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Write 50,000 words in 30 days? Hereës your big chance
Tuesday, 19 December 2006 17:02

John North
Editor & Publisher
Itës too late for this year, but for those interested, there is an annual writing contest that they might find intriguing.

Specifically, NaNoWriMo is a contest held every November during National Novel Writing Month that challenges authors to write a 50,000-word novel in 30 days.

This year, about 80,000 people entered the contest and nearly 13,000 of them reported finishing the task on time.


Altogether, 982,495,939 words ÇƒÓ an utterly staggering output ÇƒÓ were generated by the contestants this year.

The 50,000-word count would roughly match the length of "The Great Gatsby" and require writing an average of 1,667 words per day. What weëre talking about here is a major commitment with a non-traditional benefit.

The contest was started by a writer in Oakland, Calif., in 1999, when only 21 people participated and five finished. Since then, NaNoWriMo has expanded to 250 chapters around the world and has become a nonprofit corporation.


In an interesting twist, this contest brazenly emphasizes quantity over quality. Thus, the participants are pushed by ÇƒÓ and obsessed with ÇƒÓ word counts. Those who reach the 50,000-word pinnacle in 30 days are deemed winners.


The few who claim to have achieved the goal finish by inserting their novels into a word-count verifier on the official Web site, nanowrimo.org. The words then are encrypted to avoid theft of the writersë works.


Winners receive an on-line certificate, which states, according to the site, "Win or lose, you rock for even trying."


The contest aims to counter the time-honored clich?© of the struggling, miserable writer laboring grimly in solitude.


To that end, much of the month includes a series of social events. Morevoer, the contest encourages writers to commune on-line and via meet-ups and write-ins.


In my own experience, however, the professional writers I have known tend to sneer at writersë conferences and other "literary" socializing, claiming to be too busy and too financially hard-pressed with other obligations to partake of such dilettante blathering.


Thus,  I canët help but wonder if NaNoWriMo is just another way for some people to pose as writers, with all the cach?© that includes. Certainly, putting quantity over quality has never been the mark of a writing craftsman.


Ultimately, I wonder what value this contest has, inasmuch as lots of time and effort is spent, people and tasks are neglected and the result is likely a meaningless jumble or words, accompanied by the authorës mental exhaustion.


While many appear to find NaNoWriMo a challenge, surely they could use their time better to produce something of quality, which, in turn, would be more satisfying.


As a telling sidelight, to me the most amusing aspect of NaNoWriMo is the admission by some of the authors to spending so much time with their characters that they often end up hating them and, when possible, kill them off.


Still, I must concede the possibility, as some participants have noted, that the contest is beneficial in forcing proscratinators to produce ÇƒÓ and, possibly, good works might result from it ... Iëm not holding my breath, though.


ï

John North, publisher and editor of the Daily Planet, may be contacted at publisher-at-ashevilledailyplanet.com.
 



 


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