Thursday, October 9th, 2025 @ 7:30 PM PT on Twitch!
Our yearly NaNoWriMo streams are back, starting with the traditional NaNoPrep/Preptober drop-in stream for chatting, sprinting, and sharing tips on how to prepare for The Big 50,000.
THIS STREAM HAS (OPTIONAL) HOMEWORK BELOW THE CUT!
If you can, the best way to prepare for NaNo is to write out everything you do in a day, in as much detail as possible. I like to go for 15-minute chunks and pick a weekday. Honestly and nonjudgementally record every single thing you spend time on in a single day, and weāll look together to see where you can fit the writing in during the stream. I usually use a piece of notebook paper, like this:
(The above entire segment of text and image are from 2022's Preptober stream.)
Alternatively (or in addition!), ask yourself: what are you working on this year? What do you hope to achieve, and to what extent is it linked inextricably with the 50,000 word goal? How have your experiences with these sorts of challenges changed in accordance with your circumstances, and what do you think you can expect this year? How do you think things might go awry?
You don't have to do any of the above, but if you do, we'll have so much to talk aboutāand won't that be fun!
3 Tips for Fast Drafting Your Novel In Record Time
Every year, weāre lucky to have great sponsors for our nonprofit events. Writing Mastery Academy, a 2021 NaNo sponsor, was founded by Jessica Brody, author of the bestselling plotting guide Save the Cat! Writes a Novel. In this post, Jessica shares her tips for getting words down on the page quickly, aka Fast Drafting:
As an author who writes on more than 350,000 words per year, I like to joke that every month is a NaNoWriMo for me. So with the real NaNoWriMo approaching, I thought Iād share my top 3 tips for writing quickly and efficiently, which you can use toĀ easily smash through that 50k mark this November!Ā
1. You Donāt Need an Outline. You Only Need 5 Things.
As the author of Save the Cat! Writes a Novel, Iām used to talking about plot. But as any happy āpantserā will tell you, you donāt have to start a novel with a full plot outline (although you certainly can!).Ā
No matter if youāre a die hard plotter, pantser or somewhere in between, I urge you to, at the very least, sit down and brainstorm 5 things about your main character, your plot, and your world before you begin writing.Ā
In my Novel Fast Drafting course, I call this the āLevel 1ā groundwork. Itās the bare minimum brainstorming that I believe you need to set yourself up for success when fast drafting your NaNo novel.Ā
And hereās the best news: the 5 things can be anything!Ā
For your main character, it can be physical traits, personality traits, unique characteristics, nervous ticks, habits, pet peeves, pieces of backstory, likes, dislikes, flaws, the sky's the limit!Ā
For your plot, it can be any 5 things that happen in your story at any time. Your opening scene, your final scene, a kissing scene, a fight scene, a discovery scene, a battle scene, a break-up scene. This is a wide-open brainstorm that will get you started thinking about structure and more importantly, give you scenes to write toward.
And for your world (realistic or fantasy!), start your groundwork by brainstorming any 5 high-level details about the setting of your story. Like facts or history of the town, number of oceans or planets, biggest rivals (political, personal, or between schools or towns), rules of magic, etc.Ā
Starting with only 5 things for character, plot, and world will help keep you on track throughout the process and point you in the right direction. Think of it like a rudder on your novelās boat.Ā
Of course, you can go beyond those 5 things (as many happy plotters will tell you!) and I often find writers who start with these 5 things end up brainstorming much more, but these 5 things are a great starting point.
2. Always Write Forward, Never Backward.
This tip might seem obvious. Of course, I would always write forward! Why would I write backward? But youād be surprised! Every time you go back and edit something that youāve already written, you are essentially writing backward. You are erasing progress. I know, I know, itās called revision. But the whole philosophy behind my Fast Drafting method (and arguably a key step to winning NaNoWriMo) is that you only put new words on the page every day. Which means resisting the urge to edit words youāve already written.Ā
This is not easy. But hereās what I say to myself as I Fast Draft, whenever I feel the urge to edit:Ā
āPresent Jessica is a horrible reviser! Because Present Jessica has no idea what the full story is going to look like. Present Jessica is the least capable person to revise this novel. But you know who is the most capable person to revise this novel? Future Jessica! Future Jessica has seen the whole story from start to finish. She has perspective. She knows what needs to be done and how to do it. Present Jessica would just be wasting time if she started revising now.āĀ
And itās true! Until youāve finished the story, you canāt revise it with clarity. And the fastest way to finish the story and get that clarity is to always write forward.Ā
3. Revise Invisibly.
But! But! But what if I have ideas for revising as I write? I donāt want to forget them! Of course, you donāt. And hereās where the most crucial element of my Fast Drafting method comes into play (and what many students in my Novel Fast Drafting course have called a āgame changerā).Ā
I call it āInvisible Revisingā and hereās how it works:Ā
Invisible revisions are revisions you only make in your mind. Not on the actual page. I know, it sounds like a Jedi mind trick or something. Maybe I should call them Jedi revisions...
When a revision idea comes to you (whether it be something small like a name change or large like the introduction of a new subplot), instead of going back to make the revision when the idea comes to you, you write it down somewhere so you donāt forget. Or maybe you leave a little comment for yourself in the manuscript, like, āChange name,ā or āintroduce new subplot here.ā Then, you keep going. But hereās the catch. You keep going, as if youāve already made the change.
Itās an invisible revision.Ā
From that point forward, the character has a new name and that new subplot does exist. It doesnāt make for the tidiest first draft (but thatās not what first drafts are for, are they? Otherwise theyād be called final drafts.) But it makes for a very fast and efficient first draft. Because it saves so much time. Instead of writing backward (going back to add in the new subplot), you revise it invisibly and keep writing forward. Then, by the time you reach the end of the first draft, you know exactly what you need to do to revise it.
With just these three tips: brainstorm 5 things, always write forward, and revise invisibly, you can stop stressing, second-guessing and endlessly revising, and rock NaNoWriMo (and every writing month)!Ā
If you want to dive deeper into invisible revisions or any of these tips, you can learn more in my Novel Fast Drafting course, available to stream on-demand in the Writing Mastery Academy.
Hereās to your Fast Drafting success!
Jessica Brody is the author of the #1 bestselling novel-writing guide, Save the Cat! Writes a Novel and the founder of the online writing school, Writing Mastery Academy. She has also written over 20 novels for teen, tweens, and adults. Her books have been translated and published in over 23 countries and several have been optioned for film and television.
I can't believe it's that time of year already but
It's time to sign up for Preptober!
This year's overall immersive theme is Restaurant and we are continuing to explore that world as we prepare for NaNoWriMo (although KCAWS is no longer endorsing or associating itself with the official NaNoWriMo website or organisation, please see the enclosed disclaimer for our official statement on that matter).
If you are looking for help to get yourself writing ready, then why not come join us for some fun exercises?
Sign up here - https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdvlIK85k5i9eOuvjTmyXmpkqserYx0JyAALsfx_kmKrSr7wQ/viewform?usp=sf_link
Sometimes when reading over my work, I find that the story feels...dull. Recently, Iāve come to realize that itās because Iām not giving my story high enough stakes! Without a solid risk to back up your conflict, what is the point of your conflict at all? High stakes are a necessity to grip your reading and keep them engaged in the story, so what can you do to raise those stakes if theyāre feeling flat?
Figure out what your characters want, and stop them from getting it. This relates back into your conflict. Your conflict is sourced by what your character stands against in achieving their goal. Your stakes are what they risk losing if they donāt achieve this goal, and there what they stand to gain if they succeed.
Ā Give them a personal reason to care, and show how their world will be shattered if they fail. Your stakes donāt need to be world endingly huge, but they should seem that way to your character. Maybe they arenāt trying to stop the apocalypse, but if they donāt stop this Baron from making a deal with the King, they will lose their homeland. The more your stakes matter to your character, the more they will matter to you reader.
As with all things writing, do this on a macro and micro level. Across the entire narrative, your story will have a couple major stakes and sources of conflict, but try to achieve this on a more chapter to chapter level, too. For example, your character is trying to sell their gemstone brooch to a pawn shop so they have enough money to pay for a ride to the next village, and the pawn broker is a known swindle. The entire book isnāt building to the outcome of this deal, but if the deal fails then theyāre going to lose two days travel time. See? Even that little risk makes things much more interesting.
At the end of the day, raising the stakes = giving a character more reasons to care. If you can make it matter intenselyĀ to your character, you can make it matter intenselyĀ to your reader.
my favourite way to recover after working on a hard assignment; cook lots of good food, catch up on youtube (watched a lot of @twirlingpages vlogs today) and read!
i also got some work done in preparation for nanowrimo and iām really excited to get to work on my project in a few days!