal over to my Facebook page on the off-chance that someone will read it.

To recap on the current situation — my son, Matthew, made a remarkable request of me. As a 18th-birthday present to him, he asked that I participate in NaNoWriMo, (National Novel Writing Month). The short form is that you’re supposed to write 50,000 words of a novel during the month of November. I gave myself the goal of 2,000 words a day. Not counting today (and I haven’t started today’s writing yet) I have hit that mark 12 times, and fallen short three times (blame the election — I do). Thus far, I have done 26,800 words. These are words that I have added to the manuscript I have been fiddling with for years, and the total word count on that book (which I envision as being volume 1 of Something Big) is 96,258.

Just to keep myself honest, I have been posting my word count and fiddly updates at my personal web journal: The View From Here.

I have been resisting the temptation to do much writing about writing, and have not done more than created an account at NaNoWriMo.org, as practically anything can serve as a distraction from actually writing words for the book, and 2,000 words a day takes some doing even without distractions. I’ll write more about the experience AFTER the month is up.

All for now,

roger_sig

What Have I Got to Say for Myself?

Greetings, All!

I have been toodling along for a while now with another web journal, FoxBytes.net, which is focused on FoxAcre Press, the small-press publishing business I run. I’ve found that a lot of what I have to say doesn’t exactly fit neatly into the category of book publishing, so I have spot-welded together this site, which I intend to be a bit more personal, and, probably, a bit more off-topic. I’ll be making it up as I go along. Among my current to-do list items, I find the perennial task updating my home page, RogerMacBrideAllen.com. (All the above webpages, and this one, are actually hosted in the FoxAcre.com website.)

The first task at hand, after getting the basic system installed, is to get some sort of layout and design worked out. It’s helpful to have some actual posts and web pages to work with while making that happen — but now, at least, I have a start-up post.  More very soon.

roger_sig