I started to think about this when I hear from students or friends who are floundering.  You know I don't believe in writer's block, but I do understand when someone gets tired of writing badly every day.  
So how about a collaborative novel.  Maybe two people who aren't getting anywhere can set out together.  The usual route is the epistolary one -- two kids exchange letters about their lives, their problems, etc.  Maybe they've known each other and one has moved away.  Maybe they've met on-line.  If a couple of you decide to try this, my advice is to work against the grain -- trade genders, for sure.   If you're a female, be a male.   If you're naturally snarky, settle down and let the other person be that.   Subvert your so-called natural tendencies.  
Another possibility is to have a couple of writers simply alternate chapters.  Some collaborators agree on a skeletal story-line; some just start and see what happens; a few people I've known go page-by-page, so X would write page one, for example, e-mail that to Y, and Y would write page two and send it back to X.  And so on.  At a page per day, they have a novel-sized ms. in about four months.
And any novel-sized manuscript is a cause for celebration!  
 
 
 
Hear, hear. Whatever gets us to the finish line. I co-wrote my three nonfiction gold rush books and it was a great experience. When one was down, the other was up. In fact, I had withdrawal symptoms when I was back on my own. I wouldn't recommend it all the time, but like marriage, collaboration can work - with negotiation. Jane Yolen co-wrote a novel with Bruce Coville in alternating chapters.
ReplyDeleteAw, I want to do this. But I wouldn't be the boy. As my daughter says, I'm glad I'm a girl because I don't have to collect Star Wars figures and brag about hunting.
ReplyDelete