Weekends off keep me charged up and ready to keep working. I always have something percolating, and I rarely take more than a week off between projects. This is my life, five days a week, and it allows me to accomplish a lot. Sometimes I combine options two and three. It really depends on my mood as to which. At ten, we split up so he can have some quiet time (to play video games and watch bad Japanese horror movies.) From ten to midnight, I will do one of three things: (1) read a book, (2) chat on IM to one of my friends, (3) work more. I make dinner for my family, and we hang out with the kids until 8:30. Listen online or offline with Android, iOS, web, Chromecast, and Google Assistant. I spend the other five hours working on edits, revisions, galleys, or whatever else has come across my desk. Get instant access to all your favorite books. Once I’ve finished my words, that’s not the end of my work day. When I’m writing, I write: typity typity type. I know what I’m writing in the morning, so there’s no blank staring time. To keep the writing moving that fast, I block the scene the night before in bed as I’m waiting to fall asleep. I don’t check email or mess around online. If I’m drafting a book, I write for three hours in the morning. I work a lot, I’d say forty to fifty hours a week. Salvation is surrounded, monsters at the gates, and this time. The epic conclusion to Ann Aguirre's USA Today-bestselling Razorland trilogy. But since I suspect this question has its roots in speculation regarding my productivity, I will elaborate. Buy a cheap copy of Horde book by Ann Aguirre.
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