by LEITA BOUCICAUT

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Montreal scribes race to November novel-writing deadline

This article was written for OpenFile Montreal in 2011. Unfortunately, the company has since closed and restructured, so I'm posting it here. 

November 29, 2011

The month of November is often synonymous with Remembrance Day and, increasingly, the Movember phenomenon [http://ca.movember.com]. But, imagine sitting down in front of your computer every day and cranking out three to four pages of text. Multiply that by the 30 days in November and you’ve written a novel. That’s what National Novel Writing Month, or NaNoWriMo, is all about: writing the great, or not so great, novel.

And it’s exactly what Montrealer Greg Stroll is trying to do. He hopes to finish his fantasy novel, Trinity Divided (www.trinitydivided.com), in the next two days.

“It’s a trans-reality story where the main character in the first book is a fallen angel,” Stroll says. “Over the three books, she’s the same person but in three different lives, so that’s where the name Trinity Divided comes from.”

This year 1,709 Montrealers accepted the challenge to write young adult, science fiction and mainstream fiction novels. Over the past month, NaNoWriMo members have gathered in groups of up to 25 people to write at cafes, bookstores and libraries, such as Java U in Monkland, Chapters bookstore in the West Island and the BANQ (Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec).

The first National Novel Writing Month began in California in 1999. Freelance writer Chris Baty and 20 of his friends decided to challenge themselves by writing the quick novel. The rules are few and simple. Write as fast as you can, write as much as you can and don’t even think about editing.

Members sign up with their local chapter, create a profile and post their word count online on a daily basis. Of the 200,500 world-wide participants last year, 37,500 people reached their goal.

NaNoWriMo is a unique way of writing. With over 500 chapters located across the globe, people challenge themselves to write 50,000 words (or 200 pages) in just one month, the length of your average paperback book. It is a feat many would consider nearly impossible, but thousands partake in it every year.

The key, according to NaNoWriMo, is quantity not quality. So, why would someone bother doing such a thing?

“It was a challenge to see if I could do it and I was able to,” says Stroll.

Stroll began the NaNoWriMo challenge in 2009 and hasn’t looked back since. Diagnosed with schizophrenia and on disability leave, Stroll hopes to publish his books and build a life for himself.

“Stress can trigger my symptoms, but it’s not the worst thing for a schizophrenic,” he says. “Becoming a professional writer would change the tone of my life, my confidence, the way I perceive myself.”

Rebecca J. Blain is a NaNoWriMo member who doubles as a volunteer municipal liaison for the Montreal chapter.

“Every day I do writing challenges for the region,” she says. “I try to make sure there are multiple write-ins organized for everybody. This year we had a write-in on every single day except Mondays. It’s a big commitment.”

Blain joined the challenge in 2009. A professional freelance writer [http://www.rebeccablain.com], she uses NaNoWriMo as a platform for writing high epic fantasies on a full-time basis. This year, she’s attempting an urban fantasy about werewolves, called Winter Wolf.

“I had a crazy dream and decided I liked it, and turned it into a book,” she says. “I want to write as fast as I can and at the highest quality I can. I want to become a professional novelist so I treat NaNo as a break from the normal sit-down-you-write-every-day sort of thing.”

Olivier Breleux is pursuing a PhD in Computer Science at Université de Montreal. He joined NaNoWriMo last year.

“A lot of people want to be writers but they never do it and at some point you just have to jump in and do something,” says Breleux. “Quality is achieved by having some quantity in the first place.”

Breleux hopes to publish his dystopian science fiction/philosophical novel, Le Cube, someday soon (http://breuleux.net/blog/le-cube).

“The website assumes good faith,” says Breleux. “They don’t verify that it’s an actual novel. You could easily cheat but it’s pointless, there are no prizes. You would basically be cheating yourself.”

Regardless of the commitment and the stress associated with the month of November for these NaNoWriMo members, they would all do it again next year.

“I strongly recommend any person who likes to write, give it a try at least once,” says Blain.  “It isn’t for everybody. But if you are one of those people who enjoys challenge and you can turn your internal editor off, you can really have some fun with it.”

To find out more about NaNoWriMo, visit the website at: http://www.nanowrimo.org/en/regions/canada-quebec-montreal.




Friday, June 7, 2013

Seoul Searching

My latest article for Wherever Magazine, a new travel magazine. It is purely offline so I've had to scan it in.

http://www.vijninteractive.com/Personal/Seoul-Searching-for-Wherever-Magazine.pdf

The Maleness of God

This is my first published piece, about a billion years ago. It's a review on a book of short stories.

http://www.vijninteractive.com/Personal/Book-Review-for-Matrix-Magazine.pdf

Friday, May 31, 2013

The Story of the Trillium Laker

I was very happy to be part of this project. I was involved in editing this book for Canada Steamship Lines.

http://www.cslships.com/files/csl/download_pdf.pdf

Executable Specifications with Scrum: A Practical Guide to Agile Requirements Discovery

I was privileged to be part of this project which will be available on the Amazon website in the fall of 2013.

Mario Cardinal has written a book on Executable Specifications and I was hired to edit and proofread the book, as well as write and translate certain sections of it.

Here is a link to his book.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0321784138

Thursday, November 8, 2012