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I’ve struggled with the length thing, Tracy. My strength has always been short and strong, which is perfect for journalism and marketing. Not so much for writing traditional 120,000-150,000 word novels. But the rules seem to be changing with ebooks. Take away the logistical and economical restrictions determined by print runs and the inflexible demands of mass marketing, and I think writers have a lot more flexibility. People can pick the length and pace they like, in addition to style and genre. And ebook readers seem more voracious than their paper predecessors. Traditional publishers not only have been unable to make the turn, they can’t keep up with the demand. Cookbooks are being published recipe by recipe. Serials are coming back, as are novellas. And short stories are on the rise. So I guess I'll just begin and the beginning, write until the story is told, then stop. Who knows, maybe it’ll work. Having said that, ebooks will never replace the intoxicating aroma of a bookstore.



I'm a plot-by-miniscule-details person, and have been since book #5...which was the first one I sold. (The first three were used for kindling, #4 is used as a freebie for signing up for my newsletter.) I learned to plot ahead of the curve when I started dabbling with screenwriting, and the difference in my fiction writing was night and day.
But that's me.
Everyone has to find their own way.
Have fun with it.
Cheers,
t.