The Rise and Fall of NaNoWriMo

How a press release with an AI statement is the beginning of the end of the end for a 25-year organization

Rochelle Deans
6 min readSep 3, 2024

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Photo by Igor Omilaev on Unsplash

Really, the story of how National Novel Writing Month came to be provides much foreshadowing into the way it’s crumbling now. In 1999, the idea was posed by a group — all men, as I remember it, although I can’t find a source that states it outright anymore — of college students: let’s write 50,000 words in November.

The reasons were arbitrary: Of Mice and Men was nearby and had 50,000 words in it, November had 30 days, which is easy enough to divide and felt like a good timeline as a habit-starter, and the founder Chris Baty even joked he wanted to tell potential dates he was a novelist. (The link to the joke from this 2015 HuffPost article leads to a 404; NaNo has done a lot of scrubbing their past recently.)

Since then, Baty has written and published two books, both of them nonfiction, and both related to NaNo itself. One, Ready, Set, Novel, is a workbook that Baty’s own website declares “the greatest novel-prep workbook in history.”

The second is called No Plot? No Problem, although in looking it up just now I found an e-book edition was published in 2004, before the revised and updated (and available in print) option came out a decade…

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Rochelle Deans

Editor, author, ADHDer. She/her. Editor of Building a Novel and Style Edit. Top writer in Fashion. I write about what interests me