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I have a terrible confession to make

I've installed/serviced espresso machines in a few Level and WeWork co-working spaces. Really nice, hip offices, with lots of amenities, including free espresso, cold brew and beer on tap etc.

Folks claim the setting gives them a sense of camaraderie and helps to keep them accountable.

Also nice to be surrounded by other creative, entrepreneurial types.

Working from home, with its distractions, can be hard. I can definitely see the appeal to these places.
How much does it cost per day? Trying to figure out if it's worth it just for the beer.
 
Cranked out my 1,000-word quota, ate a delicious breakfast sandwich for lunch, and drank a boatload of coffee. Feel good! A little jittery but good!
 
Cranked out my 1,000-word quota, ate a delicious breakfast sandwich for lunch, and drank a boatload of coffee. Feel good! A little jittery but good!

Are you giving fiction a go?

If so, remember: If you are going to pay off a trait at the end, you have to establish that trait earlier. Goes for villains as well as protagonists.
 
Are you giving fiction a go?

If so, remember: If you are going to pay off a trait at the end, you have to establish that trait earlier. Goes for villains as well as protagonists.

Thanks for the tip.

The closest I will ever get to writing fiction is my monthly exercise schedule.
 
Gotcha. Writing 1,000 words in a coffee house seemed like a very burgeoning novelist thing to do.

I have a non-fiction book due on Dec. 1. I'm trying to treat writing it like a job. I have to write 500 words a day Monday to Thursday. (Friday is for editing and outlining.) That's 8,000 or so words a month. Something like 90,000 words, the publisher's target, in 11 months. Had to write 1,000 words today because I missed a day on Monday. I know the writer's life is supposed to be devoid of routine, but I have other projects going on, so I have to be disciplined about this. The coffee shop has helped me feel like I'm going to work.

Thinking about the whole book is hard. Writing 500 words a day, four days a week, is easy.
 
I have a non-fiction book due on Dec. 1. I'm trying to treat writing it like a job. I have to write 500 words a day Monday to Thursday. (Friday is for editing and outlining.) That's 8,000 or so words a month. Something like 90,000 words, the publisher's target, in 11 months. Had to write 1,000 words today because I missed a day on Monday. I know the writer's life is supposed to be devoid of routine, but I have other projects going on, so I have to be disciplined about this. The coffee shop has helped me feel like I'm going to work.

Thinking about the whole book is hard. Writing 500 words a day, four days a week, is easy.

Really? I thought it was the opposite. You know, like Hemingway -- minus the alcoholism.
 
Really? I thought it was the opposite. You know, like Hemingway -- minus the alcoholism.

Well, one of the great appeals of writing for me has been the absence of routine in my life. I like not waking up to an alarm, and I like setting my own schedule. I like not knowing what any given day holds. I have a deadline, and so long as I hit it, no one gives a shirt how I get there.

But I just had to pay back a substantial sum of money for a book deal that I signed, oh, seven years ago, without actually delivering a book. Because writing a book does take discipline. I don't plan on giving this advance back. Hello, routine.
 

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