Showing posts with label Dead and Buryd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dead and Buryd. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2015

NaNoWriMo November: Chele Cooke

I'm always to have author Chele Cooke as a guest on my blog. She's a fabulous writer and her tips today are helpful as always. Chele is a serious NaNo pro (and maybe a bit of a masochist - doing NaNo for ten years!). I hope you are inspired by her "5 Tips for 50k". And don't forget to enter the Mega Book Giveaway at the end of the post. You may just win one of Chele's great books :-)

5 Tips for 50k

by Chele Cooke

It’s scary to think that this year, I’m attempting to complete my tenth year doing NaNoWriMo. I first tried it in University and failed spectacularly. In fact, I failed for five years in a row. Every time I got to around the 17k mark, my inspiration dropped out.

The first time I succeeded was in 2011, and I’ve succeeded in hitting that magical 50k mark every year since. So, this year is a big one for me. Can I hit five in a row? The last three years, I’ve written the first 50,000 words of the latest book in my Out of Orbit series. Each book in that series has now been published and this November is time to work on the concluding instalment.

It’s difficult… really difficult. Anyone who tells you churning out 50,000 words is easy because they don’t have to be edited, is either extremely lucky or has never tried to do it in 30 days.

So I’m still going to give you my top five tips got to 50k and hit that big, shiny ‘WINNER’ button.

1.     Aim High
While NaNoWriMo says you need to write 1,667 words per day in order to reach that 50k goal, I always suggest that whenever possible, aim above that. If you’re on a roll, keep writing. Having a buffer will help when you’re struggling, or if you have a day when you can’t write. Personally, I always aim for 2,500 words for the first seven days, giving me a 5,831 word buffer by the end of day 7.

2.     Split the Workload
If you find yourself with a day that you can’t write, don’t assume you have to double up the next day. Split the extra words over a few days so that you don’t buckle under overwhelming pressure. Maybe even schedule a few days off to recuperate and let your brain quietly work out the blocks in the background.

3.     Planning and Plotting
I’m not going to get into the Planning vs Pantsing debate, but if you like to plan your writing, do so to the best of your ability. I’ll usually have 10,000 words of plotting in bullet points before I start the first draft. Even if you’re finding now that you would work better with a plan, take a day or two to set out the next half-dozen chapters. Remember that your brain is already working very hard in coming up with this prose. Give it a break by not needing to figure out what comes next.

4.     The Use of Placeholders
If you’re writing a genre which requires the creation of words, places, etc, try using a placeholder to keep yourself from stopping. This also works if you need to research, or if you haven’t decided on a character name. Set yourself up a word document or excel spreadsheet and keep that information listed so you’ll use the same placeholder every time.

CITYALPHA – Main City
CHARF1 – Female Character, chapter 2
PERCNT – Percentage population killed by virus in 1st Week.

Using this method, you can let your brain mull over these things in the background without slowing you down, and you can use the Find and Replace function to later change them over.
Side Note: If using this method, I suggest not using real words as placeholders, as you may use that word somewhere else. Miss out vowels, or combine elements of words, and keep them on your list.

5.     Work the Way that Works for YOU!
Don’t listen to anyone who tells you that you have to work chronologically, or that you must turn off your inner editor, yadda yadda yadda. If you want to skip around, do it! If you have to go back and edit that paragraph because it affects the rest of the plot, do it! Whether you can only write at 6am, or you best plot whilst standing on your head, do what works for you!
You won’t have a finished novel at the end of NaNoWriMo. You’ll be really far ahead if you’ve finished a draft. All the other kinks can be worked out later on! Just focus on keeping yourself going, and on enjoying yourself!

This is a challenge, but it’s not a competition. Someone else winning does not mean you lose, and even if you don’t hit that 50k, you’ve still done incredibly well. Whatever comes of this November, everyone taking part should feel proud that they attempted it. Whatever you wrote, you had more than when you started and that’s an accomplishment!

And if you need a little ass-kicking, find a local write-in. I’ve found the people taking part to be a lovely bunch, and meeting up can be really motivational.


Best of luck, and if you have any tips for completing NaNoWriMo that I’ve not mentioned, share them below.


Chele Cooke, Author

Part time author and full time fantacist, Chele Cooke is a sci-fi, fantasy, and paranormal author living in London, UK.

While some know they want to write stories since childhood, Chele first started writing as a teenager writing fanfiction and roleplaying. Before long playing in other people's worlds wasn't enough and she started creating her own. Living in San Francisco at the time, she found a lot of inspiration in her favourite city, some of which can be found in her books.

With a degree in Creative Writing, Chele's first novel, Dead and Buryd, was published in 2013, which is currently free to download from all the major eBook retailers.

You can connect with Chele here:


 

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Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Writer Wednesday: Time to Fight or Take Flight with Chele Cooke


Welcome to Writer Wednesday! I am pleased to welcome back author Chele Cooke. I'm happy to share with you her new release, Fight or Flight. It's the follow up to Dead and Buryd (the Out of Orbit series). If you haven't already read Dead and Buryd, pick it up now! It's FREE on Amazon from July 25 to August 8. And grab Fight or Flight while you're there.

To whet your appetite, here is an excerpt from Fight or Flight. Enjoy!


Fight or Flight by Chele Cooke
Book 2 of the Out of Orbit Series
From Chapter 2: Promises and Protection

“Dhiren,” Georgianna began. “How did you… I mean, why did you agree to work for them?”

A soft sigh left his lips and he leaned forwards, resting his arms across his knees. He glanced at Georgianna before turning his attention back onto his boots.

“I didn’t have much of a choice.”

“But you’re… You could have defended yourself,” she argued. “You don’t need their protection like…”

“Like me” almost slipped from her lips, but she couldn’t bring herself to say it. Dhiren tilted his head to the side and carefully stretched out his jaw, a click sounding from one of the joints.

“I did from the Adveni,” he admitted. “When I was captured, I knew that it would only be so long before I was given the rope. Vajra approached me. He said he would keep me from being executed if I worked for them.”

He gave a dismissive shrug.

He was older than her, perhaps by five or six years. She had often wondered about him, curious about what he’d done to get put into the compound, but she had never dared ask. 

He’d never been anything but kind and cheerful to her, but the opinions of the other inmates had often weighed on her mind.

She’d heard stories when she used to come into the compound on her medic visits, but it was only when she arrived as an inmate herself that the other inmates really began to talk. They told her everything she wanted to know. There were different stories, but the one she heard most often was that the brothers had been captured after the massacre of an Adveni transport almost six years before. Ta-Dao, the elder brother, and Vajra, the younger, had been informed that they would never leave the compound unless they were being put into the ground.

Funnily, there were no common rumours about Dhiren’s incarceration. Every person who spoke about it gave a different story, varying from the questionable to the downright insane. His story, according to most, was far more exciting than the brothers because he never talked about it. Georgianna wondered if anyone had bothered to ask him.

“What… What did you do?”

Dhiren’s eyes narrowed and he tugged at each of his sleeves in turn, covering up a little more skin. She wondered whether she had stepped too far. If she was wrong about people being afraid to ask him about his crime, he might not look at her the same way again. He didn’t speak to many of the other inmates and from what Georgianna had seen, he didn’t even speak to the brothers unless he had to. He watched her for a few moments, a calculating expression on his square face.

“Murder. Three Adveni.”

In an instant, the cautious look in his eyes was gone and he smiled proudly, almost childishly—a teenager boasting of his first hunting kill.

“That they caught me for.”

*     *    *

Oh, I love that last line. And I want to know more about Dhiren. How about you?

Links to Fight or Flight



And read Chele's bio and check out her social media links after the Giveaway.


Chele Cooke is an English-born writer based in London. Starting out writing fan fiction, she soon moved onto her own fiction, releasing her first novel, ‘Dead and Buryd’, in 2013, the sequel ‘Fight or Flight’ following less than a year later.

She is currently working on The Out of Orbit series, a number of short stories, a circus based sci-fi, and a paranormal serial currently released weekly on Wattpad.

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