I miss writing blog posts, but I find it tricky to fit them into the writing schedule right now, so while I'm wrestling the WIP into shape, I thought I'd highlight some past blog posts. It is the summer re-run season, after all. This is a post from last year, while I was working on my novella, Lord Rakehell's Love, the first in the Curse of True Love Series. It seems appropriate to give it another look since I'm finishing up the next in the series, Lord Wastrel. Hope you enjoy!
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I like writing novellas, and novel-length books, and blog posts, and tweets. All of them have different word-length requirements, which is part of the fun, and the challenge. Whichever mode I'm in, while I'm in the midst of it, it feels easy to do. But when I get away from it, all of a sudden I've temporarily lost my ability to function within those limits.
For example, when I don't tweet for a couple of days, I can't seem to make 140 characters work. At all. It feels so confining that I end up deleting and rewriting a simple tweet at least three times before I send it off. However, when I'm back in "tweet mode", most of my thoughts are in 140-character bite-size chunks. I can zip tweets out right and left without even checking to make sure they're the proper length.
I never expected to feel that way about tweeting. I started out writing full-length novels, so anything less than 250 to 300 pages feels abbreviated to me. When you have a word count of 70 to 100 k, there's plenty of space to walk around and enjoy the scenery, all while giving the characters lots of adventures and time to grow and change.
That is also the tricky part of writing novels. With a word count in the upper thousands, it can feel like you'll never get the characters to their HEA. You hit that Heartbreak Hill part of the writing marathon, long before the finish line, where you know you've given it your best shot, but you fall to your knees, panting, because you don't have anything left. Many a manuscript has faltered at this point, well before it managed to reach The End.
Novellas have their own challenges, too. I wrote my first one, Summer Lovin', because I knew there wasn't enough story for an entire novel. I thought it would fit well in the smaller space, and I naively believed it would take a shorter amount of time to write.
Hah!
It's a deceptively challenging creature, the novella. It requires brevity, but not too much or you're writing a synopsis. It demands a well-developed story, but again, not too much or it becomes a novel that doesn't realize it's too big for its britches. In an email exchange my friend Julie DuChesne commented that writing novellas is like "putting control-top pantyhose on your imagination", adding, "You can stretch the boundaries a little bit, but in the end only so much is going to fit."
It's a challenge I enjoy, though (even if my brain is not keen on wearing stockings as headbands), so I'll continue to write novellas. I'm in the midst of one now titled Heartbreaker, a sequel to Back on Track. I've even decided to write some seasonal sequels to Summer Lovin', thanks to readers asking for more of Mia and Luke's adventures with Hellboy, the puppy with a shoe fetish. However, now I know to allow twice as much time to write half the number of words.
The funny thing is I didn't use to like reading novellas. If I liked the author, or the characters, I wanted a full-length story. But now that my reading time borders on the non-existent, novellas are perfect. They're like a reading snack. I can finish one in a relatively short timeframe, but feel completely satisfied. Since I got my Nook, I've probably read a zillion novellas (conservative estimate). They've introduced me to authors that I wouldn't have encountered otherwise, and I can get my reading fix in, without feeling guilty that I'm taking too much time away from writing my own stories.
Especially those shorter ones that take double the time to finish.
So now my question to you is: what size do you prefer?