Sunday, January 6, 2013

Book One: THIS YEAR YOU WRITE YOUR NOVEL

This Year You Write Your Novel, by Walter Mosley. Little Brown and Company, 2009.

(Wow, feels weird not to be using MLA format, here. But for the sake of you nonacademic bookworms, I'll persevere).

Time To Read (TTR from here on): Started and finished on January 1st, 2013*.

Comments:

While this is a book for honest-to-goodness newbie writers, and I am certainly not that (I'm working on novel six, at the moment. They say you've got to write about 1,000,000 words before you break through, and I'm seriously close), it felt like time well spent. Why? Because it was the new year and I needed encouragement/confirmation, which I found. I also found a few gems of insight, which is a plus. I especially liked the section on revisions/rewrites.

Here's a link to the NPR review, too: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9620861

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*I am a crazy fast reader (I'm not necessarily bragging, sometimes this is a very bad thing. Just ask my overtaxed eyeballs**), but This Year You Write Your Novel is also really short.

On the topic of fast reading, I feel like--but have no experience to back me up on this--that my fast reading is akin to being a junkie. I recently read Jim Butcher's Cold Days, a 500+ page novel, cover to cover over five hours, without stopping for anything. I read my two-volume, gateway edition of The Count of Monte Cristo, which is about 1400 pages, in a week (and I was lagging, then).

**Actually, no, I do not wear nor do I require glasses. My eyeballs are resilient little boogers.


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