Halfway through Novel November 2025 – Need to take a break?

This post covers my fourth Novel November video. If you want the latest videos as they go up, subscribe to the Andromedary Instinct YouTube channel and my Novel November playlist.

This one features some time in my car and a late night recording in the home office/studio, with a mid-month success update and a tip on avoiding story burnout.

See the other parts of this series here:

Part 1: https://rsts11.com/2025/11/04/another-novel-november-this-time-with-video/
Part 2: https://rsts11.com/2025/11/11/back-up-its-3-2-1-contact-with-your-november-novel/
Part 3: https://rsts11.com/2025/11/11/walk-through-my-daily-writing-ritual-with-me-for-novel-november-and-beyond/

Word count progress:

11/1-11/7: 16k words, about 2200 words a day.
11/8-11/14: 8.6k words, 1151/day.
First half of the month: 25.6k words, about 1700 words a day, pacing to 51k.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

00:00 Starting out in the car
01:48 Back from the home office
02:35 Take a break if you need to
05:45 What’s next

TAKE A BREAK?

From 2002 to 2009, I wrote one story during NaNoWriMo – my November Novel. Burying yourself in one story can be pretty grueling, and I’ve learned to take a break from a story without taking a break from writing.

Mind you, this leaves me with a lot of fragments, but if you have another story you can work with, even an alternate path or backstory for what you’re writing, it can give you a break and a fresh look at your main November Novel story. And if it is related to the main story, you can count it toward your Novel November word count.

As you’ll see above, I hit 25,661 words on the halfway day of Novel November 2025. I chart my annual progress, but just created my graph for November alone. The green line is daily word count against the right axis, blue is the cumulative number for the month, and red is the final word count I’m targeting if I keep my daily average.

I’m still working on production values, but much like Novel November, there’s a benefit to getting something out there even if it’s nowhere near perfect. Mr. Beast is known for saying that you should make 100 videos and improve something every time. I’m working on that idea, although sometimes it’s one foot forward and the other back.

My lighting on this video on the second half is a good illustration of that foot back. But maybe by next year at this time, I’ll be doing live sessions and a daily update. I am so glad I didn’t commit to that this year, at least.

CREDITS

Video recorded on iPhone 17 Pro Max and edited on Davinci Resolve 20.

Audio recorded with NZXT Capsule Elite (https://amzn.to/3LB6S7E).

Phone stand and light (which obviously needs some tuning) is the Centercam Camera Light (https://amzn.to/4r4LGqJ)

Music is Secret Escape by Heath Cantu, licensed through Epidemic Sound: https://share.epidemicsound.com/z8qrol

Thumbnail created with vidIQ🚀 (https://vidiq.com/Andromedary) and Canva Pro.

As an Amazon affiliate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Other links may be assumed to be affiliate links as well.

Back up! It’s 3-2-1 Contact! With Your November Novel

As I post this on rsts11 on the 11th, my second and third Novel November videos are up. The second one came out on November 2nd. The write-up (not a literal transcript, but close) is below the video link. To catch my videos when they come out, subscribe to the Andromedary Instinct YouTube channel and my Novel November playlist.

For this one, I used the iPhone 17 Pro Max as usual, the BASN Dynamic Microphone connected via USB-C to the phone, and the Midstriddle heavy duty phone stand to hold the phone.

See the first part here: https://rsts11.com/2025/11/04/another-novel-november-this-time-with-video/

My third video, a literal-ish walk-through of my morning writing ritual and a not-so-great wireless lavalier microphone test is live here: https://rsts11.com/2025/11/11/walk-through-my-daily-writing-ritual-with-me-for-novel-november-and-beyond/

I know you just started writing your 2025 November Novel, but it’s the best time to start backing up your book.

Even if it’s just a single page.

I’ll tell you how I do it myself, and why I should do better, and help you with starting your 3-2-1 backup plan for your writing (or any important files).

But first, my word count progress:

11/1: over 1700 words today, over 1700 words total for November
11/2: over 1800 words today, over 3600 words total for November

I recorded this on the afternoon of the first but had to crop the video before posting. I also realized there’s a gain knob on the microphone I’m using, and I should turn it up a bit.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

00:00 Let’s get started
00:45 The 3-2-1 rule for backups
03:49 Looking for something to write about
06:13 That’s all for today

BACKING UP YOUR NOVEL

The 3-2-1 rule is pretty simple. There are other versions of it, but this is a good start.

Keep 3 copies of your file as backups.

Continue reading

Another Novel November, this time with video

Welcome back to rsts11. As many of my readers know, I was deep in National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) from 2002-2009, from the 7-seconds-left finish in 2002, to running the SFNanos for a couple of years and helping my friend Linda start the Pensinsula group, to coordinating over half a dozen writers retreats, as well as finishing eight 50,000 word drafts for those years.

Last year, I did an unofficial November Novel with the Reedsy project, and I’m doing it again this year. And this time, I’m using it as a prompt (heh) to do videos.

The first two are posted, and yeah, the production values are a bit light. I’ve been out of video production for almost two years, and with plans to do 1-3 videos a week this month, I’m hoping to get my studio space working and my productions polished.

The first video was scripted, although I went off in a lot of places. That’s okay. I’m okay with how it turned out (and the original script is below, for your enjoyment).

If you’re doing a November Novel with any of the entities doing events in NaNoWriMo’s wake, subscribe to the Andromedary Instinct YouTube channel and my Novel November playlist.

Haven’t started yet? It’s not too late, as I mention in the first video. You can either accelerate your daily rate (if you start on November 5, you have 25 days of 2,000 words), or just start your thirty days then. My record for daily word count was a little over 19,000 words on November 30, 2003, and I don’t recommend it, but with Veteran’s Day and the 4-day Thanksgiving holiday (for those whose employers observe), you can catch up better than almost any other month of the year.

I’ll also be doing some tech and health videos before the end of the month, including my 2025 adventure to back away from Type 2 Diabetes and get an efficient home lab running.

Stay tuned for more videos, and text accompaniment to the videos, here on rsts11.com. And there might be some travel stuff soon on rsts11travel.com too.

DO YOU WANT TO WRITE A NOVEL?

I never thought I would start from Disney Princess karaoke and get to Hello Kitty when planning a video, but here we are.

Do you want to write a novel?

Are you one of the millions of people out there who say you want to write a novel? Or even a short story?

Are you looking at the length of a novel and getting winded just thinking about writing 40 to 120 thousand words?

Just need a push in the right direction?

Then write a novel with me this November.

Continue reading

Writing the entire Harry Potter series in a year: A return to regular story building in 2024

January 3 2025 update: I finished 2024 with 516,658 words, or 1412 words a day for the whole year. That puts me past the word count for the first four Harry Potter novels (which came to 459,975 total). But do read on.

There’s a bit of clickbait to that title, but according to a quick web search, the first Harry Potter book (Sorcerer’s Stone) has just short of 77,000 words. And in my writing journey for 2024, as of January 25, I had written that many words.

Don’t get too excited.

I don’t expect it to be as coherent or commercially successful as J.K. Rowling’s works, and there probably won’t be a movie made of any of the first things I’ve composed this year.

But it’s an enormous start to the year, and if I stay on pace, there’s a reasonable chance of passing one million words in 2024. (The entire Harry Potter series, seven books, is 1,084,170 words, or 90,347 words a month).

Last year I wrote about writing a thousand Amazon reviews in one year. In the last 18 months I’ve made it to 1145, but I didn’t get a thousand-review year. I’m okay with that, and if I only get half a million words this year, it’s more than I’ve written in any decade, including college probably, so I’ll be satisfied.

A novel in a month

Some of you may have met me through National Novel Writing Month[1], or NaNoWriMo. I got involved in 2002, completing a 50,000 word novel the same month I got laid off from 3PAR and lost my mother in the same week. The writing, and the community, probably came the closest to keeping me sane through a very stressful month.

I continued doing it every year through 2009, including being the San Francisco Municipal Liaison a couple of years and helping my friend Linda start the peninsula region along the way. I stayed as active as I could with the South Bay group, but in 2009, life and a bad relationship soured me on the effort. When you need an escape from your escape, it’s not a good thing. I’ve occasionally considered going back, but I haven’t.

Getting back on the writing horse

I’ve written partial drafts of at least half a dozen short stories since then, and from November 2022 to March 2023 I kept a handwritten journal every day. Double espresso and sparkling water, a warm white monitor lamp, and a notebook and pen started every day in that time. Some days I literally wrote “I don’t feel like writing anything today” and others I wrote a full page.

But 10 to a hundred or so words is pretty manageable, undirected other than the obligation to write *something* every day, and didn’t run the risk of turning into anything interesting.

To be honest, the NaNoWriMo days weren’t as smooth as they might have seemed. Just needing 1667 words a day on average isn’t so scary in theory. But thinking back, that felt harder than this January effort where I averaged 3290 words a day.

One counter-intuitive reason is that I didn’t have, want, or really need anyone to support me in Home Office Writing Alone Month (HoOfWrAlMo? Maybe not). I didn’t go to write-ins, or share my word count with anyone consistently. There was no party at Rickshaw Stop when I got to the end of the month, just dinner at Opa with my honey. And that was just celebrating Wednesday, and her not wanting to cook.

The stronger reason, I think, is that I wasn’t focused on trying to get a single coherent work to the finish line. In fact, with 11 new projects and one I picked up after two years of sitting in the drafts folder, I didn’t have to stick with one character, one story line, even one location. So if I ran out of steam on one thing, I could warm up something else.

As with my 2000s era novels, my characters sometimes take off in different directions. The runaway one MC picks up at a rest area who I thought would go camping with him? Her dad’s a real estate magnate who invites him to join the family business, not just the family. The girl another MC meets at a coffee shop on the coast? She’s taller than last time he saw her. And there’s more, but I’m going to be intentionally vague for now.

Sometimes the draw for a character or a story ebbs and flows. Sometimes I don’t care enough to come up with a full length story/novella, much less a novel, and sometimes a one-off suddenly pops into existence as a five-book series that I’m writing out of order and then going back to try to squeeze some continuity into it. Witches, spells, and brooms? I lived through that in the early 90s so maybe some of that will end up in a story called Allan Kahzam and the Bikini of Extreme Peril before the snow falls at Squaw Valley next winter.

Darn, it’s bad enough that a KLF video gave me an idea for a story. Now I have to figure out a magical bikini?

But you see where this is going.

The year’s progress in review

I’ve replaced the monthly wraps with this table for easier reading, for those of you who are so inclined. Some numbers may not match the previously-published numbers due to rounding.

MonthWordsPerDayTotalWordsPerDay-YTDPace
January 103414333510341433351220610
February 4032113901437352395876570
March 3576011531794951972721752
April 4257814192220731835671610
May 6655621462886291898694668
June 194906493081191692619272
July 141324553222511512553392
August 177965743400471393509838
September204816823605281315481290
October278598983883871273465918
November6187420624502611344491904
December6665721505169181412516792

Where do we go from here?

Well, if you spend a month working on a single story line, you may make it to the end of the month with nothing salvageable but the patterns and habits you developed. That, and being the legend of the guy who finished and submitted his first novel with seven (7) seconds to spare, are what I still carry from NaNoWrimo between 2002-2009.

But if you track multiple projects, you may find it easier to write, and out of those 12 projects I grew by anywhere from 854 to 23125 words last month, maybe two or three will see the light of day before the Summer Solstice. One of them is looking to be that five-book series, two of them have a third part still to be started, there are half a dozen I haven’t resurrected from the last 20 years, plus digging out and looking at those 8 novel-attempts to see if any of them hold up to a decade or more in cold storage on a VM in San Diego.

And it feels like every time I walk to a cafeteria on campus at work, I get another picture in my head that could become a thing. Like that five-book series that began with the thought of a couple of young women sitting around a large living room asking themselves why guys like boobs. Don’t feel too bad for the guy in the room. He has a pretty good answer. Maybe you’ll get to read it later this year next year.

I would offer to write a future post about my writing tools and workflow[2][3], but “Word + OneDrive” isn’t so exciting. So there you have that.

For my fellow NaNoWrimo survivors, and any other writers out there, how is your productivity going? What do you think is worth thinking about as someone gets back into writing, or into it in full force for the first time?

[1] I’ve been reading a lot of the fresh drama around NaNoWriMo in the last month or two thanks to Reddit algorithms, and I’m glad I’ve been out of that scene for something like 15 years. I feel bad for the people affected, both in the bad actor situations and the apparent incompetence among the so-called leadership that’s killing the program now.

[2] I have started using the free Reedsy editor, although I have not used their marketplace yet. It’s some of the best of Word, plus the formatting of Kindle Create, and then some. Even has an AI-enabled proofreader of sorts, suggesting missing words or punctuation, extras, miscapitalized or misspelled words, and little bits of structure. You can pay extra for more features, but the free version is enough for a reasonably good writer to make KDP-ready or even print-ready media. I may write more about it later in the year after I use more of its features and get a few titles out of the way.

[3] Fifteen years after my last November writing retreat, I’m going to hide at the coast for a couple of days and focus on writing, and maybe a bit of editing. Don’t be surprised to see another burst of words in the next two weeks.