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From Idea to Story: Thoughts and Exercises

This post was inspired by my new Tumblr, where I’ll be throwing things that inspire me. If you want a peek inside my brain hole, feel free to click on over.

Creative people are often asked where they get their ideas from. I think anyone who has been writing for a while will know what a strange question this is, though I admit to having asked the same thing myself a few times. The question usually isn’t–where do the ideas come from? It’s more, how do I use these ideas, and make them more than snippets? How do I flesh this scrap out, build it into something that will move people, delight people, intrigue and excite people?

JK Rowling said she had the first bits of her ideas about Harry Potter when she was on a long train ride. She didn’t have any pen or paper with her, and so she was forced to mull these ideas over in her head, stringing things together for hours on end without the benefit of being able to put anything down in black and white. Her method, whether by intention or because of circumstance, was essentially daydreaming. Prolonged periods of daydreaming. And I think that is the root of the creative process. We have to give ourselves room to dream. And then we have to anchor those dreams to some kind of reality.

So how did this wildly successful author come up with her ideas? It doesn’t matter. What matters is that she took them and created a world out of them. And there are at least as many ways to do this as there are authors. I’m still finding my method, that tried-and-true process that works every time.

I think I’m on a wild goose chase. I’m sure as I grow both as a writer and as a person, what works fr me will change. But that’s good! It forces me to try new things, and occasionally stumble upon something new. And the whole point of being alive is to learn, to live, to grow.

Here are a few things that work for me right now. Who knows? Maybe they’ll spur something in you, too.

Creating Characters From People

It’s cheating. I know. But it’s the best and worst kind of cheating there is. We all know people with idiosyncrasies that drive us up the wall, or make us want to study them like animals in a lab. Or something like that. And when it comes to creating believable, interesting characters you could do a whole lot worse than picking them from the ripe field that is your life.

Now, I’m not recommending trying to put Dad into your story whole cloth. That won’t work. It can’t. Human beings are so intricate and complicated that any facsimile we try to create will inevitably come out forced. Instead, try inserting Dad’s laconic nature into the best friend of your main character. Or his love of puzzles into the villain. In doing this, you inject something familiar into this character. You’ll know, from experience, how this aspect of a personality works, and it will be easier to conjecture. And by using just one piece of the person, you avoid the “OMG you put me in your book and I’m a jerk! What do you think of me?” problem.

Who is This Going to Hurt Most?

So you’ve got this awesome idea for a world where people literally share one heart, and if they don’t find their mate before a certain age they start to die. Great. Now, you go to choose a main character and–you find the middle-aged woman comfortably married with three children who have been linked with their mates since birth. Hmm…I could think of a couple of ways you could use this woman, but I don’t think she’s MC material for this story.

How about the CEO of a company in charge of finding people’s mates? If he fails, well, there goes his commission! Again, not a strong candidate.

Or how about the girl who’s fallen in love with her best friend, who gets murdered. And then she finds out her mate is the guy responsible for the murder. Now this has potential.

Who does your idea hurt? How can you make it hurt worse? I’ve mentioned this here before, and it applies as much today as it did a hundred years ago and will a hundred years in the future–put your character in a tree and throw rocks at them. But before you get them up there, find the character who has trouble climbing trees, find the character with thin skin, the character scared of heights and projectiles. The connections will start coming, growing like sinews between pieces of your ideas until you have something vaguely story shaped.

Randomize

Then, if you get really stuck, do something crazy. This is an exercise borrowed and tweaked from Holly Lisle (who has a whole, comprehensive course about how to take an idea and make it into a book).

Take a magazine. Rip out a bunch of pictures. Scatter them over your floor. Start throwing things at your impromptu collage. A penny will do. Wherever that penny lands, let that inform your next scene.

For example, let’s say you’re writing a far-future hard SF. I have no experience in this genre, so excuse any unintentional foot-in-mouthing I may commit. You’ve just massacred an issue of Vogue, so you have a spread of watch ads, fashion shoots, and the like. Your penny lands on this*:

Congratulations! Your characters have just discovered a new alien race! Or perhaps that trunk she’s sitting on contains the WMD your hero will have to wrest from the grips of evil. Or this is the villain disguised as your hero’s long-lost sister, dropping in for a none too friendly visit. There are a dozen ways you can take this particular picture, easy, and this picture is pretty…well, boring.

The ideas are everywhere. It’s the connective fibers that are harder to come by.

*photo ripped shamelessly from the internets.

Also, I’m not affiliated with anyone. Any links are free from outside influence.

 
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Posted by on January 12, 2012 in creating, planning, writing

 

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First Publication! And Happy New Year!

Yeesh. It’s been nearly a month since I last posted, and I don’t even have NaNoWriMo to blame.

All that aside, I have excellent news! My short story “The Nightmare Eater” has been published and released by The Colored Lens. You can download it and read it (among several other surely excellent stories) here.

This is my first official publication! I have another story coming out early next year, but this one…dang. It’s a cool feeling. Like, very shiny and fluttery. It is the first step on my path to total world dominion! (Or a publishing deal that will keep me in fish&chips and gin for the rest of my natural life.)It’s nice to be going into 2012 with a notch in my belt. I think it bodes well for the year.

This is a big one, guys. If everything goes according to our plans, by this time next year I will be writing from a tiny apartment somewhere in Japan. Caleb will be doing what he loves, and I will have more time than ever to devote to that whole fish&chips aspiration. With the new year comes the expectation of resolutions. I’m personally not a fan of resolutions, as I see them more like ongoing actions than things to be achieved. Which is good and all, but I’m much better at getting things accomplished when I have goals. Do XYZ by 123, or x number of times per month/week/year.

(Confession: When I was younger, probably between the ages of 11 and 16, one recurring resolution that I dutifully scrawled in my diary was :Be nicer. I have since abandoned that resolution. Now, pardon me while I eat your face.)

But goals! I do well with goals. And I’ve got a few good ones lined up for the coming twelve months, a few of which I’ll share with you here.

  • Revise “The Absinthe Gang” and start querying editors.
  • Learn enough conversational Japanese to get by.
  • Use the perfumist and herbalist classes I signed up for.
  • Write a short story using some of what I learned in aforementioned classes.
  • Keep track of my reading. I’m thinking I’ll either utilize GoodReads more, or keep a spreadsheet.

There are more, because I’m nothing if not ambitious. I’m going into 2012 focused on my writing and on Japan, which is similar to where I was last year. Only now I’ve been through ClarionWest, I have my first publishing cred with another in the works, and Caleb has applied to JET (!). It’s interesting, seeing things move forward like this. For a while, aspects of my life felt stationary. Writing, for example. After letting my mad skillz lie fallow for several years, it took a while for me to get back to where I’d been, and then another long while before I was anywhere decent. I know I still have a long way to go, and that I will always find something new to learn, but it is crazy heartening to see how far I’ve come.

I’m not the only one kicking ass and taking names. Click here to check out fellow CW alum Jenni’s post on the awesomeness that is my class of ClarionWest. Mega fist bump!

How have you progressed this last year? What goals are you setting for the coming year?

Photo used under creative commons license from: graciepoo

 
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Posted by on December 31, 2011 in career, discovery, planning

 

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Making Time

Over the last month or so I have seen a substantial decrease in my available free time. There was moving, then Foolscap, then being sick, then a mini vacation to Vancouver Island. It all added up to sap my time away in force. Now that things have settled down a bit, though, I’m noticing that I have more on my plate now than ever. Two critique groups, a novel in the making, short stories to submit, cons and other events to attend, not to mention keeping up relationships with the people I care about. Add to that the varied stressors that life likes to throw out there every once in a while and I’ve been feeling…well…kinda crushed.

I’ve been here before, of course. Everyone has. And I’ve tried making a schedule for myself that fits in all the things I want/need to do. (Not in that order.) (Okay, sometimes in that order.) Then I’ll stick to my schedule for approximately one minutes, and proceed to blow it off royally. I am not sure what it is, exactly, but I don’t think my mind works well with that particular kind of structure.

But I do need structure. I think that people work best when they have some kind of setup to their day, not just casting about aimlessly while the tides push them willy-nilly. That’s how we lose hours to I Can Haz Cheezburger and their ilk. (Nope. Never done that.) So I’m left with the question- how do I make sure I get everything done, when I want it to get done, without feeling burned out or pissed off?

I know I’m not the only person asking this question.

I think one way to start answering that question is to look at my priorities.

  • Fiction is a huge priority in my life, both the reading of and the writing of. Making time for those things hasn’t been a challenge for me for a couple of years now. In fact, when I’m not writing daily I get antsy and irritable.
  • Maintaining relationships with the people I love is another important factor. This one is more tricky, as I can sometimes let this aspect subsume other things I need to do. People can be very edifying, and very distracting.
  • Exercise. Oh, god, exercise. I hate you exercise. But I like being able to use my body in ways that don’t hurt, and aren’t too much of an effort, so exercise is important. Needless to say, I have a hell of a time keeping this one in good standing.
  • Eating healthy. Which requires cooking and grocery shopping and planning, all of which take time.
  • Down time. This one is the hardest for me. This is pure relaxation time. Reading books outside of my genre, purely for enjoyment purposes. Watching the occasional episode of Modern Family or The Office. (Or Bones. Hurry up, Bones!) The problem I have with relaxing is that I often find myself ‘relaxing’ in ways that aren’t actually relaxing. Seriously, watching TV is not relaxing. It’s numbing.

So those are my main priorities, not organized in order of importance. And when I look at it this way it doesn’t seem too bad. Getting everything in seems rather doable, as long as I’m not wasting time. And yet, when the day starts rolling, I start to lose track of things.

Well, if anyone has any time management tips, I am all ears. Obviously I don’t have this all figured out. For the time being I think I’ll try a combination of scheduling things and to-do lists.

6:30 am – Wake up. Snooze button.

6:45 am – Wake up again. Throw phone to foot of bed so I can’t use the snooze.

6:50 am – Make to-do list.

10 am – Wonder why I can’t read anything on my to-do list.

10:05 am – I Can Haz Cheezburger eats my brain!

 

Photo used under creative commons license from _SiD_

 
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Posted by on September 30, 2011 in planning

 

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Paul Park on Plot

So, day four draws to a close. It’s kind of amazing and scary to think that tomorrow is out last day with the estimable Paul Park. Just twenty four hours ago I was talking about how we were only on day three, and we had so much time ahead of us. Now, as Thursday is now officially over, it seems our days are numbered. Such an interesting thing, time. Maybe it stretches in all sorts of crazy ways inside this house. We’ve stumbled upon a rift. How appropriate for an F/SF group, eh?

Today we discussed plot, and the various, typical kinds of plot. Our exercise yesterday was to draw up a brief, 5-6 scene outline for a short story. I’ve been outlining for a long time, after being inducted about three years ago when I did my first NaNo. I’m hooked, I gotta say. The short story I wrote for this last week, however, I did seat of my pants, in order to try something new. Dare to fail. Stretch yourself. You know, all that good scary stuff. So moving back to structure was really comfortable for me, but learning about the four basic story structures as Park laid out was really informative. Now, for your consumption pleasure, I’m going to try to lay out those structures. Keep in mind I have had two point five alcoholic drinks, and I am writing in a room of twelve talking people.

Here we go!

Action story: This story is your classic, linear, causal action drawn story. This kind of story is generally ABC structure, and ends with a happy ending. It begins with one or two scenes of the MC at rest, so we can establish who he is, how he relates to his world, etc. Then a problem arises, he attempts to fix it, fails, etc. Two essential endings are implied in the plot, essentially success or failure, but once we get to the ending, if we see either of these expectations played out then we feel cheated. So these stories pretty much require some kind of earned twist or reversal. Usually features flat characters.

Fate Story: Plot is less crucial here. We’re following a character, and the events of the story are determined not by outside actions, but by the characters motivations and flaws. Love stories follow this structure. Note–love stories, not romances. These stories often have tragic endings, because they are driven by the character’s obsession, problems, etc. These characters are ROUND.

Manners story: Common in genre literature. The point of the story is to introduce the reader to a new society. This is not common in a short story, and the plot is often pretty loose. We don’t have to worry so much about cause and effect, as the point is dramatizing different aspects of the society. The reader is drawn through different situations, being shown interesting pieces and illuminations. These stories often have subplots that follow the lines of actions stories. Characters are FLAT.

World Story: This story relies on the rhythms of nature. Generational sagas, birth, death, etc. Families feature largely in these kinds of pieces. This story is free in time and space, being driven by the kinds of rhythms we see in nature. The momentum is dependent not on overlaid plot, but on, again, natural rhythms. This can be extrapolated to include any number of things, like seasons, life, um…other cycles.

It was definitely enlightening. I stick with action stories, across the board. I think I should try to branch out a bit, toy with some of these other structures. I’m especially intrigued by the world structure, the idea f following the rhtyhms of nature to inform a story.

Okee! 1 minute left on my battery!

 
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Posted by on June 23, 2011 in Clarion West, planning, writing

 

Mmmmm…steak…

Shortness of breath. –Check

Trouble swallowing. –Check

Increased hear rate. –Check

What is this? Is Eliza having a heart attack? Suffering from an aneurysm? Coping with the untimely demise of her laptop?

Nope. These are just signs that Clarion West is only two weeks away. Expect symptoms to increase, with a marked rise in nausea, nerves and neuroses.

In preparation for the upcoming exodus, I have been severely focusing my writing activities. I have:

  • One novel to critique. 85% done with the in-text comments. Then I shall write a short essay on each issue I found within the book in question.
  • One short story to revise. 75% done with the initial read-through. Then I will have to figure out the best way to get this weird, slightly convoluted piece of information worked into the story before I set about with actual revisions.
  • Several (like 2-3 dozen) story ideas to brainstorm. Just to have on hand in case my brain turns to goo. Plus, I think its good practice.

You may notice that none of these activities involve any actual writing. The last word I wrote, fresh came over a week ago, when finishing the short story I now need to revise.

This is hard for me. I love writing. I love creating. Swimming around in the English language is one of my all time, slam-dunk, super-fab activities. Hence the writerliness. Over the past year I’ve gotten really flipping good about writing every day, or nearly so. Even if it’s only a few words here and there.

I’ve enacted this self-imposed bar on new writing because of two reasons. !0 I want to store up my writerly juices for ClaionWest. and 2) I know that any story I embark on right now, in conjunction with the other things going on in my life, would not get the attention it deserves. Hell, it might not even get finished, and the last thing I want to do is start CW with a dangling thread.

Still, as many times as I repeat these wholly logical reasons to myself, the itch will not go away. In fact, it only gets worse. Plus, since I’m brainstorming these new story ideas, well, a big part of me wants to pounce and start writing! It’s like raising cattle so you can get that juicy, grass-fed filet mignon. Once your cattle starts getting plump, its all you can do to keep yourself from jumping into the pasture and taking it down right there, bare hands and teeth.

Right? Are you with me? Its exactly like that. I want to drink my story’s blood. And wear its pelt as an overcoat.

But for the sake of my upcoming workshop, I am going to curb my enthusiasm for a couple weeks.

Then, that filet mignon is mine.

Or maybe that heart attack.

Time will tell.

Photo used under creative commons license c/o maraker.

 
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Posted by on June 3, 2011 in Clarion West, not writing, planning, writing

 

What Has Been Done, What is To Come: Week 2

Hoo boy, this has been a weird week, schedule-wise. I had engagements Thursday all day, Friday night and Saturday afternoon/evening. I took Monday evening and early Tuesday afternoon off from writing, to boot. Which, all in all, left me with a tiny amount of writing time available!

All that aside I think I did pretty well.

What Has Been Done

This week we got an idea building assignment. Three diverse pictures, culled from the lands of internet. We were to brainstorm ideas on each picture, moving through, and past cliches to find three original ideas for each prompt.

The prospect of using pictures to form ideas is not new to  me. My story A Kind of Death, which earned an honorable mention from the WotF contest, was prompted by a picture I found on DeviantArt. But using a picture cold like this was different. I’ve always used pictures that have prompted ideas, as opposed to using pictures in order to prompt ideas, so the process was kind of turned on its head. And, using pictures I would not have normally been attracted to, I had to stretch myself a bit to make the good ideas come.

Always good to push yourself beyond your comfort zone. I’ll include the pictures and my favorite idea from each one at the end of this post.

As far as writing this week goes…well, like I mentioned I didn’t give myself much time. I really like my story, and where its going. And I managed to find a reasonable breaking point today, so that I can feel okay going away from it for a while. It definitely is not an unfinished story, necessarily, but I do want to expand upon it. I’ve learned that I need to give myself more time to work with. A couple nights and one morning are not enough.

Also, I learned what a beekeeper is called! An apiculturist. One of my characters is an apiculturist, in a fun turn of events. And he loves Dickinson. He’s a sweetie, I’ll tell you what. No wonder my main character is in love with him.

What is to Come

Merrilee just posted about organization, and I have had my short story file box pulled out and ready to be sorted for nearly two weeks now. Time to get on top of that.

Also, I desperately need to do some edits on *Mystery Project* and get it ready to submit. Seriously, I can’t believe I’ve let it flounder for so long. It needs to be mailed by the 30th!

And story the second is on my plate now. My interest is still dystopian settings, and I will be focusing where education choices are made by the government. I noticed this last week that my focus really ended up being more of a prompt, and I’m betting that theme will continue. The focus of this last story certainly wasn’t on the fact that romantic expression is limited, but it did influence the tone of the story. Maybe I’ll write something with a teacher as the main character…I think that would be an interesting angle. And an angry parent as the antagonist?  Or maybe she is an underground textbook trafficker, and a fellow teacher (or student!) is the antagonist.

Ah, time to brainstorm!

Lastly…

Here are the pictures, followed by my favorite story idea for each.

Great picture, huh? Terribly expressive, even if they do both end up looking like twits.

I got a couple of favorites for this. Hard to choose, so I won’t bother. :) Both are pretty stream of consciousness.

1. The woman has just received the news that she is being excommunicated from her church because the casserole she brought to the potluck had the face of satan cooked into the cheese. She has devoted a lot of time to this church, but the new pastor makes his own way. He’s been looking for a reason to get rid of her anyway, and with the climate of the times being as fearful as it is, he found a good opportunity. Without the protection of the church, she doesn’t know what to do. It is organizations like churches and support groups like AA that keep people safe. Without those mini communities individuals are only prey for–what?

2. He’s dating her much younger daughter–who is he? The mother’s boss. Met the daughter and fell into lust. He’s married, and unapologetic about the whole thing. Mom is furious, because she wants her daughter to marry a doctor and there is no way that’s going to happen if she runs around with this jerk. She keeps her job, and creates an escalating scale of blackmail, eventually culminating in murder. Of who? the boss? Mom? The daughter? The man mom wants her to marry?

This was my favorite picture of the three, and my imagination really took off.

1. These houses serve only as drying houses for a massive marijuana crop. They are far away from most civilization, and while the sea air can be a detriment, many customers have said they can practically taste the ocean in the pot. The houses are a secret, and the crew takes turns living there throughout the year, while they all live there through the winter tending small individual use plants. They have a pact, and a comfortable lifestyle within these limits. Until one of them falls in love. With the daughter of a woman running for president, who vows to legalize marijuana. In the current age, her vote looks good, and she is squeaky clean. The boy truly believes in her cause, that’s how he met the daughter. But if the press pry into his life, and find out that he does something that is still currently illegal, her hopes of being elected will be crushed. And the rotten contender will rush into office.

This one gave me fits. I’m not a real abstract kind of person, so it was difficult getting into this piece. But I managed!

1. A woman who works in a battered woman’s shelter begins to wake up with bruises. At first they aren’t so bad, but they get worse and worse. Who? Woman- abused in a previous relationship, and he got killed in a car accident under dubious circumstances. New boyfriend is a super gentle pushover, who never pressures her into anything she doesn’t practically beg for. She’s missing the excitement of her old boyfriend, the thrill of it. What- her intense desire for the old boyfriend, as well as the guilt that goes along with it, manifests in either a ghost, or a psychological issue where she bruises herself.


 
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Posted by on May 16, 2010 in Creativity Workshop, planning

 

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I Found a Shining Jewel…

Okay, you guys are awesome!

Had a crappy day yesterday. Vented. And got back a wealth of constructive and comforting responses. I just wanted to drop a quick thanks.

So last night I did as I had planned, and took the night off. Watched a movie, finished Shiver, drank two (!) martinis. It was a nice night, I’ll tell ya. Very indulgent.

Then today after work, since I only work until about noon on Tuesdays, I took a nice long hike. Longer than I had anticipated, actually, because I ended up getting lost about three quarters of the way through. No matter, I made it back to my car without being raped OR murdered, so I consider it a win. I know my legs are going to complain tomorrow, but such are the wages of directional sin.

Here’s what I found out: The whole going for a long walk thing? Priceless.

As I was wandering through the undeniably fantastic beauty of the Pacific Northwest in Spring, enjoying the smells and the solitude and the buzz of the bees (which I’m glad were in relative abundance) I stumbled across something beautiful.

My first scene.

Story the first has officially been started, and I’m raring to go. I do have a busy week, with a craft night on Thursday, a romantic dinner on Friday and an all day social/potluck/gathering on Saturday, but I will triumph! Even if it means locking myself in the garage at the social and banging out the last words.

Then rewarding myself with dessert!

 
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Posted by on May 11, 2010 in Creativity Workshop, planning

 

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NPI Update, Planning a novel & Voting time!

311 words today, in Steampunk X. Nothing yesterday. I was busy, happily, merrily busy.

I’ve spent a good chunk of time over the last two days steadily planning away on my novel. We’ll call it SN, for convenience’s sake. I’m horrible at titles, and so I went to a random title generator and found- tada!- Sleeping Night.

Terribly cliché, absolutely non-descriptive of the book I’m working on (apart from their being night scenes, and occasionally my characters will sleep, I suppose), but it was better than The Legend of the Boyfriend. Now there’s a novel I want to read.

Sadie’s new boyfriend is a little weird. The first time she met him, in the sewers of Tinytown, he seemed really nice. But more and more, she notices things about him. You know, weird things. Like the red ribbon he keeps tied around his throat. And his obsession with the town’s excessive urban legends. Sadie’s starting to think there’s more to her new guy than meets the eye. And maybe, she doesn’t want to find out what it is.

Hmm…maybe that wouldn’t be so bad. Regardless, that’s not what I’m writing now.

But, in the last forty-eight hours, I have accomplished much. The basics of the story remain the same-ish. One of my characters has gone through a complete personality change, which affects the way another character acts dramatically. My main character’s home situation went from super duper shit to pretty dang cool with deeply hidden secrets. Much more at stake, there.

I’m not going to go into details, but it has been great. I’ve been using the story structure setup from Larry Brooks to get some major highlights from my plot into place, and have a few scenes above and beyond the pivotal ones mapped out, too. It’s been time full of writing, longhand, into my moleskine. Which is now more than halfway full.

I’m really excited about getting this party started. Maybe by Thursday, next Saturday at the latest.

In other news, the voting for the ErgoFiction searchterms contest is officially open! The poll will be live until the end of the week, with authors and winners announced on Sunday. Go! Vote! And hopefully you will vote for mine!

 
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Posted by on March 7, 2010 in planning, writing

 

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Some ideas for this blog

I’ve been thinking about what I want from this blog the last couple days, and what I want to do with it. There are a couple things that pique my interest.

Like reviews. I see some grand movies, and read some lovely books, and I want to get these things out to more people, with my humble opinion attached, of course. So I’m going to start Review Tuesdays. Every Tuesday, at some point during the day, I will post a review on a movie, or a book, or a new gadget, or last night’s dinner…you know, really relevant stuff.

And stories. I love writing. Obviously. That’s why I’m here. But more than just writing, I love a good story. Put the two togather- I love writing stories! So I’m going to do Story Fridays, where I will post either a very short story, or possibly installments of a serial. I think that would be fun. Maybe something Steampunk?

Ooh, yeah! Steampunk serial! Okay, that’s what I’ll do. And it will provide me a nice breather from the book. So you can start looking for these two things starting this week, with a review of Candor, by Pam Bachorz. Aaaand- The first installment of Steampunk X (working title, that).

And periodically over the rest of the week I will continue to post a variety of things, mostly revolving around writing.

*ALSO* Go check out the Class of 2K10′s super sweetie Valentine’s contest. It’s a chance to profess your undying love and devotion to that special someone (real or fictional) that really lifts you up.

 
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Posted by on February 8, 2010 in planning

 

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Into the New Year

Updates
1. I sent ‘A Kind of Death’, formerly titled ‘Judith’ to the Writers of the Future for consideration. I should hear results in about two and a half months.
2. Finished ‘Struck By Chocolate’, my attempt at a romance novel. It is currently tucked away, so that I might get some distance before revising.
3. Finished ‘Phib’, tentative title, a short story for the next quarter of WOTF.
4. Started ‘Home’. New novel…top secrets. ><;

I finished writing SBC on the eighth of January, and dived right away into Phib. Then, I finished Phib on Thrusday. Friday saw me feeling sick and oogy, and starting a new novel. I remember days, weeks, months…years even, in my past when I didn’t write anything.

"I’m not inspired."

"I’m too tired."

"I don’t have anything to write about."

And to be honest, a lot of things have changed in my life. I’m married, I have a stable job and living situation, I’m not constantly stressed about money and basic safety. And I think that helps. But there was still about two years when I used those same excuses. Not until diving into NaNoWriMo and finishing Chasing Smoke did I realize that I can really do this. And I’ve been going ever since.

It was a choice I made to be awesome. To pursue my goals. Nothing special about me except that I made that choice, and that I make it again, every day.

The really funny thing I’ve found, though, is that I feel more inspired. I’m tired less often (and even when I am tired, I have the energy to write something). And I always have something to write about. Too much really. It’s like exercising a muscle- the more you do it, the stronger it gets. 

I’ve seen a lot of resolutions getting thrown around the last couple weeks. A lot of goals, too, for those a bit squeamish on the word ‘resolution’. I figured I would offer my own, here.

And, being one of those who finds the word resolution pretty empty, here are my 2010 goals:

1. Write a short story for every quarter of WOTF, and send that puppy in.
2. Write a novel I feel comfortable with submitting to agents.
3. Keep a record of all the books and short stories I read, as well as my thoughts on them.
4. Read. A lot. And then read some more.
5. Ditto #4, with writing.

I realize that all of these are writing focused. That’s because that is where my life is focused right now. I want to be in the best possible position two years from now, when we move to Japan.

Oh, 1 more: 6. Post regularly on this blog. Having a ghost town of my life floating round on the internets is kind of depressing.

For anyone who stumbles across this space, feel free to add your own New Years…whatever you want to call them.

 
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Posted by on January 16, 2010 in planning

 

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