: Re: Is it possible for me to finish a novel? I never took formal study regarding on writing, but I'm good on imagination. I was able to take down ideas, my book will be trilogy if I could manage
If you want to be a writer, WRITE!
My personal experience is that a lot of ideas lose their allure once you start working on them for real. So if you want to find out whether those ideas have potential, start writing right away.
If you are afraid you could spend dozens or hundreds of hours writing half a novel, only to find out that it's not worth the time you'd need to finish it, then you shouldn't start writing right away. Do some outlining instead. Try to develop your idea into a full plot. Write down everything you know about your characters (no prosa, just a list), about the settings (locations, time, etc), and about the plot. Does it work? Does it sound like a story someone would want to read? If not, what does it need? Start adding more items and filling in the blanks. Eventually, your "final" plot draft might end up being a page or 10 pages long. There's no recommended length. Whatever works for you is the right length. Finally, if you like your outline, write.
Also, I read many years ago that, very often, it's very hard to finish your first novel because you ALWAYS hit a wall when you have spent so much time working on it that the initial excitement has worn off and you realise there's still a lot to do, while at the same time, you're full of fantastic new ideas for other projects. If that happens, you have to FORCE YOURSELF to finish that novel, even if you don't like the final result. Because if you don't finish that first novel, you will never finish any other novel. Finish the first novel, just to prove to yourself that YOU CAN DO IT. Then, forget about it for a couple of years. Later, read that first novel again and realise how much you would do differently now. You will learn a lot.
I don't recall where this advice is from, but it worked for me. I think, but I am not sure, that it was on Diana Gabaldon's blog.
More posts by @Goswami879
: Stories with Philosophical Conversations? I'm working on a short story that has two characters debating a philosophical view. Other than the inherent conflict built into the two opposing stances
: Choosing between first and third person I'm not an author, but I often wonder if I was to write a novel would it be best in third person or first person? I like being able to delve into
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © selfpublishingguru.com2024 All Rights reserved.