![]() ![]() It really was a story made to be read aloud (the audiobook, incidentally, is fantastic), and although there were years of revision working to make the story cohesive, we had a hell of a lot of fun making it. I don’t think I actually saw David’s text until the first draft was finished. We discussed plot occasionally-especially the stuff that happened with the two Wills together-and we discussed the overall shape of the novel (we wanted it to be shaped like an X), but mostly we just read to each other and then kept going. In continuation of our celebration of Will & Grace - which airs its second series finale Thursday, April 23rd on NBC - we wanted to take a look back at the d. This process continued over more than a year. I wrote chapter three while David wrote chapter four, and then we met to read those aloud to each other. ![]() ![]() (Sarah was also listening.)Īfter the first chapters, we were convinced we could turn the thing into a book. Then we met at my apartment in New York City and read our chapters out loud to each other. The odd-numbered chapters are narrated by a Will Grayson who lives in Evanston. The even-numbered chapters are narrated by a Will Grayson who lives in Naperville, a Chicago suburb. ![]() The odd-numbered chapters are narrated by a Will Grayson who lives in Evanston, at the northern edge of Chicago. I wrote chapter one while David was writing chapter two. The book features two different narrators, both named Will Grayson. The book features two different narrators, both named Will Grayson. ![]()
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