Postby FllMtl Novelist » Wed May 25, 2011 6:16 pm
I can't be your coauthor or accountability/feedback partner, but I can tell you what I've learned about collaboration from reliable sources (Writer's Market and the Writing Excuses podcast). I don't want to tell you not to collaborate, but it's generally discouraged. In the end, of course, it's your choice. Here's what I know, and I hope this information helps you, whether you decide to coauthor or not. (The following only applies to coauthoring.)
One of the misconceptions about coauthoring is that it takes less time to complete a project than it would for a person to work on it alone. It takes more. The two parties have to communicate clearly to each other about everything -- plot ideas, world building, character relationships, and so on, not to mention the tricky business side of the partnership -- and that takes time. Another thing is, if you're both working on the same draft at the same time, and you're doing a "I write one chapter then you write one chapter" arrangement (which is common among writing teams), you have to wait for your partner to finish before you can do your chapter, and vice versa. If he/she is having problems outside writing and can't get to the project for a few days, you can't get to the project either. (I suppose if you're working with an outline this isn't necessarily the case, but I can't see it being a good idea to write without reading what your partner wrote before you.)
Another point: oftentimes, people try to collaborate in the hope that another person will do all the hard parts they don't want to deal with. For example, a person who knows her weakness in dialogue will try to collaborate with someone who is really good at it so she won't have to ever do it. Don't put off learning or practicing something you hate in the hopes that you can team up with someone who will do it for you. It's not a guarantee that you'll find someone who can and will do everything you hate, and an unwillingness to learn a technique suggests laziness (whether that's the case or not).
That said, there are writing collaborations out there that work beautifully. It's just not the path for everyone.
If you do decide to collaborate, do so with someone who is similar to you in commitment to the project and writing experience. Work with someone you get along well with. It's probably a good idea to, before you write a single word of world-building, at least write up a list of what you both want out of the partnership, what you both want to put into it, how you intend to resolve conflict (does one of you have the final say?), and any other promises you think you should make.
I hope that helps... ^^;;
Hats wrote:"Frodo! Cast off your [s]sins[/s] into the fire!"
EllaEdric 06:53 -IM SO UNEQUIPPED TO BE A MAN ITS NOT EVEN FUNNY.