

NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) is an event that occurs, alliteratively enough, every November. The rules are simple, admission is free and unrestricted, and there are helpful online fora where you can interact with your fellow aspiring authors for advice, help, and consolation or cheers. There are even threads offering orphaned plots and characters up for grabs if you don't happen to have what you need right at hand.
National Novel Writing Month is a fun, seat-of-your-pants approach to novel writing. Participants begin writing on November 1. The goal is to write a 50,000-word (approximately 175-page) novel by 11:59:59, November 30.
Valuing enthusiasm and perseverance over painstaking craft, NaNoWriMo is a novel-writing program for everyone who has thought fleetingly about writing a novel but has been scared away by the time and effort involved.
Because of the limited writing window, the ONLY thing that matters in NaNoWriMo is output. It’s all about quantity, not quality. This approach forces you to lower your expectations, take risks, and write on the fly.
Make no mistake: You will be writing a lot of crap. And that’s a good thing. By forcing yourself to write so intensely, you are giving yourself permission to make mistakes. To forgo the endless tweaking and editing and just create. To build without tearing down.
NaNoWriMo has even lined up a stable of published authors whose pep talks will be emailed to participants over the course of the month. (If any persp, er, aspiring author has time to read them!)

Those who fall by the wayside get to lick their wounds, wear the Cone of Shame, and brood about their poor choices to sleep, eat, and work when they should have been writing. Maybe next year!
In 2010, 84 participants from around the world wrote over nine million words. Only 44 entrants finished, with the longest entry achieving 175,000 words. That's overkill; the required 50,000 words is about 175 pages, or 1600-1700 words a day for 30 days.
Here are the rules in their entirety, from the website:
- Write a 50,000-word (or longer!) novel, between November 1 and November 30.
- Start from scratch. None of your own previously written prose can be included in your NaNoWriMo draft (though outlines, character sketches, and research are all fine, as are citations from other people’s works).
- Write a novel. We define a novel as a lengthy work of fiction. If you consider the book you’re writing a novel, we consider it a novel too!
- Be the sole author of your novel. Apart from those citations mentioned two bullet-points up.
- Write more than one word repeated 50,000 times.
- Upload your novel for word-count validation to our site between November 25 and November 30.
The prestigious Man Booker Prize was awarded this month to Julian Barnes for The Sense of an Ending, a short novel of only about 50,000 words. While I suspect the author spent rather more time than a month writing and polishing it, every author has to start somewhere. So what are you waiting for?
* Too stupid to live.
* Too stupid to live.