NaNo Nostalgia; Or: Back to Nonfiction
I felt a little sad on Sunday, the first day of November. Nostalgic, because it was also the opening day of National Novel Writing Month.
Last November, for the first time, I joined hundreds of thousands of aspiring novelists in that crazy, exhilarating NaNoWriMo marathon. I thought of it as an experiment—and as a way to stay busy while I awaited the publication of my first book, a music memoir, in January.
On November 31, I crossed the finish line with a 50,000+ word first draft of a novel, my very first. A mystery, with music themes.
I continued to work on the mystery this past year, in between promoting Accordion Dreams and working at my day job. I revised and expanded. Submitted chapters to my critique group. Finally, just over a month ago, I sent the mystery to my agent, to see what she thought. Did it have a future?
In a word: No.
My agent had a few kind words to say about some features of the book. But she saw nothing but problems with one key element: The plot. Too flimsy. Vague and complicated, at the same time. Not compelling enough to hold the interest of readers—or a potential publisher.
More revision—on this book, or anything similar—was not what my agent had in mind. She put it bluntly: this genre didn’t strike her as my forte. She urged me to get back to that second nonfiction project I’d mentioned to her a few years ago. That book about my ethnic heritage. My “dark Slovenian roots,” as she put it. She recalled that it sounded promising.
I allowed myself a day to feel a litte bit sorry for myself. I had no regrets about the time spent on my now-retired novel, since I’d enjoyed the process and learned so much. But I felt sad to say good-bye to my characters. I’d grown fond of them—and attached to the fictional world I’d created. Writing fiction is like having your own private playground. I had no idea how seductive it could be.
“Don’t Mourn, organize!” I don’t recall who said that, but it seemed like good advice. The next day, I re-organized my bookshelves and my computer files. Set the fiction-writing books aside. Pulled together all the material I’ve been reading about Slovenia and the Balkans, a couple of bookshelves full. Re-read the informal proposal I'd written a few years ago, along with the short pieces I'd already written. Gathered together the scattered Internet sites I'd saved. (I finally figured out how to create a “Bookmarks” folder.)
Only then did it hit me: I've been working on this all along. This is the mystery I wanted to write in the first place. A real life mystery.
So now I have started back into my Slovenian project in earnest. Tangled roots. Shame about an obscure little country most people can't find on a map. Family secrets. The mysterious death—and subsequent fall into obscurity—of my grandmother's cousin, a Slovenian immigrant like my grandfather. Except Louis Adamic was a famous writer and journalist in the 1930s and 1940s. A leftist and an early multiculturalist. The only writer I’ve found in the family tree.
Even though I won’t be doing NaNoWriMo, I do plan to write every day—without the pressure of producing the daily 1667 words. Those big word count goals don’t work so well for nonfiction—even for memoir. I have to do research, or at least fact checking, along the way. But I hope I can harness some of that wonderful zest and energy I remember from last November.
My own personal Non-Novel Writing Month. Or, to put it more positively: National Nonfiction Writing Month. NaNonWriMo.
Good luck to all you November writers, NaNo or Not.
Or, as they'd say in Slovene, Na Zdravje! Cheers!
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