10/12/2023 0 Comments Month long writing challenge prompts![]() All the great content from both-including the 30 days of WNFIN/NaNonFiWriMo posts dating back to 2007-now reside on Write Nonfiction NOW! The yearly WNFIN challenge and all the NaNonFiWriMo events and announcements now take place on the one site. In October 2013, the two blogs, Write Nonfiction NOW! and Write Nonfiction in November!, were combined. It’s a great way to prepare for the challenge at any time of the year. You can still access the “ I Know I Can WNFIN” program. In 2012-13, instead of remaining dormant, the Write Nonfiction in NOVEMBER! blog “stayed alive” during the majority of the year with links to Write nonfiction NOW! posts and with a “training program” of writing prompts to help writers prepare for the November writing marathon. During the challenge itself, Write Nonfiction NOW! ran a snippet of each post and linked readers to Write Nonfiction in NOVEMBER! to read the rest, since that was where challenge participants had “signed in.” I have offered a month of expert guest posts on nonfiction writing, publishing and promotion during the challenge every year until 2015.Īs of 2009, this blog, Write Nonfiction NOW!, which I considered the “sister blog” to Write Nonfiction in NOVEMBER!, took over the other 11 months of the year, challenging nonfiction writers to continue writing nonfiction all year long. ![]() The blog sat dormant the rest of the year, although it continued to get a fair amount of traffic. I wrote the three remaining posts and an introduction to each post. When November rolled around the next year, I enlisted help-27 expert guest bloggers. The first year, I produced a huge brain dump of everything I knew on these topics, which resulted in 27 days of blog posts. Until 2013, this was provided via a dedicated blog called Write Nonfiction in NOVEMBER!, which featured 30 days of expert guest posts during November. Therefore, NaNonFiWriMo offers its participants a way to learn about writing, publishing and promoting nonfiction as they complete the 30-day challenge. I feel strongly about educating writers so they can succeed. If you meet your goal, you get the personal satisfaction of knowing you did so-and a manuscript, or maybe several manuscripts, with which to pursue publication. ![]() The event is a personal challenge conducted on the honor system to start and finish a work of nonfiction in 30 days- any work of nonfiction. Unlike its fiction counterpart, NaNonFiWriMo is not a contest and offers no word-counting mechanism to deem anyone a winner. So, I gave birth to Write Nonfiction in November (WNFIN), aka National Nonfiction Writing Month (NaNonFiWriMo). Although I have a rebellious nature, I wanted to participate in a legitimate manner. ![]() Participating as a rebel might be fine for some nonfiction writers, but not for me. In October 2007, a year after I participated in National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), I asked myself, “What’s a nonfiction writer supposed to do during November?” Searching around in the NaNoWriMo forums, I discovered NaNoRebels. This can be an article, an essay, a book, a book proposal, a white paper, or a manifesto. ![]() During the Write Nonfiction in November (WNFIN) Challenge, also known as National Nonfiction Writing Month (NaNonFiWriMo), you are personally challenged to start and complete a work of nonfiction in 30 days. ![]()
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