1000 words a day for a part-time writer
I've got a 40h, full-time job, as many do. Yet I'd like to become a writer someday, or at least, bring a novel through the first draft.
This considered, I'm trying to give myself a daily target of 1000 words to write each day at least. I'm starting to find that I work best under some kind of stress, or commitment.
On the days that I reach the goal, I'm usually satisfied and I feel a small boost in motivation, so let's say this method is working for me.
Now, the question for you is this: is writing 1000 words a day a reasonable pace for a part-time writer dealing with his first draft?
The assumption here is to maximize commitment to a single novel in order to finish the first draft sooner (in months, rather than a year or years).
Related, but not overlapping:
Time management for part-time writing
Additional information:
I'm adding this paragraph after the comments and some of the answers.
- I commute to work on foot or by bike. It takes me from 15 to 30 min. to get there, but reasonably enough, no writing can be done. On "good" days I use this time to listen to podcasts or maybe outline the next scene as I'm walking.
- I try to make a stand and not overtime.
- Sometimes I'm able to squeeze some writing at work during lunch break, but that's a difficult one to pull off.
- Aside from working, I've got the basic stuff to do (chores, groceries, tending to my house and other off-work matters). I've got a SO that helps out with this.
About the writing itself:
- I'm a discovery writer. I have an idea of where the story is going, but I can't predict every turn of the page.
- My actual project is already started and well into its second act. Sometime I have to stop for research certain topics, or take notes about worldbuilding as I go.
- It takes me around 20 minutes (and a great deal of force of will) to shut off the distractions and get writing at a decent pace.
And lastly,
- yes, I can think abuot my writing while I'm doing other stuff. The sad thing is that what I think at other times of the day seldomly gets me inspired when I finaly sit and try to write.
I hope that those additional infos won't make the question too specific about me (I imagine there are other part-time writers out there interested in the topic).
creative-writing wordcount first-draft habits
add a comment |
I've got a 40h, full-time job, as many do. Yet I'd like to become a writer someday, or at least, bring a novel through the first draft.
This considered, I'm trying to give myself a daily target of 1000 words to write each day at least. I'm starting to find that I work best under some kind of stress, or commitment.
On the days that I reach the goal, I'm usually satisfied and I feel a small boost in motivation, so let's say this method is working for me.
Now, the question for you is this: is writing 1000 words a day a reasonable pace for a part-time writer dealing with his first draft?
The assumption here is to maximize commitment to a single novel in order to finish the first draft sooner (in months, rather than a year or years).
Related, but not overlapping:
Time management for part-time writing
Additional information:
I'm adding this paragraph after the comments and some of the answers.
- I commute to work on foot or by bike. It takes me from 15 to 30 min. to get there, but reasonably enough, no writing can be done. On "good" days I use this time to listen to podcasts or maybe outline the next scene as I'm walking.
- I try to make a stand and not overtime.
- Sometimes I'm able to squeeze some writing at work during lunch break, but that's a difficult one to pull off.
- Aside from working, I've got the basic stuff to do (chores, groceries, tending to my house and other off-work matters). I've got a SO that helps out with this.
About the writing itself:
- I'm a discovery writer. I have an idea of where the story is going, but I can't predict every turn of the page.
- My actual project is already started and well into its second act. Sometime I have to stop for research certain topics, or take notes about worldbuilding as I go.
- It takes me around 20 minutes (and a great deal of force of will) to shut off the distractions and get writing at a decent pace.
And lastly,
- yes, I can think abuot my writing while I'm doing other stuff. The sad thing is that what I think at other times of the day seldomly gets me inspired when I finaly sit and try to write.
I hope that those additional infos won't make the question too specific about me (I imagine there are other part-time writers out there interested in the topic).
creative-writing wordcount first-draft habits
1
How do you get to work? If you go by bus (as I do) or train, you may find that's the best time to write, if only because you'll be tired when you get home. I've written multiple novels on a phone in that way.
– J.G.
2 days ago
1
@J.G. Whether you can be productive during your daily commute will largely depend on whether your are affected by other passengers sitting next to you reading what you write while you write it.
– user57423
2 days ago
2
@user57423 You're absolutely right! Any number of variables unique to each of our lives come in to effect, which is why I said "may". I'm lucky neither of my buses is typically crowded.
– J.G.
2 days ago
Relevant, perhaps very relevant: cwhawes.com/anthony-trollope-on-speed-writing
– Ethan Bolker
2 days ago
@J.G. I've answered in my edit. Unluckily unless I start writing as I walk, that won't be possible.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
I've got a 40h, full-time job, as many do. Yet I'd like to become a writer someday, or at least, bring a novel through the first draft.
This considered, I'm trying to give myself a daily target of 1000 words to write each day at least. I'm starting to find that I work best under some kind of stress, or commitment.
On the days that I reach the goal, I'm usually satisfied and I feel a small boost in motivation, so let's say this method is working for me.
Now, the question for you is this: is writing 1000 words a day a reasonable pace for a part-time writer dealing with his first draft?
The assumption here is to maximize commitment to a single novel in order to finish the first draft sooner (in months, rather than a year or years).
Related, but not overlapping:
Time management for part-time writing
Additional information:
I'm adding this paragraph after the comments and some of the answers.
- I commute to work on foot or by bike. It takes me from 15 to 30 min. to get there, but reasonably enough, no writing can be done. On "good" days I use this time to listen to podcasts or maybe outline the next scene as I'm walking.
- I try to make a stand and not overtime.
- Sometimes I'm able to squeeze some writing at work during lunch break, but that's a difficult one to pull off.
- Aside from working, I've got the basic stuff to do (chores, groceries, tending to my house and other off-work matters). I've got a SO that helps out with this.
About the writing itself:
- I'm a discovery writer. I have an idea of where the story is going, but I can't predict every turn of the page.
- My actual project is already started and well into its second act. Sometime I have to stop for research certain topics, or take notes about worldbuilding as I go.
- It takes me around 20 minutes (and a great deal of force of will) to shut off the distractions and get writing at a decent pace.
And lastly,
- yes, I can think abuot my writing while I'm doing other stuff. The sad thing is that what I think at other times of the day seldomly gets me inspired when I finaly sit and try to write.
I hope that those additional infos won't make the question too specific about me (I imagine there are other part-time writers out there interested in the topic).
creative-writing wordcount first-draft habits
I've got a 40h, full-time job, as many do. Yet I'd like to become a writer someday, or at least, bring a novel through the first draft.
This considered, I'm trying to give myself a daily target of 1000 words to write each day at least. I'm starting to find that I work best under some kind of stress, or commitment.
On the days that I reach the goal, I'm usually satisfied and I feel a small boost in motivation, so let's say this method is working for me.
Now, the question for you is this: is writing 1000 words a day a reasonable pace for a part-time writer dealing with his first draft?
The assumption here is to maximize commitment to a single novel in order to finish the first draft sooner (in months, rather than a year or years).
Related, but not overlapping:
Time management for part-time writing
Additional information:
I'm adding this paragraph after the comments and some of the answers.
- I commute to work on foot or by bike. It takes me from 15 to 30 min. to get there, but reasonably enough, no writing can be done. On "good" days I use this time to listen to podcasts or maybe outline the next scene as I'm walking.
- I try to make a stand and not overtime.
- Sometimes I'm able to squeeze some writing at work during lunch break, but that's a difficult one to pull off.
- Aside from working, I've got the basic stuff to do (chores, groceries, tending to my house and other off-work matters). I've got a SO that helps out with this.
About the writing itself:
- I'm a discovery writer. I have an idea of where the story is going, but I can't predict every turn of the page.
- My actual project is already started and well into its second act. Sometime I have to stop for research certain topics, or take notes about worldbuilding as I go.
- It takes me around 20 minutes (and a great deal of force of will) to shut off the distractions and get writing at a decent pace.
And lastly,
- yes, I can think abuot my writing while I'm doing other stuff. The sad thing is that what I think at other times of the day seldomly gets me inspired when I finaly sit and try to write.
I hope that those additional infos won't make the question too specific about me (I imagine there are other part-time writers out there interested in the topic).
creative-writing wordcount first-draft habits
creative-writing wordcount first-draft habits
edited 18 hours ago
Liquid
asked 2 days ago
LiquidLiquid
5,04511042
5,04511042
1
How do you get to work? If you go by bus (as I do) or train, you may find that's the best time to write, if only because you'll be tired when you get home. I've written multiple novels on a phone in that way.
– J.G.
2 days ago
1
@J.G. Whether you can be productive during your daily commute will largely depend on whether your are affected by other passengers sitting next to you reading what you write while you write it.
– user57423
2 days ago
2
@user57423 You're absolutely right! Any number of variables unique to each of our lives come in to effect, which is why I said "may". I'm lucky neither of my buses is typically crowded.
– J.G.
2 days ago
Relevant, perhaps very relevant: cwhawes.com/anthony-trollope-on-speed-writing
– Ethan Bolker
2 days ago
@J.G. I've answered in my edit. Unluckily unless I start writing as I walk, that won't be possible.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
1
How do you get to work? If you go by bus (as I do) or train, you may find that's the best time to write, if only because you'll be tired when you get home. I've written multiple novels on a phone in that way.
– J.G.
2 days ago
1
@J.G. Whether you can be productive during your daily commute will largely depend on whether your are affected by other passengers sitting next to you reading what you write while you write it.
– user57423
2 days ago
2
@user57423 You're absolutely right! Any number of variables unique to each of our lives come in to effect, which is why I said "may". I'm lucky neither of my buses is typically crowded.
– J.G.
2 days ago
Relevant, perhaps very relevant: cwhawes.com/anthony-trollope-on-speed-writing
– Ethan Bolker
2 days ago
@J.G. I've answered in my edit. Unluckily unless I start writing as I walk, that won't be possible.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
1
1
How do you get to work? If you go by bus (as I do) or train, you may find that's the best time to write, if only because you'll be tired when you get home. I've written multiple novels on a phone in that way.
– J.G.
2 days ago
How do you get to work? If you go by bus (as I do) or train, you may find that's the best time to write, if only because you'll be tired when you get home. I've written multiple novels on a phone in that way.
– J.G.
2 days ago
1
1
@J.G. Whether you can be productive during your daily commute will largely depend on whether your are affected by other passengers sitting next to you reading what you write while you write it.
– user57423
2 days ago
@J.G. Whether you can be productive during your daily commute will largely depend on whether your are affected by other passengers sitting next to you reading what you write while you write it.
– user57423
2 days ago
2
2
@user57423 You're absolutely right! Any number of variables unique to each of our lives come in to effect, which is why I said "may". I'm lucky neither of my buses is typically crowded.
– J.G.
2 days ago
@user57423 You're absolutely right! Any number of variables unique to each of our lives come in to effect, which is why I said "may". I'm lucky neither of my buses is typically crowded.
– J.G.
2 days ago
Relevant, perhaps very relevant: cwhawes.com/anthony-trollope-on-speed-writing
– Ethan Bolker
2 days ago
Relevant, perhaps very relevant: cwhawes.com/anthony-trollope-on-speed-writing
– Ethan Bolker
2 days ago
@J.G. I've answered in my edit. Unluckily unless I start writing as I walk, that won't be possible.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
@J.G. I've answered in my edit. Unluckily unless I start writing as I walk, that won't be possible.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
Just do the math. Although it varies by genre, from about 80,000 to 120,000 (epic fantasy with lots of world-building), 1000 a day means 80 to 120 days. So about three or four months for a first draft. About the time I take myself.
Personally, I set aside 90 minutes every morning (my best time to write) to write, and use Orson Scott Card's advice: You don't have to write in that time, but you can't do anything else. No surfing the net or commenting on blogs, no outside reading (though reading what you have written is fine), just sit there and stare at the screen or do writerly duties; new prose or editing or thinking about your story. The time commitment is what counts, and eventually the work will get done. You can only stare at the screen for five or ten minutes before boredom forces you to write something.
But I don't commit to a word-count; I can guarantee an amount of time but not an amount of productivity. (As a discovery writer, some days I am stuck on choosing the right next scene, and spend the whole time re-reading and trying to figure that out. I might write notes about what I thought about. But I don't feel bad, I put in my 90.)
That's a great advice. I still have to try time-based methods; as a discovery writing myself I do perform poorly when I'm stuck and I have to meet the target 1k words.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
There are many factors that would affect whether 1000 words a day is realistic for you or not. E.g.:
- Do you do overtime?
- How long is your commute to/from work?
- Can you use the commute time for writing?
- What else do you have to do other than working? Do you have a spouse? Children? Must you do the grocery shopping, the cooking, the cleaning?
- How long does it take you to clear your head from work, chores etc., and "get in the zone" - be ready to write? Can you jump right in, or do you need some extra time first?
All those would affect how much time you have that is really free for writing.
Next is the writing itself:
- Do you need to do research for your story, while you're writing it?
- Is it all plotted out, or do you discover it as you go, sometimes sitting and thinking which one of several choices would be most interesting?
- Do you always know what your character would say, or do you know your character would make a joke, but spend half a day looking for the right one?
- related: can you think of your writing while at work / doing chores / etc., or do those things demand your focus?
Which is to say, an average of 1000 words a day might or might not be realistic, depending on many many factors. For myself, some days I do several pages with ease, things just flow, while other days I write and rewrite a single scene, and yet other days I have no time to touch my writing at all. For me, 1000 words a day is not currently realistic. I wish it were. Maybe your circumstances are different, and you can make it happen.
Hello Galastel, thanks for your answer. I've answered to what you asked in my latest edits. I see what you mean with "not realistic". I'm already seeing some drawbacks with this method, but it's probably good to me to build an habit.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
It kind of depends on the quality of your writing. Because if you pump out 365,000 words a year, but they aren't high quality words, then it ultimately doesn't get you closer to publishing (if that is your goal; I'm assuming it is since this site is aimed at professionals). The good news is is that the longer you write, the better you will get; and 1000 words a day is a good stretch; but, I've found that with that word goal target I don't quite get to my best. My actual goal with a 50 hour a week job is 1500, but I usually only hit 700-800. My best writing days see 2-3k words. Otherwise I don't get very deep.
It's generally good advice, as contrary as this may sound, to favor quantity over quality if you're trying get better.
The ceramics teacher announced on opening day that he was dividing the
class into two groups. All those on the left side of the studio, he
said, would be graded solely on the quantity of work they produced,
all those on the right solely on its quality.
His procedure was simple: on the final day of class he would bring in
his bathroom scales and weigh the work of the “quantity” group: fifty
pound of pots rated an “A”, forty pounds a “B”, and so on. Those being
graded on “quality”, however, needed to produce only one pot – albeit
a perfect one – to get an “A”.
Well, came grading time and a curious fact emerged: the works of
highest quality were all produced by the group being graded for
quantity. It seems that while the “quantity” group was busily churning
out piles of work – and learning from their mistakes – the “quality”
group had sat theorizing about perfection, and in the end had little
more to show for their efforts than grandiose theories and a pile of
dead clay.
The idea of quality vs quantity is interesting. Much like the students of the "quality" group in your example, thought, the idea of writing near-perfect scenes often blocks me. Maybe quantity is good enough for a first draft, and quality gets in the second one.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
You're in good company. Ian McEwan writes 600 words a day.
So yes, a thousand words a day is perfectly fine. But of course what is a reasonable pace for you will depend on what you want to achieve. McEwan tortures himself over 600 words of the most refined prose in the same time that Michael Crichton cranks out 10,000 words of bestselling popular fiction. If you consider the daily word counts of some famous authors you may come to the conclusion that maybe
- literary quality correlates negatively with daily word count, while
- sales and riches correlated positively with daily word count.
You decide.
add a comment |
Yes this is a great exercise. That's exactly what Stephen King advises in his audio book "On writing".
He explains that, in order to improve you have to practice, but also to maintain your level and 1000 words a day is the good level. This way of doing work in other fields, by the way.
Whatever content it produces, you should commit to that.
add a comment |
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5 Answers
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active
oldest
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
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Just do the math. Although it varies by genre, from about 80,000 to 120,000 (epic fantasy with lots of world-building), 1000 a day means 80 to 120 days. So about three or four months for a first draft. About the time I take myself.
Personally, I set aside 90 minutes every morning (my best time to write) to write, and use Orson Scott Card's advice: You don't have to write in that time, but you can't do anything else. No surfing the net or commenting on blogs, no outside reading (though reading what you have written is fine), just sit there and stare at the screen or do writerly duties; new prose or editing or thinking about your story. The time commitment is what counts, and eventually the work will get done. You can only stare at the screen for five or ten minutes before boredom forces you to write something.
But I don't commit to a word-count; I can guarantee an amount of time but not an amount of productivity. (As a discovery writer, some days I am stuck on choosing the right next scene, and spend the whole time re-reading and trying to figure that out. I might write notes about what I thought about. But I don't feel bad, I put in my 90.)
That's a great advice. I still have to try time-based methods; as a discovery writing myself I do perform poorly when I'm stuck and I have to meet the target 1k words.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
Just do the math. Although it varies by genre, from about 80,000 to 120,000 (epic fantasy with lots of world-building), 1000 a day means 80 to 120 days. So about three or four months for a first draft. About the time I take myself.
Personally, I set aside 90 minutes every morning (my best time to write) to write, and use Orson Scott Card's advice: You don't have to write in that time, but you can't do anything else. No surfing the net or commenting on blogs, no outside reading (though reading what you have written is fine), just sit there and stare at the screen or do writerly duties; new prose or editing or thinking about your story. The time commitment is what counts, and eventually the work will get done. You can only stare at the screen for five or ten minutes before boredom forces you to write something.
But I don't commit to a word-count; I can guarantee an amount of time but not an amount of productivity. (As a discovery writer, some days I am stuck on choosing the right next scene, and spend the whole time re-reading and trying to figure that out. I might write notes about what I thought about. But I don't feel bad, I put in my 90.)
That's a great advice. I still have to try time-based methods; as a discovery writing myself I do perform poorly when I'm stuck and I have to meet the target 1k words.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
Just do the math. Although it varies by genre, from about 80,000 to 120,000 (epic fantasy with lots of world-building), 1000 a day means 80 to 120 days. So about three or four months for a first draft. About the time I take myself.
Personally, I set aside 90 minutes every morning (my best time to write) to write, and use Orson Scott Card's advice: You don't have to write in that time, but you can't do anything else. No surfing the net or commenting on blogs, no outside reading (though reading what you have written is fine), just sit there and stare at the screen or do writerly duties; new prose or editing or thinking about your story. The time commitment is what counts, and eventually the work will get done. You can only stare at the screen for five or ten minutes before boredom forces you to write something.
But I don't commit to a word-count; I can guarantee an amount of time but not an amount of productivity. (As a discovery writer, some days I am stuck on choosing the right next scene, and spend the whole time re-reading and trying to figure that out. I might write notes about what I thought about. But I don't feel bad, I put in my 90.)
Just do the math. Although it varies by genre, from about 80,000 to 120,000 (epic fantasy with lots of world-building), 1000 a day means 80 to 120 days. So about three or four months for a first draft. About the time I take myself.
Personally, I set aside 90 minutes every morning (my best time to write) to write, and use Orson Scott Card's advice: You don't have to write in that time, but you can't do anything else. No surfing the net or commenting on blogs, no outside reading (though reading what you have written is fine), just sit there and stare at the screen or do writerly duties; new prose or editing or thinking about your story. The time commitment is what counts, and eventually the work will get done. You can only stare at the screen for five or ten minutes before boredom forces you to write something.
But I don't commit to a word-count; I can guarantee an amount of time but not an amount of productivity. (As a discovery writer, some days I am stuck on choosing the right next scene, and spend the whole time re-reading and trying to figure that out. I might write notes about what I thought about. But I don't feel bad, I put in my 90.)
edited 2 days ago
answered 2 days ago
AmadeusAmadeus
46.8k358148
46.8k358148
That's a great advice. I still have to try time-based methods; as a discovery writing myself I do perform poorly when I'm stuck and I have to meet the target 1k words.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
That's a great advice. I still have to try time-based methods; as a discovery writing myself I do perform poorly when I'm stuck and I have to meet the target 1k words.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
That's a great advice. I still have to try time-based methods; as a discovery writing myself I do perform poorly when I'm stuck and I have to meet the target 1k words.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
That's a great advice. I still have to try time-based methods; as a discovery writing myself I do perform poorly when I'm stuck and I have to meet the target 1k words.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
There are many factors that would affect whether 1000 words a day is realistic for you or not. E.g.:
- Do you do overtime?
- How long is your commute to/from work?
- Can you use the commute time for writing?
- What else do you have to do other than working? Do you have a spouse? Children? Must you do the grocery shopping, the cooking, the cleaning?
- How long does it take you to clear your head from work, chores etc., and "get in the zone" - be ready to write? Can you jump right in, or do you need some extra time first?
All those would affect how much time you have that is really free for writing.
Next is the writing itself:
- Do you need to do research for your story, while you're writing it?
- Is it all plotted out, or do you discover it as you go, sometimes sitting and thinking which one of several choices would be most interesting?
- Do you always know what your character would say, or do you know your character would make a joke, but spend half a day looking for the right one?
- related: can you think of your writing while at work / doing chores / etc., or do those things demand your focus?
Which is to say, an average of 1000 words a day might or might not be realistic, depending on many many factors. For myself, some days I do several pages with ease, things just flow, while other days I write and rewrite a single scene, and yet other days I have no time to touch my writing at all. For me, 1000 words a day is not currently realistic. I wish it were. Maybe your circumstances are different, and you can make it happen.
Hello Galastel, thanks for your answer. I've answered to what you asked in my latest edits. I see what you mean with "not realistic". I'm already seeing some drawbacks with this method, but it's probably good to me to build an habit.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
There are many factors that would affect whether 1000 words a day is realistic for you or not. E.g.:
- Do you do overtime?
- How long is your commute to/from work?
- Can you use the commute time for writing?
- What else do you have to do other than working? Do you have a spouse? Children? Must you do the grocery shopping, the cooking, the cleaning?
- How long does it take you to clear your head from work, chores etc., and "get in the zone" - be ready to write? Can you jump right in, or do you need some extra time first?
All those would affect how much time you have that is really free for writing.
Next is the writing itself:
- Do you need to do research for your story, while you're writing it?
- Is it all plotted out, or do you discover it as you go, sometimes sitting and thinking which one of several choices would be most interesting?
- Do you always know what your character would say, or do you know your character would make a joke, but spend half a day looking for the right one?
- related: can you think of your writing while at work / doing chores / etc., or do those things demand your focus?
Which is to say, an average of 1000 words a day might or might not be realistic, depending on many many factors. For myself, some days I do several pages with ease, things just flow, while other days I write and rewrite a single scene, and yet other days I have no time to touch my writing at all. For me, 1000 words a day is not currently realistic. I wish it were. Maybe your circumstances are different, and you can make it happen.
Hello Galastel, thanks for your answer. I've answered to what you asked in my latest edits. I see what you mean with "not realistic". I'm already seeing some drawbacks with this method, but it's probably good to me to build an habit.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
There are many factors that would affect whether 1000 words a day is realistic for you or not. E.g.:
- Do you do overtime?
- How long is your commute to/from work?
- Can you use the commute time for writing?
- What else do you have to do other than working? Do you have a spouse? Children? Must you do the grocery shopping, the cooking, the cleaning?
- How long does it take you to clear your head from work, chores etc., and "get in the zone" - be ready to write? Can you jump right in, or do you need some extra time first?
All those would affect how much time you have that is really free for writing.
Next is the writing itself:
- Do you need to do research for your story, while you're writing it?
- Is it all plotted out, or do you discover it as you go, sometimes sitting and thinking which one of several choices would be most interesting?
- Do you always know what your character would say, or do you know your character would make a joke, but spend half a day looking for the right one?
- related: can you think of your writing while at work / doing chores / etc., or do those things demand your focus?
Which is to say, an average of 1000 words a day might or might not be realistic, depending on many many factors. For myself, some days I do several pages with ease, things just flow, while other days I write and rewrite a single scene, and yet other days I have no time to touch my writing at all. For me, 1000 words a day is not currently realistic. I wish it were. Maybe your circumstances are different, and you can make it happen.
There are many factors that would affect whether 1000 words a day is realistic for you or not. E.g.:
- Do you do overtime?
- How long is your commute to/from work?
- Can you use the commute time for writing?
- What else do you have to do other than working? Do you have a spouse? Children? Must you do the grocery shopping, the cooking, the cleaning?
- How long does it take you to clear your head from work, chores etc., and "get in the zone" - be ready to write? Can you jump right in, or do you need some extra time first?
All those would affect how much time you have that is really free for writing.
Next is the writing itself:
- Do you need to do research for your story, while you're writing it?
- Is it all plotted out, or do you discover it as you go, sometimes sitting and thinking which one of several choices would be most interesting?
- Do you always know what your character would say, or do you know your character would make a joke, but spend half a day looking for the right one?
- related: can you think of your writing while at work / doing chores / etc., or do those things demand your focus?
Which is to say, an average of 1000 words a day might or might not be realistic, depending on many many factors. For myself, some days I do several pages with ease, things just flow, while other days I write and rewrite a single scene, and yet other days I have no time to touch my writing at all. For me, 1000 words a day is not currently realistic. I wish it were. Maybe your circumstances are different, and you can make it happen.
answered 2 days ago
GalastelGalastel
26.1k472142
26.1k472142
Hello Galastel, thanks for your answer. I've answered to what you asked in my latest edits. I see what you mean with "not realistic". I'm already seeing some drawbacks with this method, but it's probably good to me to build an habit.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
Hello Galastel, thanks for your answer. I've answered to what you asked in my latest edits. I see what you mean with "not realistic". I'm already seeing some drawbacks with this method, but it's probably good to me to build an habit.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
Hello Galastel, thanks for your answer. I've answered to what you asked in my latest edits. I see what you mean with "not realistic". I'm already seeing some drawbacks with this method, but it's probably good to me to build an habit.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
Hello Galastel, thanks for your answer. I've answered to what you asked in my latest edits. I see what you mean with "not realistic". I'm already seeing some drawbacks with this method, but it's probably good to me to build an habit.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
It kind of depends on the quality of your writing. Because if you pump out 365,000 words a year, but they aren't high quality words, then it ultimately doesn't get you closer to publishing (if that is your goal; I'm assuming it is since this site is aimed at professionals). The good news is is that the longer you write, the better you will get; and 1000 words a day is a good stretch; but, I've found that with that word goal target I don't quite get to my best. My actual goal with a 50 hour a week job is 1500, but I usually only hit 700-800. My best writing days see 2-3k words. Otherwise I don't get very deep.
It's generally good advice, as contrary as this may sound, to favor quantity over quality if you're trying get better.
The ceramics teacher announced on opening day that he was dividing the
class into two groups. All those on the left side of the studio, he
said, would be graded solely on the quantity of work they produced,
all those on the right solely on its quality.
His procedure was simple: on the final day of class he would bring in
his bathroom scales and weigh the work of the “quantity” group: fifty
pound of pots rated an “A”, forty pounds a “B”, and so on. Those being
graded on “quality”, however, needed to produce only one pot – albeit
a perfect one – to get an “A”.
Well, came grading time and a curious fact emerged: the works of
highest quality were all produced by the group being graded for
quantity. It seems that while the “quantity” group was busily churning
out piles of work – and learning from their mistakes – the “quality”
group had sat theorizing about perfection, and in the end had little
more to show for their efforts than grandiose theories and a pile of
dead clay.
The idea of quality vs quantity is interesting. Much like the students of the "quality" group in your example, thought, the idea of writing near-perfect scenes often blocks me. Maybe quantity is good enough for a first draft, and quality gets in the second one.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
It kind of depends on the quality of your writing. Because if you pump out 365,000 words a year, but they aren't high quality words, then it ultimately doesn't get you closer to publishing (if that is your goal; I'm assuming it is since this site is aimed at professionals). The good news is is that the longer you write, the better you will get; and 1000 words a day is a good stretch; but, I've found that with that word goal target I don't quite get to my best. My actual goal with a 50 hour a week job is 1500, but I usually only hit 700-800. My best writing days see 2-3k words. Otherwise I don't get very deep.
It's generally good advice, as contrary as this may sound, to favor quantity over quality if you're trying get better.
The ceramics teacher announced on opening day that he was dividing the
class into two groups. All those on the left side of the studio, he
said, would be graded solely on the quantity of work they produced,
all those on the right solely on its quality.
His procedure was simple: on the final day of class he would bring in
his bathroom scales and weigh the work of the “quantity” group: fifty
pound of pots rated an “A”, forty pounds a “B”, and so on. Those being
graded on “quality”, however, needed to produce only one pot – albeit
a perfect one – to get an “A”.
Well, came grading time and a curious fact emerged: the works of
highest quality were all produced by the group being graded for
quantity. It seems that while the “quantity” group was busily churning
out piles of work – and learning from their mistakes – the “quality”
group had sat theorizing about perfection, and in the end had little
more to show for their efforts than grandiose theories and a pile of
dead clay.
The idea of quality vs quantity is interesting. Much like the students of the "quality" group in your example, thought, the idea of writing near-perfect scenes often blocks me. Maybe quantity is good enough for a first draft, and quality gets in the second one.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
It kind of depends on the quality of your writing. Because if you pump out 365,000 words a year, but they aren't high quality words, then it ultimately doesn't get you closer to publishing (if that is your goal; I'm assuming it is since this site is aimed at professionals). The good news is is that the longer you write, the better you will get; and 1000 words a day is a good stretch; but, I've found that with that word goal target I don't quite get to my best. My actual goal with a 50 hour a week job is 1500, but I usually only hit 700-800. My best writing days see 2-3k words. Otherwise I don't get very deep.
It's generally good advice, as contrary as this may sound, to favor quantity over quality if you're trying get better.
The ceramics teacher announced on opening day that he was dividing the
class into two groups. All those on the left side of the studio, he
said, would be graded solely on the quantity of work they produced,
all those on the right solely on its quality.
His procedure was simple: on the final day of class he would bring in
his bathroom scales and weigh the work of the “quantity” group: fifty
pound of pots rated an “A”, forty pounds a “B”, and so on. Those being
graded on “quality”, however, needed to produce only one pot – albeit
a perfect one – to get an “A”.
Well, came grading time and a curious fact emerged: the works of
highest quality were all produced by the group being graded for
quantity. It seems that while the “quantity” group was busily churning
out piles of work – and learning from their mistakes – the “quality”
group had sat theorizing about perfection, and in the end had little
more to show for their efforts than grandiose theories and a pile of
dead clay.
It kind of depends on the quality of your writing. Because if you pump out 365,000 words a year, but they aren't high quality words, then it ultimately doesn't get you closer to publishing (if that is your goal; I'm assuming it is since this site is aimed at professionals). The good news is is that the longer you write, the better you will get; and 1000 words a day is a good stretch; but, I've found that with that word goal target I don't quite get to my best. My actual goal with a 50 hour a week job is 1500, but I usually only hit 700-800. My best writing days see 2-3k words. Otherwise I don't get very deep.
It's generally good advice, as contrary as this may sound, to favor quantity over quality if you're trying get better.
The ceramics teacher announced on opening day that he was dividing the
class into two groups. All those on the left side of the studio, he
said, would be graded solely on the quantity of work they produced,
all those on the right solely on its quality.
His procedure was simple: on the final day of class he would bring in
his bathroom scales and weigh the work of the “quantity” group: fifty
pound of pots rated an “A”, forty pounds a “B”, and so on. Those being
graded on “quality”, however, needed to produce only one pot – albeit
a perfect one – to get an “A”.
Well, came grading time and a curious fact emerged: the works of
highest quality were all produced by the group being graded for
quantity. It seems that while the “quantity” group was busily churning
out piles of work – and learning from their mistakes – the “quality”
group had sat theorizing about perfection, and in the end had little
more to show for their efforts than grandiose theories and a pile of
dead clay.
edited yesterday
answered 2 days ago
KirkKirk
6,0921732
6,0921732
The idea of quality vs quantity is interesting. Much like the students of the "quality" group in your example, thought, the idea of writing near-perfect scenes often blocks me. Maybe quantity is good enough for a first draft, and quality gets in the second one.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
The idea of quality vs quantity is interesting. Much like the students of the "quality" group in your example, thought, the idea of writing near-perfect scenes often blocks me. Maybe quantity is good enough for a first draft, and quality gets in the second one.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
The idea of quality vs quantity is interesting. Much like the students of the "quality" group in your example, thought, the idea of writing near-perfect scenes often blocks me. Maybe quantity is good enough for a first draft, and quality gets in the second one.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
The idea of quality vs quantity is interesting. Much like the students of the "quality" group in your example, thought, the idea of writing near-perfect scenes often blocks me. Maybe quantity is good enough for a first draft, and quality gets in the second one.
– Liquid
19 hours ago
add a comment |
You're in good company. Ian McEwan writes 600 words a day.
So yes, a thousand words a day is perfectly fine. But of course what is a reasonable pace for you will depend on what you want to achieve. McEwan tortures himself over 600 words of the most refined prose in the same time that Michael Crichton cranks out 10,000 words of bestselling popular fiction. If you consider the daily word counts of some famous authors you may come to the conclusion that maybe
- literary quality correlates negatively with daily word count, while
- sales and riches correlated positively with daily word count.
You decide.
add a comment |
You're in good company. Ian McEwan writes 600 words a day.
So yes, a thousand words a day is perfectly fine. But of course what is a reasonable pace for you will depend on what you want to achieve. McEwan tortures himself over 600 words of the most refined prose in the same time that Michael Crichton cranks out 10,000 words of bestselling popular fiction. If you consider the daily word counts of some famous authors you may come to the conclusion that maybe
- literary quality correlates negatively with daily word count, while
- sales and riches correlated positively with daily word count.
You decide.
add a comment |
You're in good company. Ian McEwan writes 600 words a day.
So yes, a thousand words a day is perfectly fine. But of course what is a reasonable pace for you will depend on what you want to achieve. McEwan tortures himself over 600 words of the most refined prose in the same time that Michael Crichton cranks out 10,000 words of bestselling popular fiction. If you consider the daily word counts of some famous authors you may come to the conclusion that maybe
- literary quality correlates negatively with daily word count, while
- sales and riches correlated positively with daily word count.
You decide.
You're in good company. Ian McEwan writes 600 words a day.
So yes, a thousand words a day is perfectly fine. But of course what is a reasonable pace for you will depend on what you want to achieve. McEwan tortures himself over 600 words of the most refined prose in the same time that Michael Crichton cranks out 10,000 words of bestselling popular fiction. If you consider the daily word counts of some famous authors you may come to the conclusion that maybe
- literary quality correlates negatively with daily word count, while
- sales and riches correlated positively with daily word count.
You decide.
answered 2 days ago
user57423user57423
8291425
8291425
add a comment |
add a comment |
Yes this is a great exercise. That's exactly what Stephen King advises in his audio book "On writing".
He explains that, in order to improve you have to practice, but also to maintain your level and 1000 words a day is the good level. This way of doing work in other fields, by the way.
Whatever content it produces, you should commit to that.
add a comment |
Yes this is a great exercise. That's exactly what Stephen King advises in his audio book "On writing".
He explains that, in order to improve you have to practice, but also to maintain your level and 1000 words a day is the good level. This way of doing work in other fields, by the way.
Whatever content it produces, you should commit to that.
add a comment |
Yes this is a great exercise. That's exactly what Stephen King advises in his audio book "On writing".
He explains that, in order to improve you have to practice, but also to maintain your level and 1000 words a day is the good level. This way of doing work in other fields, by the way.
Whatever content it produces, you should commit to that.
Yes this is a great exercise. That's exactly what Stephen King advises in his audio book "On writing".
He explains that, in order to improve you have to practice, but also to maintain your level and 1000 words a day is the good level. This way of doing work in other fields, by the way.
Whatever content it produces, you should commit to that.
answered yesterday
MyGamebooksMyGamebooks
473
473
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
How do you get to work? If you go by bus (as I do) or train, you may find that's the best time to write, if only because you'll be tired when you get home. I've written multiple novels on a phone in that way.
– J.G.
2 days ago
1
@J.G. Whether you can be productive during your daily commute will largely depend on whether your are affected by other passengers sitting next to you reading what you write while you write it.
– user57423
2 days ago
2
@user57423 You're absolutely right! Any number of variables unique to each of our lives come in to effect, which is why I said "may". I'm lucky neither of my buses is typically crowded.
– J.G.
2 days ago
Relevant, perhaps very relevant: cwhawes.com/anthony-trollope-on-speed-writing
– Ethan Bolker
2 days ago
@J.G. I've answered in my edit. Unluckily unless I start writing as I walk, that won't be possible.
– Liquid
19 hours ago