Mikey Jackson
Monday 2nd August 2010 5:58pm [Edited]
Worthing, West Sussex
2,808 posts
If you Google wordcount, it appears that most publishers want a debut novel to be between 80,000 and 100,000 words, or about 90,000 to be on the safe side.
Any less and it would be too thin. Readers would feel cheated at a thin novel, although this seems to apply to nowadays, not back in the day.
And any more that 100,000 would be hard for publishers to market to the bookshops because of shelf space. i.e. A 500 - 600 page epic novel takes up the space of two average novels.
But going back to how to write a novel, here's my take on it.
1. Think up a story that does not involve vampires or fantasy worlds. (PLEASE GOD, NO MORE!!!!!)
2. Using about 80,000 - 100,000 words, (preferably around 90,000) write the story down.
Pitfalls that get in the way of writing a novel:
1. Not thinking up a story
2. Not writing the story down
3. Writing down most, but not all, of the story
4. Pissing about on the Internet
5. Pissing about on the Internet again
Pitfalls that get in the way of getting said novel published:
1. A new vampire or fantasy world trend starts and all publishers change their minds and will ONLY published f**king vampire crap.