How I Became Rich and Famous, Part 2
First, read Part 1.
So I set off to become rich and famous. I read about a billion romance novels of all genres. I broke them down and made plot charts of them. I counted the number of pages in each chapter. I measured the pacing. I looked for patterns. And then, a few months later, I decided it was time to write one. So I tried. And got about 3 chapters in. And quit. It sucked. So I started over. And got about 3 chapters in. And quit. That one sucked too.
Coincidentally, this was about the time I discovered National Novel Writing Month. “Aha!” I thought. If I have a deadline, I will finish a book. So I decided that this time I’d actually, you know, have a plot in mind before I started and stuff, and so I wrote a book in November 2004. A whole book. Well, a 50,000 word book, which it turns out is more of a novella. But still. I lived and breathed that book for 30 days. More, in fact, because I was thinking about it for like a month before I wrote it. I outlined half of it before I started, and the other half while I was writing. I dreamed about it. I almost drove myself crazy. Well, except you can’t drive yourself crazy if you’re already there. But anyway.
I finished the book in 30 days. And then I thought, “What the heck do I do with this thing?”
That’s when I discovered the Romance Writers of America.
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So what you’re saying is, you worked like hell, and it was still hard? That’s not what we want to hear!!!! Your line is “Romance Novels are eeeeeaaassy and, plus, the fairies helped.”
(Which is to say, damn! Yay you and your impressive drive and tenacity!!!)
Did you have any particular devices/methods you used to help you plot? (The Snowflake Method, for example.) Or did you just use your notes from your reading?