How has “Lockdown Life” affected your writing? Have you written more? Developed/honed new writing skills? If so, please tell us about it. Or have you found yourself off-track, lacking motivation, or otherwise sidelining your writing? If the latter, how have you handled that?
(DISCLAIMER. I wrote a similar post to this one a few months ago. I’ve used some of the same graphics and descriptions for this week’s question.)
I wouldn’t say I developed any new writing skills during the past twelve months, but I may have honed some of them. The French say that appetite comes with eating. L’appétit vient en mangeant. In a similar vein, I believe good writing comes with more writing.
Early on in the lockdown last year, I wrote a Sherlock Holmes story, “The Twenty-Five-Year Engagement,” for the anthology, In League with Sherlock Holmes. Thanks to a miracle of good fortune, that story has been selected as a finalist for the 2021 Edgar Award for best short story.
But one short story isn’t much production for an entire year, especially when you consider that I was sitting at home having groceries and other supplies delivered to our door.
Once I’d finished my short story, I realized I wasn’t making any progress on my new book. I won’t say it was a revelation. More of a growing awareness that became impossible to ignore. So I decided to get moving or risk wasting the one good thing the lockdown provided: time. There was nothing else pressing for me to do, aside from some household chores, cooking, laundry. I had no excuses to avoid writing.
Here’s how the book came to be. I began writing it in March, I set up my usual spreadsheet to track my progress. I’ve found that the spreadsheet is the best tool to shame me into writing more, into meeting daily goals, into putting one foot in front of the other and moving forward day by day to finish a novel. And here it is.
And I did.
April turned out to be a very good month. Only one day without any writing. The spreadsheet compelled me to produce. Slowly, my daily production improved, and that improvement spurred me on to write more. Soon, I was writing more than a thousand words a day, then two thousand. My cumulative daily average rose from the low point of 172 words per day to 660. I managed 30,516 words in thirty days in April. Better, but not good enough for someone with nothing but time on his hands.
Then came May. I wanted to have the first draft done by June 1st, and a thousand or two words per day wasn’t going to get me there. Studying the numbers on my spreadsheet, I willed myself to do better.
I missed my self-imposed deadline of June 1st, but only by three days. In May, I wrote 73,572 words. That’s enough for an entire novel. By the time June arrived, I’d improved my daily word count average from a low of 172 words to 1,300.
There was still plenty of work left to do on the book, and I used the next few months to revise eight or nine times before I felt it was ready. Remember, you can’t revise what you haven’t written. So a first draft is the sine qua non in the life of a book.
As for motivation, I don’t believe in writer’s block. At least not for me. I know when I’m not writing, it’s out of laziness. It’s because the prospect of 400 plus blank pages is daunting. It’s hard work and, like Dorothy Parker, I love having written but writing itself? Not so much. It’s a slog. A marathon, even when you’re sprinting. But I’ve found tracking every word every day is one of the best ways to fuel your motivation.
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