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{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\deff0{\fonttbl{\f0\fnil\fcharset0 Arial;}} \viewkind4\uc1\pard\lang2057\fs18 'The art of writing,' Kingsley Amis said, 'is the art of applying the seat of one's trousers to the seat of one's chair.' So start now. Take up a notebook and pen, and write one sentence\'85 \par Can you write a novel in a year? If you simply sit back and think about the enormity of writing a book, it will seem like a vast and unconquerable task, impossibly daunting. The way to make it less daunting is to break it down into its constituent parts, to do it bit by bit. Over the chapters herein, different aspects of technique are divided up into bite size chunks, the better to aid digestion. The book will look at different aspects of writing, with set exercises to help the reader along in their confidence and technique. It is designed to be read a chapter a\fs20 week\fs18, with the aim of the fledgling writer having a body of material at the year's end which should form a solid start to their novel. Deeply practical, with sound advice at every stage, A NOVEL IN A YEAR is essential reading for any would-be novelist. \par }
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Writing expert Louise Doughty starts her writers off on their quest to write a novel in a year by suggesting a provocative prompt for each of the first few weeks. Then she asks the writers to clear their calendars and write as near to round-the-clock as possible for the next ten weeks. You can write about anything, even things that are only loosely or potentially connected to the story. Then she arrives at what she calls her favorite bit of the whole process: Put everything out on a big flat surface and gaze at it and put everything roughly in order. Gaps, she says, should soon be obvious, and this is where you should then focus.
And that is, distilled to its bones, the rough process.