The 85K90 Challenge
January usually brings a feeling of renewal. The days are getting longer (they are!). It's a new year. We have a chance to start fresh, whether that involves your eating habits, exercise routines, spending and saving and investing, or, for me, starting a new novel, January is an opportunity.As some of you know, I try to complete a novel every year, and because the Association of Rhode Island Authors, a 300+-member group to which I belong, holds its annual RI Author Expo each December, I like to debut the new novel at that time. So January is a chance for me to get started.This year, I've decided to participate in the 85k90 Challenge. Haven't heard of it? If you're a writer, or aspiring to be one, this is a terrific place to start. Started as a small Facebook group in 2016, the idea is simple - write 85,000 words in 90 days (January, February, March). I like the year-long plan, because it helps me to plot out the months. Unlike NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month), which asks you to write 1,000 words a day for a month (usually November, although there's one in the summer, too), this 85k90 project is more realistic.First of all, 30,000 words is not a novel, it's a novella. I participated in NaNoWriMo twice, and I finished, but I was nowhere near done with writing. This year, if I can write (at least) 85,000 words by the end of March, I'll be ready to step right into first edits. That's the plan. Second, thirty days goes by quickly. If life interrupts your writing schedule, it's difficult to catch up. With 85k90, you have more time. You're still writing about 1,000 words a day, but there are many days when you'll write more than that, and it gives you a little cushion for the days that maybe you can't get to it.The founder of 85k90 is Julie Valerie, a friend and fabulous writer. I'm so grateful to her for her vision and dedication to this project, and I'm right on track to get the new novel written.And here's a tiny bit about that new book - It's going to be a sequel of two different novels. Yep, I'm writing a sequel to April in Galway and combining it into a sequel to A Jingle Valley Wedding - and it's working!