Saturday, May 23, 2026

How Fast Do You Write?

By Kait Carson

“The mind travels faster than the pen; consequently, writing becomes a question of learning to make occasional wing shots, bringing down the bird of thought as it flashes by.” — E. B. White

“There is no rule on how to write. Sometimes it comes easily and perfectly; sometimes it’s like drilling rock and then blasting it out with charges.” Ernest Hemingway

“Writing is easy: All you do is stare at a blank sheet of paper until the drops of blood form on your forehead.” — Gene Fowler

I always knew I wanted to be a writer. My parents were great readers and my dad taught me to read at age 2. In his defense, teaching me to read was his best offense. He hated the Prince Valiant comics in the Sunday paper and, being possessed of curly hair, I loved the Prince’s stick-straight do. Toddlers pitch epic fits, and he turned mine into a teaching moment. Once I discovered that all those marks on the page made words, I was hooked. And I wanted to make my own marks.

By the time I turned nine, I had read Little Women and set my goal higher. I proclaimed I would be just like Jo March and write for a living. Every day after school, I would hurry home, put on the remains of my mother’s wedding dress (she had cut the train for chair covers years before, but kept the gown), pull out my fountain pens and ink, and write. I don’t remember any of the stories, but I remember lots of gigantic exclamation points.

Writing, I decided, was easy. I mean, look at all the books out there. How hard could it be? A monster stroke of luck confirmed my assessment. I wrote a letter to the editor, and the publication resulted in an offer of representation. I accepted. The poor guy never knew I was twelve when I signed the contract. What followed were sales to various teen fashion and lifestyle magazines. All that changed when I went to college. My agent passed away, and I put writing aside in the name of fun and experience.

The writing bug remained dormant until I hit middle age when it returned with a vengeance. In my memory, the only requirement for churning out stories was sitting at a typewriter. No plotting, planning, or even a topic required to unleash the flow of words. I can’t say if maturity, or computers and keyboards changed my style, but suddenly, the Gene Fowler quote made perfect sense.

Writing, I discovered, is not only hard, it’s glacial. At least my writing. I have writing friends who write ten to sixteen books every year. Good books, well-written and edited books, and since I’m writing this in 2026, I need to emphasize the books are NOT the product of AI. How can I know that? Easy. They’ve been keeping up the pace since before AI was a gleam in Silicon Valley’s eye. These authors are simply fast writers. And I envy them.

As for me, my writing speed stalls at a book every two years. At first, I blamed the day job, but that hasn’t been an issue since 2020. And I’ve taken steps to speed up the process: classes, how-to books, bullet-point outlines, detailed outlines, no outlines but shooting from the cuff. Nothing works. I putter along at the same snaillike pace.

If you’re looking for a big reveal here about how I solved my problem, you’ve come to the wrong place. I finally accepted that every writer has their own style and pace, and wishing does not change that. All of this introspection and speaking with another writer friend offered a clue to my less than snappy pace, and it’s one I’m fine with. Against all writing advice, I edit as I write and refuse to leave any chapter until it’s as polished as I can make it. Slow in the execution, but fast in the editing.

Have I gotten faster? Yes. Part of that is learning the craft, but most of it is consistency, and it’s possible that my secret sauce is working on more than one project at a time. Right now, I have two books in the works, and I get up every day looking forward to reconnecting with the characters and stories of each book. Variety is the spice of my creativity.

I will never write sixteen books in a year. Heck, I can’t type that fast!

Writers, do you stress over your production? Readers, how do you feel about slow writers?

 Kait Carson writes the Hayden Kent Mysteries, set in the Fabulous Florida Keys, and is at work on a new mystery series set in her adopted state of Maine. Her short fiction has been nationally published in the True Confessions magazines and in Woman’s World. Kait’s short story, “Gutted, Filleted, and Fried”, appeared in the Silver Falchion Award-nominated Guppy Anthology Hook, Line, and Sinker. Her nonfiction essay was included in the Agatha Award-winning book Writing the Cozy Mystery. She is a former President of the Guppy Chapter of Sisters in Crime, and a current member of Sisters in Crime and Guppies.

15 comments:

  1. I am max one book a year; they just take time to percolate from concept to completion with complexity.

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  2. I tried an experiment during the pandemic. I used my lunch hour and daily commute time to write daily. I was surprised how much my writing pace picked up when I wrote consistently.

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  3. The hardest part for me is getting started.

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  4. I've had a month-long break during which I thought through writing projects for the second half of 2026. Two new Italian notebooks in hand (one printed with sunflowers and one with lavender), I'll start free-writing next week.

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    1. Best of luck, and the notebooks sound beautiful!

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  5. You've had a great writing career, starting so young! I can manage one book a year. I had to do one every 9 months for a contract once and that nearly killed me. But I do get short stories out in the meantime. In between novel words. I tried NaNaWriMo once and found I could not physically type that many words in a month. Too much arthritis in my hands!

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    1. Thank you, Kaye. I love your short stories and so admire you for writing them! They are wonderful.

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  6. Kait, I had no idea that your writing career began at such an early age! I feel a bit nervous every time I sit down to write, which is probably why I end up writing at the end of the day. I find that knowing the scene I'm about to write helps. I wrote two books simultaneously these past two years. Never again!

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    1. Marilyn, your books are fabulous. I devoured your library series and was so sorry to see it end. I agree, there is nothing so intimidating as those first words.

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  7. I am not a writer, but I greatly appreciate people who are. Even if it takes you a year to finish writing a book, the length of time will increase the anticipation your readers will have in waiting for it.
    There are some authors I follow who are very prolific and even though I enjoy their books I don’t want to read them as fast as they are written. I usually like some time between books if they are part of a series so I have something waiting for me.
    I am a fast reader so I can go through several books a week, If I am really enjoying a story I might read it more slowly because I don’t want it to end. This is also why I like longer books.
    I like your doing editing as you go along, i think it is probably easier for you to catch inconsistencies and other issues when you write that way.
    I used to do the same thing when I wrote papers for classes. I found my thoughts seem to flow better and I could put everything together more easily once I was finished.
    I still do so even for posting to blogs such as this one.

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  8. Hi, Anon. Welcome to the blog and thank you for such a well-thought out response. I am grateful to read that a longer time between books increases a readers anticipation. Writers often fear the opposite.
    I know what you mean about taking time to savor some books. I did that when I read Kristin Hannah's THE WOMEN. Oh, it was wonderful.

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  9. I admire authors who can crank out multiple good books a years. Alas, that is not me. But I can enjoy their work and keep plugging away on my own.

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