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nanowrimo · 2 years
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How NaNo Camp-Ins Helped Me Finish My NYT Profiled Book
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We all know about NaNoWriMo, but what about CampMo? CampMo is when a bunch of Wrimos get together in a writing-retreat format. Cathy Salustri, author of the NYT Profiled travel writer, talks about her experience with CampMo, and how it helped her finish her book. Disclaimer, we are still cautiously opening up to in-person events like CampMo. It’s tentative that it will happen this year, and if it does, we encourage following COVID-19 protocols and being safe and responsible!
The first time I participated in NaNoWriMo, I hadn’t written anything creative since my undergrad days, which predated email, to give you an idea. I didn’t think I had it in me… until a germ of an idea took hold right about the same time I learned about NaNoWriMo. Most of my writing that year involved late nights at a massive maple table. I crammed in the last few words, checking my word count a few seconds after midnight, thus barely missing “winning” NaNo my first year.
The next year, I discovered write-ins. I also discovered CampMo, or NaNoWriMo camp-ins.
Lest you think this involved huddling in pup tents and writing by firelight, let me disabuse you of that notion: We camped in cabins at Lake Louisa State Park, and these cabins? Well, they weren’t exactly rustic: They had two bedrooms – one with an ensuite bathroom – dishwashers, full-size refrigerators, gas fireplaces, screened porches with rocking chairs, and comfy futon couches and chairs. The only thing missing was an icemaker, but, well, we all have to suffer for our art. 
For three days and two nights, WriMos filled the cabins, writing and eating and writing and drinking and writing some more. The lack of cell service, TV, or wi-fi forced us to spend time in our imaginations, and I wrote something like 25,000 words in three days. 
Some years later, I had an actual book contract for a Florida travel narrative based on 1930s-era road trips. I’d done the research. I’d written the book proposal. I’d gotten the contract. My first meeting with my editor went well, until I casually asked her how much she thought the book would cost readers. She said she’d take a look at the projections and budget from whatever department did those things, and I froze. 
This wasn’t my book any longer, I realized. This was something more; it now lived officially outside my head. However well it sold – which means, of course, however well I wrote it – would impact people’s jobs. My publisher was investing time, money, and talent into bringing my book to print – and if I failed, they would suffer. 
I stayed frozen for a few months more. The voices in my head constantly reminded me how much other people had invested in a book I couldn’t seem to write.
And then it was November. I took a leave of absence from my paying writing job – a hyperlocal weekly newspaper where I covered city council, Little League, and various duck scandals – and focused on churning out a draft.
And I went back to the cabin to find that CampMo magic. I fell upon that cabin like a menopausal woman on an ice floe. I holed up in a chair and, with all the distractions of the world removed, I wrote. And wrote. And then I had a beer, because this isn’t a movie and I’m human. But then I wrote some more. I took a short walk through the woods, sure. I left to go get more beer. But I wrote.
Although I didn’t finish the draft that weekend, I wrote a lot of it, and finished the rest of it by November 30. Months after publication, the New York Times profiled “Backroads of Paradise.” The publisher printed a second run, then a third.
CampMo Magic.
This year, with (hopefully) the worst of COVID-19 behind us, I’m looking at November cabins again, hoping not only to go back and meet the magic, but to share it with other writers. 
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Cathy Salustri works out of Gulfport, Florida, travels across Florida on foot, bike, boat, or car to places the Interstate bypassed long ago, as well as those spots where natural beauty has survived the onslaught of overpopulation. She attended the University of Central Florida, and earned her undergraduate degree at the University of Tampa finding the Florida Studies MLA program at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg. Cathy has written travel pieces for USA Today, Visit Florida, regional magazines and local press. You can find all her travel writing at the greatfloridaroadtrip.com.
Photo by baikang yuan on Unsplash  
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vampywriter · 2 years
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My exams are over, I'm taking this week to clean my flat, and then Camp Month is starting!!
I've decided to aim for 25k words. I will be doing 30 jours pour écrire, in French. I also really really want to finish the first draft of Dreaming of You. Once Dreaming of You is done I'll take a break of it before I start editing or rewriting it, so I'll finish the month with Passat tornar escrich (in Occitan) and a project which is made of 3 stories in the same universe.
Dreaming of you: What if dreams were a window onto other realities, alternate universes? Tobey's been living a coffeeshop romance AU in their dreams, falling in love with the man from their dreams... but then they discover the man exists, and he teaches at the university they study at.
Passat tornar escrich: Alis viatja dins lo temps. Ajuda son amoros e cambia lo fil deu temps. Quand retourna au prasent, son amoros es son paire. Alix travels through time and helps their boyfriend, changing the future. When Alix comes back to the present, it's to discover their boyfriend is now their father.
3-in-1 WIP: Potions go wrong, Rory is sent to the past, where he becomes his best friend's dad and cannot change the succession of events that lead to Archie losing his dad, Will's aged down and Charlie takes care of him while someone else finds a solution. Lewis's father has disowned him and taken his name away, David welcomes him and shows him what it's like having a family that loves you.
do you sense a pattern?
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campmoe · 6 years
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Thank you to everyone who helped make our second annual Trunk or Treat a huge success 🎃 👻 🕷 🍬🍭 #camp #campmoe #daycamp #summercamp #camplife #kids #torrington #connecticut #halloween #candy #trunkortreat #community
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vampywriter · 2 years
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I've got my head in my exams right now but next weekend I'll be free of exams for six months!!! and I cannot wait to come back to writing. I miss my little character!
July is coming and with it camp wrimo, I think I will try to do half a nano. I've got at least one WIP to finish, Dreaming of You (that shouldn't take more than 10k, honestly), and then I could come back to some earlier WIP... Not sure which one exactly, but I'll make a decision soon enough :)
Anyone else thinking of doing this writing camp? :)
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campmoe · 7 years
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The dunk tank has arrived!!!  Be sure to get in your last minute votes to get your counselors dunked by visiting our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/campmoe/ and liking the staff pictures in the 2017 MOE Day Carnival Dunk Tank Contest album (each “like” counts as a vote).  You can also vote by using the following link: https://surveyhero.com/c/b058636
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