Enough?

What the most effective amount of writing per day might be is a question that bothered me for the last three years. Too much focus on page count and the work seems forced and needs heavy, if not complete, revisions. Too few pages and the manuscript takes forever.

As for the first method – maybe revisions aren’t so bad, and are a necessary part of the process, but top down rewrites really goad. For me, that’s a surefire route to frustration. If a manuscript is written with the intent that ninety percent is bound for the ashcan anyway, why bother? I never liked redoing work because my boss agreed to something stupid or broke something that worked; I’d rather not spin my wheels by my own design.

Enter the opposite argument, a more exacting, and in my opinion, maintainable level of production. Since October 2004 that’s the method used for the book formerly known as Velocity. After dealing with endless revisions on the Ridge Runner, I realized there was little hope for improvements in my present state of mind, so I started from scratch on a new project. With the Ridge Runner no longer a weight, I focused on less on output, more on quality. That meant reading a chapter out loud ten to twenty times, revising it on each pass until the biggest problem was a dropped word or misspelling.

Basically, I drop a word or two on every page, it’s very difficult for me to catch, and less so for a fresh pair of eyes. Therefore I assume I drop words, catch what I can and let Editor person beat up the holdouts. And as for spelling, auto correct is far from infallible. By thy way, the chapter reviews doesn’t include all the in place edits. Once new content reaches the page mark, it’s open season.

OK, so now there is one true draft, and it reads better from the word go, but that brings me to another problem, which is the drastic falloff in output. Even writing six days out of seven, the weekly page count seems pathetic. It’s been bugging me a lot lately, as I near the one year mark of working this way.

While reading Chris Moore’s most recent blog entry, at last I found comfort. He mentions that his output averages five hundred words a day, or less than one and one-half pages. So a manuscript takes him a year and change. Or maybe longer, but let’s say a year. He’s worked this way for each of his nine books for the last fourteen years. I can live with that level of productivity. If a writing life is thirty to fifty years, at that rate that means twenty to thirty books. Not too shabby. Not to shabby at all.

2 thoughts on “Enough?

  • August 3, 2005 at 2:48 pm
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    Sounds like you’ve figured out what works best for you – and it’s probably quicker in the long run. Good job.

  • August 3, 2005 at 3:53 pm
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    thanks pollster! it was arrived at through much pain.

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