The end of NaNoWriMo

I’m not sure how much I have mentioned it on the blog over the years but I have been a massive fan of the National Novel Writing Month for many years. After being introduced to in back at university I have been an active and enthusiastic participant since 2008 and I have looked forward to November every year since as I take the chance to write.

In that time I have finished very few novels but I always hit the 50k mark. I have written stories that were easy, some that were like pulling teeth and every ten, hundred, thousand words was torturous. I have written stories that I based off songs, based off a dream, based off playing The Sims. I’ve tried my hand at fantasy, historical, short stories, contemporary, and romance. I have 50 thousand plus words written for each of these ideas and so many more that I think of fondly. Of these numerous stories I have even developed three of them into actual edited, structured, novels. I have thought about them for years, tinkered, fiddled with, restructured and pondered over some for more than a decade as the idea wouldn’t leave me. Nano is incredibly important to me. So much so I associate warm weather with writing and often get my most writing done on warm sunny days. I think I associate it with sitting in front of my computer each November writing every single day for hours on end.

But all of that is changing. The announcement came in my inbox at 9am on 1 April via email that Nano was coming to an end. I had to check the current time in the USA to determine if it was a poor taste joke or whether the US hadn’t entered April yet. Alas, it was not a joke. As a non-profit organisation NaNoWriMo relies on donations in part, each year they are involved with the P4A project and you can donate through their website and have been able to for many years. However it seems that isn’t enough as the Nano team cited financial issues as the cause of their closure.

There have been are a lot of factors in the past as well, I know they had a major issue with their forums and moderation which resulted in an overhaul of how the site worked and the forums ran, but even then it kept going. The sad thing is, even if there has been a slump in finances, many believe the final nail in the coffin was their support of the use of AI in writing which resulted in obvious backlash. In the video they released it adds a bit more confusion on the exact reasons for the final closure. Those more knowledgeable than I can look at their graphs and finances, but you can also read between the lines and work out what it all means and what their reasons really are. At the moment I’m happy to sit on the sidelines and just be sad and annoyed about the whole thing.

It’s not new that Nano has been different in the past few years. The change of the website and forum set up felt different to the numerous years spent chatting in topic forums about specialist hobbies for a character, or sharing titles, sharing character names, going into the genre specific areas to share fantasy ideas and concepts. The shout outs for hitting 1k, 5k, 40k were always fun to revisit and see how far ahead or behind you were with other people and your month’s projections, not to mention the “coffee shop” forums where you could escape writing for a while and chat about other things. I still have an entire bulging folder (as bulging as an online folder can be) of the Nano encouragement emails that used to come out from various famous authors over the years. Those little reminders to keep going were wonderful and often had a lot of inspiration and advice as well. They felt less common than they used to be too.

Participating in Nano wasn’t confined to the website. You could talk to people online and share stories and encouragement without ever opening up the website or a forum. A hashtag on any social platform and a conversation could give you a writing buddy across the world. People all over were talking about and making things connected to Nano, it was a great community. I fell in love with Nanotoons which was started by Debbie Ridpath Ohi and continued by Errol Elumir. I came in with Errol’s run and it made me wish for a write-in near me I could join and become immersed in the fun and games of community writing. I loved getting the emails each year and loved following the characters on their writing journey alongside my own.

Even with all the changes there’s no denying how impactful Nano can be on a writer. Nano famously was the place many novels were started. There’s articles and lists, a Goodreads category, even a bookshop section for books that were written during Nano. It’s wonderful to see that the pain and panic of trying to write 50k in a month (an “easy” 1667 words per day) can accomplish something great.

Lifetime word count

In my time participating I started 17 books, and I have continued to work on 3 of them. Which isn’t a huge percentage but it doesn’t mean the others are forgotten either. I have so many memories on this blog, as well as other places like Facebook, Tumblr, and even Twitter back in the day of sharing my goals, my achievements, and my frustrations and elations that it will be strange not to have an official website to work with.

It does feel like, even though they were years apart, the writing traditions and community I have enjoyed since I started using Nano in 2008 are gone. My beloved WriteorDie, a staple for many Nanoers, after numerous changes and updates finally shutdown entirely. A quiet and surprising end to something so integral to my writing experiences. NaNotoons ended in 2018 which was a shining light in my inbox each November, and now Nano itself is gone.

Of course no one can stop you writing a novel in November, but there was a comfort in a website, having a goal, the new badges that came in recently to add some fun and challenges and retrospection on writing styles. Not to mention chatting with others who were just as keen, just as frustrated, just as stuck and creative as you were. I could have written this post about the memories of my projects, the challenges each one had, the fun I had finding a new inspirational quote each year, and competing against buddies and their writing stats. How I would write summaries for books I hadn’t written yet, design covers, and would vary between having a full story and no title or a title and no story. I could talk about the winners certificates I was so proud of, the winner goodies, and the banners I spread across the socials. How I got writing software I still use and how I saved all my stats to look back on my achievements each year. But then I could be writing forever.

As a worldwide community event that started in 1999, NaNoWriMo recently celebrated its 25th anniversary. It has brought people together in write-ins, across the globe and in local communities as people found support, buddy systems, encouragement and ideas sharing and it is a shame it won’t survive long enough to even see out the 2025 event.

I don’t know where we will all end up but hopefully there will be a migration somewhere else where we can continue to build on the writing community that we’ve grown to love over the decades. If there’s one thing I’ve noticed is the writing community will always find one another and the writing will persevere.

The Waterproof Notepad: A Thing of Genius

I have gone to so, so many author events where the discussion inevitably ends up somewhere around getting great ideas in the shower and having to try and remember them. I’ve sat in the audience while authors cry “why isn’t there a waterproof notepad” to which I tell myself I will speak to them afterwards and tell them that there is in fact a waterproof notepad but alas, I never do. I’ve even considered raising my hand and telling them during question time but that’s a whole different hurdle to overcome. Instead, I thought I would share it here publicly with you in case you too are suffering the frustration of having million dollar ideas and perfect story plots lost down the drain ever night.

May I introduce you to Aqua Love Notes, the waterproof notepad.

Despite the name, Aqua Love Notes are the greatest thing ever created. This is the absolutely fabulous one that I bought a few years ago that has been a pure life saver. It isn’t used for fun notes and message to others in my household, it is used for when my mind is mulling over menial things in the shower and suddenly an idea comes to me, or a piece of dialogue or scene and I need to write it down lest I forget.

There are multiple pages, and if you are like me who writes small and scribbles all over the page you can use the same pad for years. You get two pencils, red and lead, one which has a rubber on the end and both are able to be sharpened in a regular sharpener.

I used to try and write in the steam on the shower but I’d always forget about it by the time I finished and it doesn’t last once it dries. Who knows how many brilliant ideas I have lost over time, but not any more. If you are looking for something to jot ideas down on or plot out your next epic story than this is ideal. I bought mine from Amazon because it was the only place at the time I could find one, but now you know such genius exists you may find some elsewhere with some clever searching.

With NaNoWriMo happening this month it might be the perfect thing you need when you are plotting and planning and need all the ideas you can get when you are starting out.

Go forth and never be stuck in the shower with nowhere to put your ideas again!

Day #7 of NanoWriMo

Shield-Nano-Blue-Brown-RGB-HiResIt’s hard to believe there has been a whole week of Nano already. On one hand it feels so early in the month, on the other it feels like only yesterday I was staring at a blank page wondering where I was going to start. Where did seven days go?

Already this year my NaNoWriMo journey has been like no other. For the first time I have chosen to write a fantasy novel. In the past I’ve written young adult stories, mainstream fiction, and I even once wrote a humorous story that was filled with references from other novels.

The other reason this novel is so different is the immense effort I have put into the research side of writing. In the past I have had to research what life was in the 1600s in a coastal village, or religious practices before Christmas became what it is today, but the amount of research I have done in the past week or so is incredible.

The research, I have discovered, is enormous, and it is quite easy to drown yourself in it if you aren’t careful. I have found myself looking up the usual things like the average marrying age of women in 1850s, the general theories and myths around elves and pixies, and what the social opinions on homosexuality were in the 1800s. Then the fiddly things like information about writing fantasy in general to different types of magical creatures and the mythology that goes with them. I can’t seem to go a day without looking up something else. The good news about that though is while it is severe procrastination after a point, it’s still story related which makes it more acceptable than watching TV or something. Right?

I have compiled a nice set of statistics that captures my first NaNo week and what my current writing situation is. Hopefully it isn’t too dissimilar than other people or I may have to worry.

Total words written: 12 150
Distractions: Innumerable
Interruptions: Numerous
Main character name changes: 3
Character deaths: 0
Character deaths I’m putting off: 1
Creatures created: 19
Internet windows currently open: 4
Internet tabs currently open: 125
Word documents currently open: 7
Plot issues discovered: 3
Plot issues solved: 1

So that’s my current stats list. All the plot issues and characters and internet tabs look less overwhelming when they are in a nice list. It’s quite nice.

I have learnt important things though this week After inundating myself with pages upon pages of information about magical creatures, and trying to make sure their inclusion in my story was as close to basic looks and behaviour as I could, I realised that I do not have to follow the rules. Thankfully sooner rather than later I have realised that this is my story and I can make my characters be anything I want them to be. If Eoin Colfer can make his pixies and elves technologically advanced and live underground, then I can tweak the behaviour, styles, and abilities of creatures as well. While I love the traditional aspects which I am drawing from, I have realised I need to stop worrying about how they are supposed to look and just write characters I have formed in my mind, personality and appearance included.

I mentioned Eoin Colfer, famous for the marvellous Artemis Fowl series, he is just one of my inspirations this month. So far I have drawn inspiration from Colfer, Terry Pratchett, as well as Holly Black, but there are a few snippets inspired by J.K. Rowling as well because she does tiny details so wonderfully well it’s hard not to take some tips when you can. I’m drawing ideas a lot from real life as well. I’m even drawing inspiration from ancient extinct creatures because those I’ve found fit perfectly in the world I am creating. I’m also using numerous languages like Latin and other world languages to contribute to creating names and species. I like this because I can create types of portmanteaus as well as give my characters names that have meanings like their personalities or physical feature. I am not doing this for everything though, partly because random names can be just as nice, and also because sometimes the languages fail me and I can’t create anything good from them with the meanings I want.

Aside from becoming invested and engaged with my story, there are a few other things that keep me writing each day. The NaNoWriMo website differs slightly every year and this year they have added to their selection of achievement badges. When certain tasks are completed you gain a badge, and I have to say wanting to achieve these badges is a key factor in my writing this week. Writing for five days straight, reaching the key 5k and 10k word counts are important ones. But there are also personal ones, whether you have consumed more caffeine than is probably wise, whether you have written in an odd or creative environment, there’s even one if you admit to being a procrastinator.

There are also great tips about getting the best from your novel and wonderful support. You may have heard some of these tips but I’ll share a few I keep telling myself:

  • Back up your novel regularly
  • As tempting as editing is, try and resist it unless absolutely crucial
  • Don’t worry if you are falling behind the expected word count for the day, there is time to catch up
  • Love what you are writing, if you want to change midway be brave and do it
  • Waste some time exploring the NaNoWriMo forums, whether it is for inspiration, for advice, character names, games and procrastination, or ideas sharing it can be incredibly beneficial
  • Some days you may write a lot, other days you may not write a lot. At least you are writing.

This is a long rambling post I know but it’s a small insight into my first week of NaNoWriMo that I felt like sharing. If I have given you any ideas or suggestions I’m glad I could help. These are just some of the things I am doing as well; I think choosing fantasy I’m approaching it way more differently than I do most stories so it is a different kind of experience for me. There are still 23 days remaining too where anything can happen and anything no doubt will so I’m enjoying it as much as possible so I have fond memories to look back on when in a few weeks time I’m up at 2am trying to catch up on word counts with way too much caffeine in my system.

I love hearing about other people’s experiences so feel free to let me know how your NaNo experience is going. Have you gotten any helpful hints from the forums, adopted a character trait or plot? Are you collecting badges? Do you also have 125 tabs open across 4 internet windows (I can’t be the only one).

National Novel Writing Month 2015

Shield-Nano-Blue-Brown-RGB-HiResThe National Novel Writing Month (aka NaNoWriMo or NaNo) is soon to be upon us. This is the time of year where people all over the world sit down and try and write a 50k word novel during the month of November. The official website was launched this morning and I have already spent a good hour on it looking at the forums, updating my own details, and sorting out my plans for this year’s story. The trouble I had was dragging myself back from diving into too much research and not doing the things I was supposed to be doing instead. Once you venture down the NaNoWriMo hole you easily become lost in character names, descriptions, and tiny details like shoe colours and character quirks. Or even worse perusing the forums and chatting to people before the month has even begun!

This will be my 8th NaNo, which is nothing considering how long it has actually been going for, some people have been at it at lot longer than I. But I am still looking forward to putting my ideas to paper. Of the past 7 stories I have written I could honestly say only two I would make into actual books, and one a short story. These I have sitting on my computer, in their little folders, patiently waiting for me to edit them. I am adding notes and snippets to them all the time though so I like to think that counts for something for now.

This year I am writing a fantasy, first time for NaNo and for myself in awhile. I don’t think I have written a fantasy since primary school so it will be great to get back into the world building and mystic creatures side. I am returning to an idea I first thought about in 2009, but I started planning all the way back in April and by the time November came around I was over-planned and didn’t actually know where to begin so I changed stories the day NaNo started (a risky move on my part). In the years since I have thought about it some more, added bits and pieces to my idea and hopefully come 1st November I will be rearing to go.

There is so much to enjoy with NaNo, the joy of writing (and actually writing for a reason where you can’t keep making excuses not to), talking to other people from all over the world, and I even get a thrill from the stress of falling behind of word counts and doing mass catch ups in one sitting.

One of the changes to the NaNo site is the new badges that can be earned. Some of these are for simply updating your novel details, others are for participating in discussions, and for the consistent workers out there a few are even for daily novel updates, and even one for 30 days of constant updates. I may try and aim for that one this year.

Good luck if you’re choosing to participate this year. Whether you are a first time NaNoer, a seasoned participant, or somewhere in between, I wish you immense luck on this journey because it can be tough and challenging. The forums are your friends; you can turn to them for ideas, celebrations, discussions of shared experiences, and of course distractions and great games. As always WriteOrDie is a godsend I implore its use at all times, and I wish you all the success in reaching the 50k word goal!