How To Write Your First Novel: A Guide For Aspiring Fiction Authors
By MK Williams
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About this ebook
So often, when I introduce myself to a new person and they learn that I am an author, they reply back that they plan to write a book one day. I’m always so excited to learn more about their idea and see how I can help. More often than not, they reply that they haven’t written a single word. They ask me, “how do you write a novel? How do you get started?”
Over the years I’ve written multiple novels and I have condensed my best tips and practices into How To Write Your First Novel: A Guide For Aspiring Fiction Authors. No matter your plan for publishing your novel, you first need to write the book! I’ve broken down the critical elements to success in two parts: your writing habits and your writing craft. You’ll be able to come back and reference this advice throughout your drafting process and as you look to write additional books.
Are you ready to go from aspiring author to author? Are you ready to take your idea and turn it into a book? Let’s get started today!
MK Williams
MK Williams is an Indiana-born, Philadelphia-raised, Florida-transplant working and living beneath the sunny, and often rainy, skies of Tampa. As a writer Williams has penned three novels, the first to be published being Nailbiters, as well as many short stories. Williams' writing influences include a lifetime of watching suspenseful mysteries and action movies and reading Stephen King, Ian McEwan and J.K. Rowling. For more information on the premiere novel, Nailbiters, and forthcoming novels and collections please visit: https://1mkwilliams.com/
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Book preview
How To Write Your First Novel - MK Williams
How To Write Your First Novel:
A Guide For Aspiring Fiction Authors
An Author Your Ambition Book
By M.K. Williams
Copyright © 2021 MK Williams Publishing, LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. The use of any of my works in AI learning or NFT is prohibited. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed Attention: Permissions Coordinator,
at the address below.
ISBN: 978-1-952084-08-9
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020922514
All content reflects our opinion at a given time and can change as time progresses. All information should be taken as an opinion and should not be misconstrued for professional or legal advice. The contents of this book are informational in nature and are not legal or tax advice, and the authors and publishers are not engaged in the provision of legal, tax, or any other advice.
Printed by MK Williams Publishing, LLC in the United States of America.
First printing edition 2021.
authoryourambition@gmail.com
www.authoryourambition.com
Works by M.K. Williams
Fiction
The Project Collusion Series
Nailbiters
Architects
The Feminina Series
The Infinite-Infinite
The Alpha-Nina
Other Fiction
The Games You Cannot Win
Escaping Avila Chase
Enemies of Peace
Interview with a #Vanlifer
Non-Fiction
Self-Publishing for the First-Time Author
Book Marketing for the First-Time Author
How to Write Your First Novel: A Guide for Aspiring Fiction Authors
Going Wide: Self-Publishing Your Books Outside The Amazon Ecosystem
Author Your Ambition: The Complete Self-Publishing Workbook for First-Time Authors
Dedication:
To all the aspiring authors who dream, plan, write, and work hard to make it a reality.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part 1: You Need More Than Just An Idea
Chapter 1: Dedicate Time To Write
Chapter 2: Dedicate Space And Attention To Writing
Chapter 3: Do Your Research
Chapter 4: Goals And Getting It Done
Part 2: Elements Of Your Novel
Chapter 5: Voice And Structure – How To Actually Write The Dang Thing?
Chapter 6: Plot – Writing That Compels The Reader To Turn The Page
Chapter 7: Creating Three-Dimensional Characters
Chapter 8: Bring It All Together
Chapter 9: The Revision Process Begins
Conclusion
Introduction
My Story
I pulled my gloves off just as the elevator arrived. It was another freezing January evening in Philadelphia. The cold clung to my clothes for a few moments after I entered Creese Hall. Home to the University Bookstore, Administration offices for each department, and the Drexel University Honors College, I headed to one of the few classrooms in the building. It was almost 6 pm, and I was eager to arrive on time for this class.
I'm not sure many 20-year-olds would characterize themselves as excited about attending a 3-hour seminar class at 6 pm on a Monday. But I wasn't most 20-year-olds, and this wasn't just any class.
My Economics major and affinity for math-jokes may have fooled some, but I was a word nerd at my core. When I saw a course called Writing Killer Fiction
in the winter term catalog, I made sure I was the first to sign up.
I entered the narrow room and took my seat at a long table. In total, there were eight students in the class and one professor. Cordelia Biddle, a published author, made the term assignment easy to understand from that first night. Over the next ten weeks, each of us was to compose a short story. Each week, a different scene would be due for critique, and the final assignment would be to stitch these scenes together into one narrative. She gave us guidance on character, plot, suspense, red-herrings, and all the goodies that readers love.
The assignment was to write a 50-page short story.
Most of my classmates did this with ease. A few began to worry that they wouldn't make the page count.
I didn't finish, though.
As the end of term approached, I knew that my story was nowhere near done. I had 100 pages in a Microsoft Word document, and I knew there was more to the story I still had to write. I told Professor Biddle that I hadn’t completed the assignment. She told me to get a membership to a professional writer's association and consider attending conferences. I got an A in the class.
A year later, after I graduated (in the middle of a deep recession), I pulled that story back out and worked on it bit by bit each day until I finished the manuscript.
I had completed my first novel. And I had no idea what to do next.
The most significant advantage that my coursework provided was dedicated time to get the book written. Of the aspiring authors that I meet today, most of them who share their desire to write a book haven't even started. Hands-down, the hardest thing about writing a book is writing it.
Don't get me wrong, finding an audience, maximizing your ranking on Amazon, and dealing with tricky ePub formatting can be a real pain as well. But none of those things matter if you don't get your words written.
Over the years since I wrote my first novel, friends and acquaintances have asked for help getting their own book started. At the outset, my advice was, you sit at your computer and write.
But I realized that their trepidation about writing their novel had nothing to do with the mechanics of turning on a computer, opening a word processor, and typing. Their concerns were about craft, story-telling, suspense, and the creation of art.
As I have tried to articulate an answer to, how do you write a novel?
I have refined my response. Now, when I work with clients looking for the beginning steps, I break down the book's critical elements. Setting out on this journey to write a novel isn't like starting at the beginning of a trail with a specific route to a mountain's peak. There are multiple points where you can begin and elements that you’ll want to include. But no defined path that everyone must follow.
I will provide you with guidance on those necessary items, and a few of the optional ones as well, so that you can write your first novel.
Maxims, Truisms, The Advice You’ve Already Heard
As a writer, we often lament that all of our good ideas must have already been written. All the brilliant things have been said. Maybe that is true for some topics, but it is absolutely not true for writing. Still, how can I say something more clever than Hemingway, more profound than Austen? Who am I to try and put a new spin on their words?
You can log onto your social media right now and find memorable quotes by prolific authors by searching #authorquotes. They will look very stylish, and they will inspire you, but then what?
I’m not here to regurgitate what others have said. I’m here to tell you what I have done and what has worked for me. I do that to help you reach your goal.
Yes, you should write what you know. But you know more than what you’ve studied in school. You know your life experience. You know what you’ve felt. Yes, you do need to spend time in the chair. We’ll get to that later.
Yes, you should write every day because not everything you write will be great or even good. You need to get the bad writing out. And you do that by practicing every day. You can’t go weeks or even months without writing and expect to write the next great American novel. Just like a pianist can’t go weeks or months without practicing and plan to put on a performance worthy of a major stage.
Nothing that I will tell you here is earth-shattering or brand new, but I hope that the way I explain it will propel you towards your goal. I’ve followed the advice of the great authors who came before me. What I will tell you are my specific tactics and strategies that have helped me and the multitude of authors I have worked with. My aim here is to inspire you, yes. But most importantly, I want to give you actionable tips that you apply today to