Before I start, I think it is better to clarify something. This is a guide to write a novel, not to publish it. Publishing is a totally different art, which I never mastered or really understood, and is up to each writer to find his way through success. Writing novels, on the other hand, is something that I dedicated much study using a variety of books, and in that, I think I can help.
Have you ever heard someone saying that someday he or she might write a book with some story they have in the head for years. Well… those will hardly ever write a novel. The most important rule to write a novel is the simplest of them. It is “Write”. You must write as much as you can so you can put 100.000 words in the paper, and it won't happen only producing positive thoughts in your mind. You must defy yourself to sit in front of a computer screen or a blank sheet of paper to write for at least two or three hours a day if you want to start in a slow pace.
That first rule, “Write”, is the most important one, and I think with only that you could have your novel written in a while, but there are other sub-rules and techniques that may become handy.
The second rule, that is primordially a sub-category of the first one, is to develop a writing schedule. That rule I took from Dean Koontz in “Writing Popular Fiction” and Dick Perry in “One Way to Write your Novel”, and when I worked that rule, I realized, amazed, that it works. Most wannabe writers will say that they work in their own time, and when inspiration comes they write ruled their own rhythm. Those are the ones that maybe, and just maybe, will have a novel written in three or four years. Writing is like everything else in life. It takes discipline. Believe-me; if you force yourself to write for a specific time everyday (not procrastinate, surfing the web), it will be hard in the beginning, but your mind will get used to it and will start to help. Inspiration will come much easier if you have a writing schedule. You just need to develop your inspirations muscles, and that won't happen if you don't force the Muse to get outside and workout.
Some will ask: What about writer's block? Then I will say that in 99,9% of the times, people call writer's block what some other person could easily name as laziness. That's right and true. Don't hate me if you have used that excuse hundreds of times; it is still true, and the earlier you face your laziness, the faster you will overcome it.
The second rule, which I believe I must be borrowing from Lawrence Block's “Writing the novel, from plot to print” (forgive me, Lawrence Block, if I didn't take that from you), is that you must create a daily writing goal. Dick Perry suggests two pages, six days a week, for a hundred says. He believes you will have a novel by then. Back then, I bought the idea, but I was never able to write on Saturdays and Sundays, so it took longer to me. Also, 100 days weren't enough; my novel wasn't ready yet, but I developed some discipline, and that prepared me for the other rules.
The next one is Plot. Plotting before start to write will guide you through the workdays. Know what you are going to write before you actually write it, gives time to your mind subconsciously work that ideas for you. Dean Koontz, and Dick Perry strongly advise you about building a story structure before you write. Dean Koontz believes you must hold that idea in your mind, but Dick Perry goes further than that and teach a way to build the whole plot before you even write the first line of your novel. His technique was the one I enjoyed most.
The plotting technique that I borrowed from Perry and that I strongly recommend, starts with buying a notebook and writing in the top of the thirty first pages “Chapter 1,2,3…30”. After that, you think about how you want your story to begin and write it on chapter 1; then, how you want the novel to end, and place it on chapter 30. Next, think about your climax and place it somewhere around chapter 18 to 22, and voilá, you have the main concept written down. Now, you just have to write down, chapter by chapter, what you think should happen from 1 to 30 for the last chapter to be consequence of the first. I also create Character profiles. One page for each profile that I create with descriptions of the Characters. That will also become handy if you forget at some point how a character looks like.
this is an interesting article. I'm sure there are lots of us here at Triond who wonder how they will ever be able to get around to writing a novel. You have given us all a template. thank you.
Just a quiet word - there are a couple of typos in your article, with I, as an avid wordster, find distracting. One more draft required - an easy fixing job with Triond!