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In my drive to get Kern back onto the tarmac after a looong flight (well . . . long for me; Air-E-Tate doesn’t offer Angharad’s Transstellar Service!), I missed a personal milestone. At the tail end of September, after just over three years on the site, I posted a story chapter containing my millionth word (not counting blog posts and comments). Near as I can tell, the magic word – appropriately enough – was “Carmen,” so I used her final picture for this blog posting rather than my own. It was the need to tell her story, after all, that got me through my writing drought and pulled me past that milestone. It took me less than a year to hit 500,000 words; the second 500,000 took more than two. As I’ve discussed with several authors, it often feels like each individual word I write is incrementally more difficult than the one before it. Maybe it’s the worry that I’ll be repeating myself; for sure, I don’t want to write variations on the same story over and over again. The more one says, the harder it is to say something new. So when I see Holly Snow posting that she’s done, I feel her pain acutely. I get it. This writing stuff can be hard. It is among the reasons why feedback from readers is so important. Were it not for a timely comment from AlisonP, I would have stopped writing stories after around 68,000 words. This is such a wonderful community. Thank you to everyone here who has supported my writing, for your clicks and kudos, for your PM’s, and especially for your comments. Thank you to the amazing authors who have freely given me their time as beta readers, editors, sounding-boards and – occasionally! – therapists. And thank you to Erin, Mel, Piper, and the whole team that holds this precious space for us. |
Comments
That's a badge I will wear with great pride!
If I have, in any way, helped to keep you writing for all of our great pleasure - then my work here is done!
Seriously, I have loved everything you've ever written, in fact I've re-read all of it a couple of months ago. I did struggle a bit with Kern in the earlier parts - in retrospect it was the Spanish language. It's a very minority language here - I can understand a lot of German, and some Latin and French, but Spanish might as well be Sanskrit. I sort of got the hang of it - or learned to not worry that I didn't understand it and greatly enjoyed Kern from then until the lovely ending. A good ending for Carmen's story - not perfect as you can't win them all and there will always be those who will NEVER accept us, but that just made the whole story more real.
Thank you for every one of your million+ words,
Alison
Millions
I wonder how many members of the two million word club have posted here on BC? :)
I have a couple of pseudonyms that have more than a million. :)
Just keep writing, we have room. :)
HUgs,
Erin
= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.
Wow
I've been posting here for 19 years and I doubt that I have anywhere near that number.
I wonder; how have you tracked that? Not that I doubt you. You are a prolific author; I'm just curious as to how many words I've written in the 19 years I've been posting. Short of setting up a tedious spreadsheet I don't see a way to do that.
I'm sure I don't have the time or patience to do that. Mostly the patience.
Hugs
Patricia
Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt
Ich bin ein femininer Mann
You got it in one
I set up a tedious spreadsheet. ;-)
I know, right? I’m such a geek. When I updated the spreadsheet I saw that Chapter 36 of Kern ended just 161 words short of getting me to 1,000,000, and “Carmen” is the 161st word of the next chapter. :)
— Emma
Keep writing Chica!
You're not one to let a little cramp in the mind stop ya from figuring out how to get around some measly words or to tame some scene or dialog and bend fiction to your whim! Congrats on a mil - we're the lucky one's when you're dropping stories! Hugz 'atcha!
XOXOXO
Rachel M. Moore...