How Hard Is It to Write Your First Book?
The truth no one tells new writers
You see the finished book.
The bestseller.
The movie deal.
The author sitting in a beautiful office.
What you don’t see?
The years before that—when writing felt impossible.
Because here’s the truth:
Most first books aren’t written in comfort. They’re written in survival mode.
Before Success, It’s Usually Chaos
Take Stephen King.
He didn’t write Carrie in some quiet, inspiring cabin.
He wrote it in a trailer.
Beside a washing machine.
Working late at night after teaching all day.
He wasn’t chasing fame.
He was trying to get by.
She wasn’t a global name.
She was a single mother, living on welfare, writing in cafés just to stay warm—buying one coffee so she wouldn’t get asked to leave.
She didn’t know Harry Potter would work.
She just kept going.
And Dan Brown?
Three failed novels.
No audience.
No momentum.
He wrote The Da Vinci Code in a basement, using an ironing board as a desk.
Not exactly the dream setup.
Here’s What They All Had in Common
It wasn’t confidence.
It wasn’t certainty.
It was this:
They kept writing without proof it would ever pay off.
That’s the part most people underestimate.
Because writing your first book isn’t just difficult technically—
It’s difficult mentally.

The Real Struggle Isn’t Writing—It’s Doubt
When you’re starting out:
-
You don’t know if the idea is good
-
You don’t know if anyone will read it
-
You don’t know if it’s worth your time
And unlike other careers, there’s no feedback loop.
Just silence.
That’s what makes most people quit.
One Practical Step (That Actually Works)
Forget perfect conditions.
Do this instead:
👉 Set a daily minimum: 300–500 words. No exceptions.
That’s it.
Not “write when inspired.”
Not “wait for the right moment.”
Just show up.
Because every writer above didn’t win because they had time—
They won because they made progress anyway.
Why This Matters More Than You Think
You’re not behind.
You’re not failing.
You’re just in the part no one talks about.
The quiet part.
The uncertain part.
The part where nothing feels guaranteed.
Final Thought
Every famous author you admire once sat exactly where you are—
Tired.
Doubtful.
Unsure if it would ever work.
The only difference?
They didn’t stop.
And if you don’t stop either—
You give your first book a chance to exist.
you might also be interested in these blogs…
WHO’S WRITING STYLE SHOULD YOU COPY?
