speed drill

Speed Drill: 10 Tips to Quickly Write Your Book

Salmaan Ahmad

Salmaan Ahmad

May 21, 2025

Do you want to write your book quickly, like a speed drill? You may have good reasons to want to get your book written as quickly as possible:

  • You’ve been talking about it for years, and now it’s time to stop talking and start acting.
  • Your book fits a particular season of the year, and you want to publish it then.
  • Your publisher gave you a deadline, and the calendar is nagging you.
  • You want to challenge yourself like a speed drill.

Whatever your reason for wanting to write your book quickly, you can reach your goal with these 10 tips.

1. Speed Drill: Set Your Word Count

Any writing project starts with knowing your exact word count. Is your book a short summer romance, or is it an epic fantasy adventure? If you’re writing nonfiction, are you writing a short, handy self-help guide, or a sweeping view of a historical era? Once you know your genre and topic, word count should be at the top of your list.

  • Novel: The average published novel runs from 50,000 to 110,000 words, but the average of books published in the U.S. is 85,000. Publishing experts say 80,000 to 90,000 is a good range for most genre fiction books. One exception is fantasy and sci-fi books, which often go to 100,000 words. If your book is going to go over 110,000 words, it’s too long for the average reader. You may need to divide it into two or more parts.
  • Novella: A cross between a short story and a short novel, a novella runs from 8,000 to 15,000 words.
  • Novelette or short book: A short book might be a romance, a self-help book, a travel guide, or a brief biography. It ranges from 40,000 to 70,000 words. Keep in mind that some readers may feel a book of this length is too short to be worth reading. On the other hand, some business readers and readers who want light reading are happier with a shorter book.
  • Memoir: A memoir should have the same word count as a novel.

For many of us, it’s easier to think about word counts in terms of page count. A word count of 30,000 is about 100 printed pages. So, for a book that’s 80,000 words long, that’s going to be about 250 printed pages. A 40,000-word book will be roughly 150 printed pages.

2. Speed Drill: Figure Out Your Exact Timeline

You’ve got your word count. Next, figure out how much you must write every day for the next few days, weeks, and months that you have available.

How many words can you write every day? Most people can commit to 500 words. That’s about two handwritten pages or one single-spaced page on a word processor.

If you’re a fast, experienced writer with enough time set aside, you can speed drill and produce 1,000 words a day. That assumes you have several uninterrupted hours of writing time a day. If you’re not that fortunate, you will have to scale back to 500 words.

If you can’t even manage that, set your goal to 250 words to start with. That’s about half of a printed, single-spaced page. It’s a small, manageable goal that most people can reach.

3. Speed Drill: Do the Calculations

Is your book 80,000 words in length? At the rate of 1,000 words a day, you can finish your book in 80 days. That’s about three months if you write five days a week and consistently churn out 1,000 words.

If you’re doing half that amount, hitting 500 words every day, you can hit your goal of 80,000 words in six months. That’s writing five days a week and producing 500 words every month.

People are often surprised when they see this number breakdown. If you thought it would take years to write a book, you may be pleasantly surprised to see that you can write book quickly as you speed drill through. At the longest, it will take you a year.

4. Speed Drill: Forget About Inspiration

If you want to write book quickly, daily writing is essential. The world is full of authors who only write when the muse hits them, and who have a drawer full of scribbled pages and unfinished manuscripts to thank for it.

The fact is, you’re not going to feel “inspired” every day. There are days when you will dread sitting down at your desktop. You need to push past the lack of inspiration and speed drill through. To write your book quickly, focus on getting words down on paper, and do it every day.

5. Speed Drill: Choose Your Weapons

Although we use word processing for most writing tasks, many writers still prefer to write their novels or nonfiction books in longhand. Some write longhand for the first draft and follow up with editing on a word processor. The list of longhand writers includes many famous, bestselling writers whose books you have admired.

Others use a combination of tools, for instance, using the computer to research material or create plot outlines while still writing the bulk of the book by hand. Others go straight to the typewriter or word processor. There’s no right choice. There’s only the choice that feels right to you.

6. Speed Drill: Decide Where You’re Going to Write

This is often an afterthought for many writers, but it deserves full consideration. You’re going to spend a lot of time in this spot, so it should be comfortable, neat, and located away from other household distractions. There’s only one desk or table where you can realistically sit and write.

Once you’ve chosen your writing spot, keep it free from distractions. Put your phone far away. Some writers like to keep music or TV on at a low volume while they work, others prefer nature sounds or total silence.

7. Speed Drill: Set Your Schedule

Are you a night owl like former president Obama, who preferred using the long, quiet hours of the night to write his most important speeches? Perhaps you’re an early bird like Haruki Murakami, who gave this description of his writing routine to Paris Review:

“When I’m in writing mode for a novel, I get up at four a.m. and work for five to six hours. In the afternoon, I run for 10 kilometers or swim for 1500 meters (or do both), then I read a bit and listen to some music. I go to bed at nine p.m.”

8. Speed Drill: Establish a Writing Routine

A writing routine is a series of steps you take every day before you write. The idea is to establish habits that clear your mind and prepare you to write. Your routine doesn’t have to be elaborate. It could be as simple as five minutes of meditation, or a 20-minute walk, followed by brewing and preparing your first cup of coffee. Once you’ve had your coffee or your walk, it’s time to write.

Ernest Hemingway famously wrote standing up. He would place the typewriter on the top of a chest of drawers and bang away from early morning until late afternoon. Charles Dickens used to take two- or three-hour walks before coming home to eat lunch and spend the rest of the day writing. You don’t have to do anything that extreme. Just find a routine you can do every day that will get you in the writing mindset.

9. Speed Drill: Use Productivity Aids

If you have favorite productivity tools you use for your other work, use them to boost your writing productivity. Whether it’s a favorite app or the Pomodoro method, apply it to your writing to write your book quickly.

You could also take this advice from John Steinbeck, who once wrote a letter to a good friend and fellow writer who asked for John’s productivity tips. Here’s part of what he said:

Abandon the idea that you are ever going to finish. Lose track of the 400 pages and write just one page each day. It helps. Then, when it gets finished, you are always surprised.

Write freely and as rapidly as possible, and throw the whole thing on paper. Never correct or rewrite until the whole thing is down. Rewrite in process is usually found to be an excuse for not going on. It also interferes with flow and rhythm which can only come from a kind of unconscious association with the material.

10. Speed Drill: Keep Yourself Motivated

Writing a book is not easy, but it doesn’t have to be a hard slog, and it doesn’t have to take that long. With these tips, you can write book quickly. Before you know it, you’ll have a finished book. When you want it printed, contact Publishing Xpress.

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