So as mentioned in a previous post, I knew from the beginning that I (likely) wouldn't finish the requisite number of words for Nanowrimo, but thought it was a valuable experience for the camaraderie and the "excuse" to focus solely on one project for a month. With going to school full-time and working (almost) full-time, my writing time is necessarily limited, so I'm not putting must-finish pressure on myself.
Another reason I don't have my eyes fixed on the word count is because I want to do it right. I am some cross between a plotser and a pantser; I don't plan out my plot in advance (in fact, at this point in the mystery, I don't know who the murderer will turn out to be), but I do plan the characters and world in extensive detail. So one of my goals as I write is to trickle the information out in a way that orients the reader, sets up the personalities, introduces the victim in a way that will hopefully build sympathy for her, intimates the politics, and develops potential motives for murder, without heavy info-dumping ...
All within the first four thousand words.
Why four thousand words? I've read in guides for mystery writing that the victim should be dead within twenty pages - which typically assumes 250 words a page. I decided to use this as my standard, my first goal post to keep the plot on track.
And I'm almost there ...
Yes, I have a long way to go.
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