I typically write on paper, with a wonderfully smooth, permanent pen. Oddly, having no option to erase or edit results in generally improved writings.
I suppose it's phycological. Without the the ability to backtrack and edit earlier paragraphs, there's no temptation to optimization preemptively, and I can focus on larger concepts, rather than minute details. However, it does result in grammatical hell, and I normally resort to MS Word-based refinement before distribution of any kind.
Graduation is next week, and I've decided on a potentially-indefinite gap instead of college. With newly available free time, I plan to continue hacking away, but also to write at greater length. There's a story that I've begun developing, which I'd love to put into full form.
At this point, I've done a large amount of writing, but most of my experience is in short (<10 page) journal entries. I seriously doubt triple-digit page-counts are handled on straight paper, or in MS Word for that matter. That said, how are novels written these days? Are there any GitHub-like services that specialize in prose?
I dunno. Thoughts?
The critical efficiency issue in writing a novel is writing a novel. Selecting novel writing software is not writing a novel any more than selecting novel writing shoes is and if you're like me shoe shopping might be more fun.
Yet it [software shopping | shoe shopping, take your pick] is distinctly not writing a novel. On the other hand, pen and paper in hand, you could have fifteen or twenty wads of paper in the trashcan in a couple of hours and maybe one or two in...what's the best file folder for writing a novel? I best find the right file folders to properly keep the pages I haven't written once I write them and this box of 100 folders shows that I am serious about my writing even though they are all empty].
War and Peace was written without computers or Google. I once had a boss who wrote his business letters in Lotus 123. It was better than DOS edlin. Tolstoy might have killed to get vim but only because Org-mode had not been invented.
The serious point is that software has a learning curve, and learning novel writing software is not writing a novel either. What's the best HN comment writing software? Certainly not the browser on my touch screen phone, but sometimes I use it anyway. But not for this comment.
Consider turning on noprocrast.
Good luck, have fun.