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Tag: amwriting

It’s All About The Words, Words, Words

Wow, it’s been a while.

So, 2017 happened. I’m not really a New Year’s Resolution type person, but I do like to take advantage of significant turning points in my life to take stock of where I am, where I’m going. What works, what doesn’t.

2016 was a good year for me, writing-wise. I put more focus into it than I had been putting in previously, and it has been the start of something great. But I wanted something concrete to make sure that I was keeping it up in 2017.

I’m notoriously bad for not keeping track of time. Small units of time I’m generally okay with, but bigger units of time? I can’t remember if something happened last week, last month, or last year. I’ve got today under control, I’ve got yesterday under control, and then there’s this big grey blob called THE PAST which everything else falls into.

So, I figure–2016 was pretty good. Yay me. But there were swaths of time where I didn’t write much, and I have no idea how long those swaths were and how frequently they happened. Also, it was really inspiring to see everyone on Twitter talk about their yearly roundup, their stats, the time they spent writing and the number of words they wrote, and I realized–I’m completely incapable of reporting on that stuff.

I don’t have the data.

So, I did some Googling, and I figured out how to get the data!! It’s this really fantastic word tracking spreadsheet from Svenja (http://svenjaliv.com). And, I figured–I’ll try it out for a month. I’ll see how it goes.

Y’all–I wrote 17,311 words IN JANUARY. In ONE MONTH. And I skipped EIGHT DAYS completely, and wrote less than 100 words on three days and more than 100/less than 400 words on eight other days.

I didn’t do well at tracking my time–but let’s be realistic, I’m also doing a lot of writing as I’m walking, in five minute chunks here and there, and occasionally while I’m lying in bed with my kid. So I’m not gonna stress out about tracking time, especially when I’m making the forward progress that I want to make.

I set my yearly goal at 200k words, and right now?

Right now, things are looking pretty damn good.

Did you set any writing goals for yourself this year? How do you stay accountable? Do you have other systems that you like to follow, or goals that you like to set?

Write Church

So my regular writing group did a new thing this week, and in addition to our regular Wednesday meeting, we met at a bar first thing Sunday morning. (Obviously, we’re calling it Write Church.)

And it was just really nice. It was definitely more informal and chattier than our normal Wednesday meets, but it was really nice to have a second focused writing session in a week, and it was great to see everyone twice in a week when I usually just see them once.

Progress on HH … well, it continues. It’s around the 40k mark. I’m having issues with the chapter I’m currently writing, as it’s mostly delving into new territory and laying out some background, and since I’m not excited about it, it’s taking a long time to get sorted out*. But I’m making progress, and I just got to the point where I’m introducing a new character. If nothing else, I now have general background arcs for my two younger characters, one of whom is very concerned about getting in touch with their family, and one who is concerned about what they are going to be when they grow up. And if this next little chunk goes okay, I’ve got an interesting librarian stationed in a moldy library to work with too.

I’ve been thinking a lot about how to tackle writing the things that aren’t fun for me, specifically when I know they’re going to get cut. When I’m working in Scrivener, I usually just abandon the section I’m on, start a new section, and move on with my life. But I’ve mostly been working on my tablet, and since Scrivener isn’t available on Android, I’m back to using Google Drive. I don’t know what it is, but I mostly** feel that when I’m working in a single document that I should write chronologically, and not skip things.

Things that are Not Fun and Destined To Be Cut usually follow a pattern for me … they’re transition scenes of some sort, written to bridge a gap between a plot point and another plot point. Frequently, they’re exploration sequences, things like ‘I wonder what this character actually needs’ and ‘what would they do as part of their normal day?’. Sometimes, they’re just ‘well, I need to have a different viewpoint character as a break here before I do another chapter with the character I was just with’.

In this case, the chapter that’s slowing me down is all three. I’m finding out some interesting things as I’m pushing through it–but overall, I’m not sure it’s worth it, and I should consider a better way to deal with this type of things in the future.

 

 

*This is a GREAT indication that it’ll get cut in the next edit.

**I do have a few thousand words that have been abandoned at the bottom of the doc and that I don’t intend to use for anything, but they also keep me from having to write into the void of an empty page, so it’s alright.

3 Day Novel time!

Yikes, is the 3-Day Novel Contest ever coming up quick.

This is the first year for me–I’ve done (and won) NaNoWriMo for the last two years, so taking on the 3-Day Novel Contest as a new challenge seemed like the obvious progression. The timing is either terrible or fantastic this year–I return to my day job literally the day after the contest ends. So on one hand, I’m likely to be exhausted when I start back to work, but on the other–at least I won’t have any time to fret about going back.

Because I’m so bogged down in rewrites for HH, I wanted something completely different. I’d originally planned to write a serious book, but after looking at my back cover blurb, I think it’ll end up being more of a snarky book than anything. The genre is YA urban fantasy, probably loosely based in Saskatoon (though I don’t know if I’ll specifically name the city). Here’s the blurb:

Sophia is sixteen, and what’s supposed to be a carefree time in her life has devolved into futile attempts to balance school, her part-time job, and her boyfriend. James is smart, handsome, and older—but he’s also controlling and pushy, and when one of their fights turns violent, Sophia accidentally sets James on fire while trying to escape.

Terrified and unable to figure out how the fire even got started, Sophia confides in her parents and her dad, in turn, confides a secret back to her—she’s not the only one in the family that’s set someone on fire. She has a half-brother twice her age that she’s never heard of—and right now, his place is the only place her parents are willing to send her while the repercussions of the James incident are sorted out.

Before she knows it, she’s travelled halfway across the country to an unfamiliar city and her half-brother’s sterile apartment. Elliot’s boyfriend, Thad, is warm and welcoming, but Elliot himself is cold and wants nothing to do with her. She knows she’s supposed to sit and wait, she knows that her parents are working on sorting things out back home—but she can’t spend the rest of her life sitting in an apartment that could double as a showroom. What she finds when she adventures outside will change her life forever …

(I’m definitely pulling too many punches in the summary–what she finds is a Secret Scientific Research Project for Strangely Talented Children and Adults. Things get complicated.)

I actually was looking out for future me (that is, the me that will be frantically editing things on Labour Day) and wrote out a vague plot summary, so at least I have some idea of where I’m going with this.  Usually I go into projects with way less of a skeleton than this, so hopefully I’m able to just slam some meat on these bones and call it a day (she says, while quietly figuring out how many words she has to write in an hour for this to even be feasible). ((It’s a lot of words. Don’t think about it. The numbers get scary.))

Wish me luck!! And good luck to everyone else participating in the challenge!

 

Revisions Forever and Ever and Ever

As everyone in my writing groups is aware (I sigh a lot during meetings), I am in the midst of a massive revision of my dark fantasy/horror novel, HH*. I first came up with the idea for the novel in 2005, and have been working on it sporadically since then, but it wasn’t until NaNoWriMo 2014 that it actually came together into a full manuscript.

I never plan my zero drafts in advance. I have a general concept of my characters (who generally have settled into themselves by 10 or 20k in), and only a vague concept of my plot (I generally know the start, and then the end, and then everything is just a blurry mess in the middle), and then I start to write and figure the rest of it out as I go. It’s great in terms of forcing my brain to figure things out on the fly, and allowing me the maximum amount of flexibility in terms of getting from A to Z.

It’s not great for producing zero drafts. My zero drafts are, quite honestly, disasters. (I’d even go so far as to say if you’ve ever read a draft of mine that was decent and reasonably smooth and I told you it was a zero draft, I was lying. It’s always at least a point five draft before other people see it.)

When I finished HH, I was really excited about it. The worldbuilding was inconsistent, the setting was thin at best, and the characters wandered around a little bit before they finally settled into their selves, but I was really passionate about the story I was telling, and I felt there was a ton of potential in the worldbuilding to create something special. HH is the … fourth** zero draft novel I’ve completed, and the first one where I looked back at it and went “actually, yeah, even after finishing it I’m still super passionate about this story”.

Since 2014, I’ve had a couple of false starts on the revisions. I kept trying, and then petering out, and getting started, and feeling overwhelmed, and resolving to do it this time, and getting distracted. Also video games. I played a lot of video games***.

Then I had my kid. I don’t know how it works for other people, but yikes, did having a kid ever put my free time into perspective. Before the kid, I felt like I had as much time as I needed to write, and consequently, I never wrote, or I wrote without being focused on it, or I planned a lot to write and then did something else instead, or I didn’t plan to write at all, or I flew around in World of Warcraft making raven noises and swooping in on everyone’s herb nodes. You know, important stuff.

But since the kid? HOLY SHIT THESE NEXT FIFTEEN MINUTES MIGHT BE THE ONLY FIFTEEN MINUTES I GET FOR THE REST OF THE AFTERNOON GET THEE TO THY KEYBOARD.

So my priorities have shifted. I’ve been putting a lot of work and a lot of words into the revision. The original draft of the novel went 80k****, and I added some bonus scenes afterwards to finish it out at just over 100k.

This revision, which I’m comfortable calling a first draft***** and letting other people read, is currently at 30k, and there’s so much story left to tell that I’m giving serious thought to splitting the damn thing in half. But we’ll see how the story unfolds, and we’ll see who needs what from whom, and when.

Here’s the hook as it stood a few months ago:

The last thing Asheni remembers before passing out is the mysterious object in her palm, the swarm of something eldritch and unidentifiable flowing toward her, and the blinding pain in her arm. She wakes up lacking all three of these things, as though they never happened–but all the same, everything else has changed.

Now her twin brother won’t speak to her, her partner is looking for answers to questions he shouldn’t know exist, and no one in the village, including the children, will make eye contact with her. The Seer is prophesying the end of the world again, which normally would be something Asheni would ignore–but they’re starting to lose contact with the surrounding cities.

Asheni has to balance the supernatural demands of her job in the present, the threat of her past coming to light, and a very uncertain future both for her, and for the people she cares about.

There’s definitely some edits that need to happen here. For instance, the bit about no one making eye contact her is interesting narrative. If one of the main character has to navigate everything when no one will look her in the eye? That’s a big deal. Ask me if it’s in the original draft of the novel. Spoiler alert: it’s not.

Oh, well, it must be in the revision I’m working on now? Hell no.

I literally made it up for the hook because I thought it sounded cool. And it does sound cool, so I should try and work it in. But as of right now, it’s not in there.

Same with the bit about the Seer prophesying the end of the world. It should be in the actual manuscript, but as of right now, it’s not. It’s actually part of two entirely separate subplots (‘the end of the world is coming’ & ‘the end of the world is not coming’) that I need to weave throughout the narrative. Neither of these subplots are directly pushed forward by the main characters–it’s more like the main characters end up sandwiched between both narratives.

And that isn’t even getting into the matter of the referenced ‘supernatural job’. I’m gonna hang off on discussing that one for a while, though. I’m testing out something in the first draft where the reader is about six chapters in before they finally figure out wtf everyone has been doing, so I need to see if that works before I commit to whether or not it’s going into the hook.

For what it’s worth, I think that’s been one of the hardest parts for me so far–figuring out how to properly seed the narrative. What needs to show up where, when do the secrets get revealed, how do the secrets get revealed? Who knows what, and how do they talk about it?

The original draft of the manuscript was completely in Asheni’s head. I used third person limited past tense, and we only followed Asheni. But then, after the draft was finished, and I was adding a few extra chapters to flesh things out, I got into a wierd headspace where I was writing flashback chapters in italic’d present tense.

When I got into this draft of the story, I figured I’d give it a go in present tense and see what happened–and I expanded the viewpoint characters to include three additional people as well as Asheni. I think it’s telling a better story now–but I know it’ll require extra work to ensure that each of the four voices is stylistically consistent. (That’ll probably be my second draft–physically dividing the story into the four parts, and editing start to finish, voice by voice.)

So that’s where I’m at with this. It’s an unfortunately slow slog, at least in part because this is the largest revision I’ve ever tackled. But I’ll get there eventually.

And I’ll try to keep the sighing to a minimum, at least while I’m out in public.

 

 

 

*working (acronym) title.

**I had to pause and count on my fingers.

***It hurts my feelings to use the past tense there, but accuracy is important.

****Not all written during NaNoWriMo. I only eked out a victory.

*****I typed in ‘one draft’ here, since I thought that was went after ‘zero draft’, and yikes, was it wrong-looking.

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