I had two years.
Two years, exactly, between the release of my last book, I Give My Marriage A Year, and my new book, The Couple Upstairs.
It was designed that way. Some authors, once they are lucky enough to have a deal in place with a publisher to put their work out in the world, also get a schedule. Two years is seen as a pretty good rhythm.
And two years probably sounds like a long time to write a book. If you’ve never met a writer.
No matter how interesting and unique we think we are, writers generally fall into one of two camps:
They’re either:
This book will take as long as it takes. Don’t rush my process, it could be next year, it could take a decade.
Or…
Give me a hard date, make it tight, I like to push to the pressure of deadlines. Three months, here we go.
Generally speaking (all of this is generally speaking, there is no fail-safe rule book for writing, no matter what someone might try to sell you), working journalists who write books fall into the second camp. If you’ve spent your entire career ruled by strict deadlines, you can’t work any other way.