
Alternate titles for this post include "It Is Finished," "December 4th, and I'm Almost Caught Up On My Sleep," and "Hey Guys, Remember Me?"
I've received a few kind e-mails from friends who, knowing the madness of my monthlong noveling adventure with
NaNoWriMo, are wondering whether it did, in fact, cause my untimely demise. Rest assured, it did not. Because if it did, the mere existence of this post would mean that I finished the book, sold it for millions, was so shocked by this that I died of a heart attack, and my newly wealthy estate hired a ghost writer to continue my humble blog. But who are we kidding?
I did finish my novel, in 50,472 words. And it was a hard fought last two thousand, let me tell you, because I spontaneously (and, some would argue, foolishly) accepted a last-minute invitation to a
Barenaked Ladies concert on November 29. That's right. I got up that morning, put in a full day of work, drove to Universal, had dinner with a friend, danced and sang and jumped and screamed and shouted and applauded at the show, drove home, drank a pot of coffee, and crossed the noveling finish line with a website-verified word count just before five in the morning on November 30.
Some stats:
How many people participated in NaNoWriMo 2006:
79,813How many people won (finished):
12,948Total word count, worldwide:
982,564,701How many people logged a word count on the site:
42,618Average word count for people who logged a word count:
23,055What I learned:
Achieving word count quotas is rough if you're accustomed to revealing characters through dialogue and leaving the other stuff to the director. In a screenplay, I could get away with "CAR EXPLODES," because the first thing the director will do upon reading the script is take a big fat Magic Marker to the rest of the stage direction anyway, and shoot "his vision" of the car exploding. In a novel, however, there's more work to be done. People who are particularly adept at and accustomed to prosaic description could produce three pages on the car explosion. Very, very challenging for me, however.
I also had confirmed for me the idea that I write best between 6pm and some assorted pre-dawn hours. I tried writing during daylight hours when I had days off to do so, but it didn't work. Whether body clock or psychology, who knows? Either way, my creepy nocturnal vampire status is solidified once and for all.
Some of you are asking, what happens now?
I'm going to take a couple of months away from the rough draft, to forget my issues with it and let it ferment for a while. Then, I'll go back to it and attempt the long process of rewriting, more to engage in and learn from the process itself than to try to make it into a marketable product. But I guess if all goes well, I'll try to do something with it eventually.
Virtually all of you have been asking what it's about. And instead of merely saying "about 200 pages," as is the temptation, I'll tell you:
It's about loneliness, and fear, and love, and being "stuck" in life. But so those of you who really know me won't be disappointed, it's also about a narcoleptic botanist, identical twins who are nothing alike whatsoever, and an Irish immigrant who thinks he's a chicano homeboy from East L.A.
You may be wondering if I'll let you read it. To which I offer a heartfelt thank you for your interest and support, but also a hearty, "No way, McJose." It's nothing personal; it needs a rewrite. Ask me again in a year's time, and we'll see.
Meanwhile, if you want to see something funny and terrifying, here's a photo of me all punchy in front of my alarm clock at 4:50am on November 30, just having become an official novelist (!), and just about to jump into bed for my big hour-and-a-half of sleep before starting a work day in which I was useful to exactly no one at my entire office.
And yes, I'm wearing Mickey Mouse ears.