I finished the first full rough draft of my urban fantasy novel in the summer of 2005. It came in at 90,000 words. Not bad. I liked it but knew it needed heavy editing. So I put it aside so I could get a fresh perspective when I came back.
The draft sat untouched until January of 2010, 4+ years later. That is a lot of freaking perspective. I'd given up on it for a lot of reasons listed in posts below, but also because I knew editing was going to be painful. I knew there were serious problems that I did not want to confront because I had no clue how to make them suck less.
Then I got back into listening to the
I Should Be Writing podcast by
Mur Lafferty and regained my inspiration. So I read the old draft and began to edit. And I was horrified at how bad some parts were. Did I actually put a Tony Soprano character in there? Did I think I could write dialog for mafia types that was not laughable? Was I insane? And realized I had to do more than edit - I had to cut and rewrite major sections.
When all was said and done I deleted 30,000 words. One third. To put that into perspective, a typical new author novel is supposed to be between 75,000-95,000 words. Also, I need to fit my writing in between other responsibilities, so in a good week I can get three days of writing at about 1,000-1,500 words per day.
So I deleted my novel into something too small to be considered a novel, set myself back a good 6-8 weeks of rewriting, and was way farther behind that I thought I'd be.
Oh yeah. And I completely deleted the antagonist because he was a gigantic, horrible cliché.
So there I was in January with 2/3 of a first draft, massive rewriting ahead of me, and no antagonist. Good times.
But now here in March I am so glad I did it. I was dead right to go with my gut and kill those 30,000 words. They were absolutely not salvageable. And it made me go back to ground zero and get into the head of my antagonist. I spent time seeing him from just his side and not just as a foil. What did he want? What was his background? If there were no protagonist what would his plan be? Character creation 101.
And I rewrote the entire antagonist storyline, 28,000 words. Then I reworked this new villain into the main story of the protagonist. And overall I am much happier with the novel now than I was in January. In fact, I realized that some of what made me put the draft down for two years was that I knew deep down that the villain was utter crap.
My point? Killing 30,000 words was quicker than trying to fix 30,000 words. Even though it seemed crazy at the time and was an agonizing decision.
Now, finally, I have a real first draft, back up over 90,000 words with some other additional tweaks, that I'm much happier with. I need to destroy to create sometimes.
Next up: No clue. I'll figure something out.