I had two new Eye on the Paranormal articles come out this month: Ghosts are not Residual People and Happy Thanksgiving & some Random Thoughts on the Supernatural, and just taped Indie Author Show # 37 Life
after Nanowrimo.
Now that you're ready to come emerge from your self - imposed writer exile, you're probably wondering what to do
after NaNoWriMo?
While she's editing those episodes
after NaNoWriMo, she'll write another ten episodes.
We've created an editing schedule she can begin
after NaNoWriMo so that she can knock all of her novels into shape, and get them published.
That's two full months
after NaNoWriMo wraps up, so there should be plenty of time to get it done right.
Not exact matches
I am in the process of writing my very first Novel, The Boys I Left in Paris, which is in the mega editing stage
after spewing out over 50,000 words for the annual
NaNoWriMo contest!
And basically that whooole time from right
after we got back from Philly until now, I haven't managed to even LOOK at my
NaNoWriMo project.
I've got some exciting editing projects in the works right now, and with
NaNoWriMo wrapping up, I've been getting a lot of new inquiries about developmental editing — which is usually the service people need most
after speed - writing a novel.
However, hundreds of
NaNoWriMo novels actually have been successfully published
after they've been edited and polished.
After all, you were able to type up your story in the short span of a month, make use of the helpful
NaNoWriMo website, and get it published with Lulu.
After saying all that, I have to admit that I won't be doing
NaNoWriMo this year as I have rewrites to do for Pentecost in order to have it ready to enter the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Awards in Jan 2010.
After eight years of programs promoting National Novel Writing Month (
NaNoWriMo), Topeka and Shawnee County (Kans.) Public Library (TSCPL) responded to customer requests for similar events.