Here to Create

We are here to create not merely survive.

Obligatory Retrospective and Goals for the New Year

Well, as usual I’ve completely ignored any kind of logical progress toward clearly defined goals.  Last year, I decided to go easy on myself and just make it my goal to keep writing and keep learning.  That, at least, I’ve done.

Writing-wise, I finished the first draft of my 2008 NaNo, HUNTED MOON, around March.  I still haven’t finished the second draft though.  For some reason I’m completely bogged down on the antagonist parts, perhaps because they’re merely plot devices and not people to me in the same way the main characters are.  Sigh.  It still needs a lot of work.

While I was waiting for HUNTED MOON to cool, I attacked NYX again, trying to get past my obsessive tweaking and get some real work done.  Working on NYX, I realized that feeling my way forward wasn’t working for me, so I wrote an outline.  Surprise!  It’s a trilogy.  It’s not my fault; I only read epic fantasy as a child and the series structure is imprinted on my brain.

Over the summer I also worked on what was supposed to be a short story with a July anthology submission deadline.  But I just couldn’t get the structure to glue together, so I let the deadline go screaming past.  I looked at it again recently and decided it’s probably a novel too, or perhaps a novella.  Oh well, I never wanted to be a short story writer anyway.

I also came up with the first seed of this year’s NaNo over the summer.  As always, NaNoWriMo gave me a good kick in the butt as far as writing goes.  I managed to finish a complete draft of my 2009 NaNo, SWORD AND KNIFE, by the middle of December.  It’s also the longest piece I’ve ever written at 100,000 words and counting.

This year, especially November, has been all about trying new things and expanding my writing comfort zone.  I took on some really big thematic ideas in NYX, I tried to write a short story this summer, and with SWORD AND KNIFE I tackled epic fantasy for the first time in years, as well as multiple first person narrators.  I doubt all these experiments will pay off by themselves, but I’ve learned a lot just trying new things.  All I really want is to be able to look at my most recent story and see that it’s better than the one before that.  And I have confidence that the next one will be even better.

That’s all I’m really trying to do in 2010.  I want to get better, and the way to do that is to keep writing.  I want to learn how to revise this year, and I want to always be producing new ideas.   I want to continue to learn about the art and craft and business of writing.  I want to read more, both new and old.  Pretty simple on the surface, but it’ll be a lot of hard work, I guarantee.  And a lot of fun.

Happy New Year and good luck to you, whether you have your own list of goals or not :)

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Semi-Annual Blog Post

So I’m right on schedule: it’s been about six months since I blogged here.  What’s that?  Other people blog every day, sometimes more than once a day?  Well shit.
I think I suffer from boxitis.  What is this blog for? I ask myself repeatedly.  No one answers, so it becomes about nothing except the crickets chirping.  The lonely, lonely crickets.
***
It’s December, which means last month was November, which means NaNoWriMo.  I love NaNo with all my heart, because no matter how bad my writing slump is, I know I’ll be able to abandon all my self-criticism and just pour something onto the page.  And I’m usually shocked at how good it is.  I mean first-draft good, not publishable good.  I am not one of the people on the NaNo forums who is “publishing” my novel at CreateSpace or torturing agents with my rough draft.
Instead, I use NaNo as a way to push myself.  This year I tried an epic fantasy for the first time since I started writing seriously.  I was a little nervous about that, because NaNo is not the best time to stare into space and worldbuild.  But it worked out well.  I planned ahead enough but not too much and the world grew by itself.
I also tried a structure I enjoyed in Havemercy by Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett
Havemercy by ______.  Why not?  It’s Nano, anything goes.  And I’m pretty happy with that too.  Two of the characters have distinct voices, I think, and the third one’s coming along.  I can whip him into shape in revisions.
Last, I made my goal 80,000 words for the month, not just 50,000.  And I made it.  The book’s at about 95,000 now, with just a couple of chapters left.  But it’s harder without the NaNo momentum to keep me going.  Also, this will make a grand total of three books finished with an actual climax and resolution.  So I’ve not had much practice at endings, and it’s hard to tie up all the plot threads without letting the story sort of drift off into space.
But I’ll get through it.  Because this one I want people to read.  Every rough draft I write gets a little cleaner.  Even with all the story problems, I’m at least not ashamed of my prose.  And I really need some feedback.  I need some validation that I can tell a decent story, that I’m not wasting my time polishing turds.
What if my beta readers tell me it’s crap?  I don’t know.  I’ll cry, I imagine, because I’ve wanted to be a writer my whole life and finally feel like I’m getting there.  So if I’m wrong about my progress, it will be hard to hear.
But even that wouldn’t be the end of the world.  I’ve started reading again at Absolute Write, one of the best writing resources on the web.  Whatever my problem is, I can find advice on moving on and give it another shot.  In my NaNo novel, I gave one of my characters the line, “You don’t stop learning until you’re dead.”  I always want that to be true for myself.

So I’m right on schedule: it’s been about six months since I blogged here. What’s that? Other people blog every day, sometimes more than once a day? Well shit.

I think I suffer from boxitis. What is this blog for? I ask myself repeatedly. No one answers, so it becomes a blog about nothing except crickets chirping. The lonely, lonely crickets.

***

It’s December, which means last month was November, which means NaNoWriMo. I love NaNo with all my heart, because no matter how bad my writing slump is, I know I’ll be able to abandon all my self-criticism and just pour something onto the page. And I’m usually shocked at how good it is. I mean first-draft good, not publishable good. I am not one of the people on the NaNo forums who is “publishing” my novel at CreateSpace or torturing agents with my rough draft.

Instead, I use NaNo as a way to push myself. This year I tried an epic fantasy for the first time since I started writing seriously. I was a little nervous about that, because NaNo is not the best time to stare into space and worldbuild. But it worked out well. I planned ahead enough but not too much and the world grew by itself.

I also tried a structure I enjoyed in Havemercy by Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett: multiple first person narrators.  Why not? It’s Nano, anything goes. And I’m pretty happy with that too. Two of the characters have distinct voices, I think, and the third one’s coming along. I can whip him into shape in revisions.

Last, I made my goal 80,000 words for the month, not just 50,000. And I made it. The book’s at about 95,000 now, with just a couple of chapters left. But it’s harder without the NaNo momentum to keep me going. Also, this will make a grand total of three books finished with an actual climax and resolution. So I’ve not had much practice at endings, and it’s hard to tie up all the plot threads without letting the story sort of drift off into space.

But I’ll get through it. Because this one I want people to read. Every rough draft I write gets a little cleaner. Even with all the story problems, I’m at least not ashamed of my prose. And I really need some feedback. I need some validation that I can tell a decent story, that I’m not wasting my time polishing turds.

What if my beta readers tell me it’s crap? I don’t know. I’ll cry, I imagine, because I’ve wanted to be a writer my whole life and finally feel like I’m getting there. So if I’m wrong about my progress, it will be hard to hear.

But even that wouldn’t be the end of the world. I’ve started reading again at Absolute Write, one of the best writing resources on the web. Whatever my problem is, I can find advice on moving on and give it another shot. In my NaNo novel, I gave one of my characters the line, “You don’t stop learning until you’re dead.”  I always want that to be true for myself.

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