Have you ever gotten an idea you liked so much you immediately put any other WIPs on hold so you could start it? Is this wise?
David McAfee said:Have you ever gotten an idea you liked so much you immediately put any other WIPs on hold so you could start it? Is this wise?
David McAfee said:Have you ever gotten an idea you liked so much you immediately put any other WIPs on hold so you could start it? Is this wise?
Maybe I wasn't the norm, but as a newbie several years ago, I did just that. Then when a project was finished, I submitted it. Got acceptances along with those rejections. I still do this. If I have a great idea (for lack of a better term) , I'll start writing it until I run out of steam, go back to another project, then back to the great idea.Jamesaritchie said:No. I thinks it's a horrible thing to do....
Switching projects because you get a new GREAT IDEA is probably the most common reason so many new writers never finish anything.
Jamesaritchie said:Switching projects because you get a new GREAT IDEA is probably the most common reason so many new writers never finish anything.
johnzakour said:Hmm, interesting statement to make…
Here's my equally non-provable statement: Writers not loving their current WIP is probably the most common reason why so many new writers never finish anything.
I don't see any reason (barring deadlines) why an author can't put one project on hold to work on another project that really has their interest at the moment. You write better when you are truly interested in the project.
I'm not saying James is wrong, I'm just saying I don't agree with him. I don't think there is a right or wrong here.
Maprilynne said:Oh Man, where's Orion when you need her? Orion's book (yanno, the one that sold in a really big auction a week after submission) was her third book and she got this idea to write it and the idea wouldn't leave her alone. She wanted to wait till her WIP was done and then write it, but an author friend told her that if the idea was that persisten she should drop everything and write it.
She did and, trust me, she doesn't regret it.
Maprilynne
Originally Posted by Jamesaritchie
Switching projects because you get a new GREAT IDEA is probably the most common reason so many new writers never finish anything.
johnzakour said:Hmm, interesting statement to make…
Here's my equally non-provable statement: Writers not loving their current WIP is probably the most common reason why so many new writers never finish anything.
Nickie said:It frequently happens to me. Most of the time I'm working on a novel, trying to complete it, but in between I get ideas for other stories.
What I do then is quickly note down the idea, and store it somewhere until I've finished with the work on hand. If I still like the idea after that time, it's guaranteed to make a great new book.
Nickie
Maprilynne said:Oh Man, where's Orion when you need her? Orion's book (yanno, the one that sold in a really big auction a week after submission) was her third book and she got this idea to write it and the idea wouldn't leave her alone. She wanted to wait till her WIP was done and then write it, but an author friend told her that if the idea was that persisten she should drop everything and write it.
She did and, trust me, she doesn't regret it.
Maprilynne
Jamesaritchie said:No, loving your book has nothing to do with it. You either finish or you don't, and it's a choice. And I'd wager that everytime a new writer doesn't "love" a WIP, they immediately jump to another they do "love,' right up until they they fall out of love in mid-book.