You are currently viewing Move Fast: Break Things
Move Fast

Move Fast: Break Things

The last time I moved fast, I shattered my knee cap.
 
 In US culture, fast and furious is always privileged over  measured and mediated. Clearly,  Being first often equates with success; the first to patent and idea, the first to publish a scientific theory, first to try a new move.  Speed  wins the race. One of the fall outs from the Amazon culture is we can have an item within days, sometimes hours of ordering.  It’s natural that over the years we have conflated writing a book with ordering a book.
 
Books arrive  overnight.  We should write them just as fast. 
Some authors do write their books that fast. Danielle Steel publishes an impressive three books a year. Younger genre authors publish more frequently than that. Writers who enjoy fast turn around often work in a specific genre.  They work within their own world which in turn, the reader is familiar with and once establish, it’s relatively easy to  churn out  five to six (sometimes more) books a year, lighting manuscripts one after the other like a chain smoker:  Cindy finds love in the Bookstore.  Mandy finds Love in the Flower Shop.  Teresa opens a Bookstore/Flower Shop and finds love.  The books are exactly what the readers want, no more, no less.  These series books, many of which are ebooks only, are, in some cases, so massively successful they earn their authors enough money to open their own Flower Shop/Cafe/Bookstore.  And jolly good for them.
 
 
 
James Patterson dominates  best sellers lists not only through world building but committee management.  He thinks up the plot and hires relatively unknown authors to write up the book drafts. Another team researches, graphic artists create the covers, the publishing team crafts the back copy and launches the marketing campaign. Patterson in turn, puts that unknown author’s name on the cover, right below Patterson, giving credit where credit is due, which can be a great career boost for the author.  All just fine, but do not make the mistake as you survey a used bookstore shelf packed with copy after copy of James Patterson and despair that you can’t publish 31 books a year. 
You are not a committee. You could be, but you aren’t. You are you. And you have my permission and support to write your book at your own pace.  
 
A book takes as long as it takes.   
 
Most of my clients aren’t working to create a system, they aren’t writing genre fiction, they are working on recording a unique expression of themselves, of their story, of a character that reflects all truth they want to say out loud but need a story to do it effectively.
 
 
Those novels and memoirs take longer to create.  And that is okay.  Sometimes you have an idea for a book but the character takes his or her sweet time before starting to speak.  Sometimes you must to wait out an elderly relative before you can write that memoir.  Sometimes you get 50,000 words into a novel and one morning realize that the Muse led you astray, and the whole thing needs to be tossed.  Or even ritualistically burned (true story).
 
 
 
If you are writing something unique, now is the time to embrace process. And process by definition, is slow, steady.  If you try to write too fast you will lose the very reason to write at all: living in your zone,  experiencing the day as a creative, spending hours in joy. Writing is a process, it’s about the doing. The goal is to spend, days and weeks, months immersed in a world of your own making.  This is your art and it won’t end when you publish.   
 
 
What I have learned  over publishing 27 or so books is no one cares when I finish or even what I finish.  They care even less about when I publish.  When I tell someone I’m a writer, they don’t ask about the finished book (likely because they aren’t really readers) but they are fascinated by the process. They want to discuss how I’m writing, do I use a computer or write by hand, do I write in the morning, if so, how early?  How on early am I able to rise that early? What do I write in my journals?  They are hungry for information on how to express this particular art.  They want to know about the how and the why.  The finished product?  Meh. 
 
 
While you are writing your book, you are a writer, you are envied because you have an interesting and absorbing project. Writers travel to interesting locations.  Writers research in picturesque libraries.  Writers can legitimately spend hours staring into space.  How much better can it get?  The win is your process.  Enjoy  the process and take as long as you like.  I know a writer who is having so much fun traveling and researching he may never finish his book. And he does not care.
 
The myth of moving fast is inescapable.  Impossibly Young Author writes book in under three hours, sells a million copies in  seven and and a half minutes, buys the Barbie dream house and lives happily ever after. Except, what she will be asked, forever after, is not – tell me about your published book, but tell me what you are working on now.  
 
Fast is currently a thing, so was smoking.  It may be healthier to just take your time.  
 
New Collection!  I’m working on a new book – Out Loud – A Writing Adventure for Women. Learn how to tap into your creativity, organize your ne

CatharineBramkamp

Catharine Bramkamp is a successful writing coach and author. She has published over 300 newspaper and magazine articles in publications like Modern Maturity (AARP), SF Chronicle and Santa Rosa Magazine. She was a contributor to two Chicken Soup Books and has published anthologies of her work, non-fiction works and novels. Her work has also appeared in a number of poetry and fiction anthologies. She has experimented with the self-publishing world since 2001. She has published and self-published seven books through companies like Author House, author assist companies like 3L Publishing and through traditional publishers like Write Life. Her poetry collection, Ammonia Sunrise, will be released in August 2011 by Finishing Line Press and her mystery novel, In Good Faith will be released by Write Life in 2011. Catharine holds a BA in English from UCSB and a MA in English from Sonoma State University. She is a 25 year member of California Writer’s Club. She is an adjunct professor for the University of Phoenix. She works with authors of both fiction and non-fiction to make their dream of producing a book come true. For more information on that, visit her at www.YourBookStartsHere.com Catharine has lived in Sonoma County for 25 years and considers wine a food group. She is married to an adorable and very patient man who complains he’s never featured in any of her books. Her grown children who are featured in a few of her books have fled the county.

Leave a Reply