Word count. Love ’em or hate ’em.
I remember being in school, and being given an assignment to write a 1,000 word essay on something, and feeling like the world had just ended. Oh, if I had only known then… Lately, I’ve made a habit of writing 100,000 word books left and right. The idea of writing something at 1,000 words feels trivial now.
Clare, an indispensable member of the team at Curiosity Quills, recently teased me for never having read the Harry Potter series. In a recent lull, I remedied that – binge reading the entire series while watching each respective movie between the books. (A rather striking example of the difference between movies and books dare I say. That old meme of the movie being the mere tip of the iceberg shines clear.)
I noticed the first book went pretty quick, and out of curiosity, I looked up the word counts for them.
Philospher’s Stone: 76,944
Chamber of Secrets: 85,141
Prisoner of Azkaban: 107,253
Goblet of Fire: 190,637
Order of the Phoenix: 257,045
Half-Blood Prince: 168,923
Deathly Hallows: 198,227
When I first started writing and trying to get published, I kept hearing people say that a long book is never going to get printed. The first novel I completed writing, Virtual Immortality, clocked in at 255k at first draft. (I wound up editing it down to 206k, but it snuck back up to 211k during edits.)
As I sought advice on publishing, I ran into some people who took it like blasphemy to suggest a book over 90k words had a chance in hell of getting picked up. These people got quite sanctimonious at the mention of The Name of the Wind – Patrick Rothfuss’s debut novel over 250k words. At that point words like ‘anomaly’ and ‘winning the lottery’ got thrown around. To hear them talk, a book must be within 70-80k words. Well, not to put too fine a point on it, but their advice – though given with a touch too much smarm – did have a point. While it is possible to have an agent or publisher pick up a brand new unheard-of author with a book outside the convention, it reduces the chances. It would have been better to hear “a book that big will be more difficult, you should consider writing something smaller,” rather than “oh, my God, you wrote a huge book for your first title? you are shitting over the entirety of publishing and offending the spirits of every dead author who’s ever put pen to paper!”
Okay, perhaps they weren’t quite that bad… but that’s the tone I took away from it. So, for any of you who might be wondering about getting that first book accepted by a publisher or by an agent, know that word count does matter. There is a preconception that a new writer will throw together 300,000 words of drek and hope to get signed. Thus, the larger a book, the less likely it is to get signed. However, if your work wows the agent/publisher/editor enough, the length can matter less. Some agents will see a wordcount past X and toss without even looking further. It’s a gamble.
In my case, I decided not to roll those dice, and wrote Division Zero #1. Compared to Virtual Immortality, it had only one main character (no rotating POV), and a less complex plot with fewer moving parts. Once that book got signed by Curiosity Quills, I sent them VI, and thankfully, they liked it.
It’s said that a writer doesn’t find their voice until they’ve written a million words. I’ve recently completed the first draft of Emma and the Elixir of Madness, the fourth book in the Tales of Widowswood series. At 90,147 words, it brings my lifetime word count (as of 3/9/17) up to 4,002,503. If there’s any truth to that ‘finding a voice’ thing, I hope I’ve done so. Maybe a writer is too close to ‘feel’ their own voice. If any of you think I ‘have’ a voice, please drop a comment : )
So for any of you who may be curious what my word counts look like–(I found the word counts of famous books fascinating)–here’s my list.
Happy reading!
Title |
Word Count |
Series |
Prophet of the Badlands |
144,279 |
Awakened |
Archon’s Queen |
126,855 |
Awakened |
Grey Ronin |
114,121 |
Awakened |
Daughter of Ash |
118,125 |
Awakened |
Zero Rogue |
106,528 |
Awakened |
Angel Descended |
197,421 |
Awakened |
Hand of Raziel |
144,876 |
Daughter of Mars |
Araphel |
114,175 |
Daughter of Mars |
Ghost Black |
111,508 |
Daughter of Mars |
Division Zero |
97,657 |
Division Zero |
Division Zero: Lex De Mortuis |
108,531 |
Division Zero |
Division Zero: Thrall |
144,914 |
Division Zero |
Division Zero: Guardian |
169,572 |
Division Zero |
Heir Ascendant |
113,000 |
Faded Skies |
Ascendant Revolution |
106,280 |
Faded Skies |
One More Run (Novel) |
136,291 |
Roadhouse Chronicles |
The Redeemed (Roadhouse 2) |
126,493 |
Roadhouse Chronicles |
Dead Man’s Number (roadhouse 3) |
140,152 |
Roadhouse Chronicles |
Emma and the Banderwigh |
59,410 |
Tales of Widowswood |
Emma and the Silk Thieves |
73,270 |
Tales of Widowswood |
Emma and the Silverbell Faeries |
66,974 |
Tales of Widowswood |
Emma and the Elixir of Madness |
90,147 |
Tales of Widowswood |
Virtual Immortality |
211,386 |
Virtual Immortality |
The Harmony Paradox |
231,536 |
Virtual Immortality |
A Dream of Clouds (short) |
20,290 |
|
Caller 107 |
54,625 |
|
Chiaroscuro: The Mouse and the Candle |
100,741 |
|
Loose Ends (Short) |
10,737 |
|
Maestro’s Requiem (Short) |
13,066 |
|
Nine Candles of Deepest Black |
109,045 |
|
Operation Chimera |
42,180 |
|
Out of Sight (short) |
19,530 |
|
Ruin of Man (short) |
16,879 |
|
Stolen Orchid (short) |
7,247 |
|
The Dysfunctional Comspiracy |
110,942 |
|
The Eldritch Heart |
128,707 |
|
The Far Side of Promise |
108,500 |
|
The Old City (Short) |
18,823 |
|
The Summer The World Ended |
92,508 |
|
Wayfarer: AV494 |
98,509 |
|