Okay. I give in. It’s a novel.
Sunday January 18, 2009
The um, project that I’ve been working on? I give in and admit it’s a novel and probably for the time being it’s the only thing I’m focusing on. I decided this the other day when I sat down and outlined about 90% of it. I never do this. I usually write out a bunch of the novel in a sort of “writing to discover” process and then figure out what needs to be there and doesn’t and from that figure out the hows of the plot and outline the details and start cleaning it up and revising it in a quasi-new-draft of it. But this outline is color-coded and I didn’t even write it on the computer. (Note to self: transfer to computer and save a billion backup copies of it everywhere.)
But this thing, this novel. It’s alive. It’s a creature taking hold of my brain. A giant squid novel, yep, that’s what I’m writing. (Having nothing to do with squids, really, except for the fact that this novel seems to have tentacles that have reached out of the monitor, grabbed me, and started smacking my head against the keyboard until I finally relented and agreed to work on it full time.)
I can’t complain, though–strike that, I shouldn’t be complaining, yet I am. I went from being in a holiday creative slump to being in a post-holiday creative slump. There was much staring at my iGoogle page, wondering what to do. I hadn’t even felt more than “Bleh” about reading–READING–that’s how slumpy I was. This… this fire… this is work of the kind I haven’t felt since February of 2006 when I started a draft based on an image of a conversation one of my historical characters was having with her brother. The image–what she was wearing, how she was sitting, her facial expressions, all of a sudden revealed this character that drew me in and made me so much more interested in her than just this figure who crops up in legend on one of the other novels. She was a real person with a whole story and a whole arc that needed to be told. That draft/novel was the cause of me getting very little sleep that semester. Instead I spent every weekend of that winter glued to the computer, feverishly working on that instead of working on what I was supposed to be working on. (Homework. Papers. Stories. The like.) The irony of this is every big draft I’ve ever started and enjoyed enough to write through I’ve started in the winter, usually in January or February. The autumn slump and the holiday break leads to an impatience and feverishness in January or February, I’m guessing. So I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised.
But I feel guilty! I should be working on something else. In fact I love that story and really want to be working on it! (Alas, I need to write to discover with that one, though, which seems a bit onerous.) Maybe I should sit down with my colored pens and outline it anyway and just be as daring and brazen with its plot as I was with this novel and see where it leads. It’s working with this one! The word count of this document is probably going to surpass the count of that one in another week with my current pace (which is nicely graphed in Excel) and really… gah. At least my protagonist has multiple reasons to feel guilty so I get to use that guilt and angst in a productive way.
To think, this all started the day I interviewed a prospective student applying to Carnegie Mellon. I went to Starbucks a bit early, sat down with the laptop and opened a blank document. “To hell with it,” I thought. I’d intentionally arrived way too early to force myself to focus on writing. Something. Anything. And hell. It worked. Carnegie Mellon, you’re still helping me write. (In an admittedly weird and roundabout way.) Bless you.
NaNoWriMo Conflict
Friday October 31, 2008
National Novel Writing Month starts tomorrow and I’m eager for it but I keep going back and forth between the projects I want to work on for it. Neither are technically begun, which is their precise appeal for NaNoWriMo, but I’m so conflicted I might end up writing half and half, which will just be plain old bizarre. That, and the project I’ve been working on for the last few months is still not finished and I keep writing scenes (in my head, ugh) for it, and those really do need to get written. (All of this brain-clogging with not-yet-written stuff will be detrimental for speedy neuron processes, I’m certain.)
The first project I wanted to work on was something entirely new. It’s set in the same world of my other projects, but because I’m a single-novel girl, it’s its own single novel. New characters, different country with different customs, all of that. I only have a bunch of disconnected images and a few sketched characters for it (all in my head) so that project’s appeal is in its complete new-ness.
The other project is a novel I started (the first draft) back in high school. That draft is unrecognizable as the second major draft of it, which I wrote in 2004-05. And that again is completely different from what it now is — in my head. I’ve been editing this story mentally for years now and I really want to write it down. But I am so busy with my other projects that I’ve put it off, procrastinator style. I would be following the tenets of NaNoWriMo — fresh document, blank page, just go – but the difference is that I know a lot more of what will happen in my head for this one than I do for the other. (The odds of me referencing its old drafts? Slim to none. It’s that different.)
I probably will end up trying to write 50,000 words for one and 20,000 words for another, just because I want to do both, I think, and I want to make sure I write 50,000 in one novel to truly win NaNoWriMo. We’ll see how it goes… that is a lot of words… but I know I’m fully capable of that level of (attempted) insanity.
NaNoWriMo is almost upon us…
Thursday September 18, 2008
I’m absolutely definitely going to full-steam-ahead participate in NaNoWriMo 2008. I have the workings of a new project poking and bouncing around my brain and I refuse to write them down, only dream about them further, until November. (I don’t want to cheat by outlining or going to town on things yet; it’ll ruin the crazy fun!) I’m looking forward to it a lot, actually, because the most fun I’ve ever had writing have been the all-consuming story-churning months (usually one month or three weeks here and there) I’ve had, when it’s all I can do to peel myself away from the screen to do anything else. Those are fun. And those have only ever really been with brand-spanking-new things, or brand-new rewrites (from scratch versions from old characters and plots). Those are so much fun. I’m sort of slogging with my two major projects (ignoring the two minor) at present, so I think jumping head-first into something fresh come November is going to be amazing fun. Especially if I can drag a few friends into doing it with me.
That doesn’t mean, of course, that I’ll be ignoring the major stuff. What I really need to do is start focusing. This morning I downed a lot of coffee before 8am and I felt uberproductive. Then that fell by the wayside by the time the gym came around, then groceries, and now I’m about to head out to do some wedding stuff. (Yay for almost-maybe booking a location?!) And laundry, oh, the pain of laundry. Tomorrow, though, we shall see who is productive. We shall see.
It’s the fall, and I’m always more productive in the fall… right? Unless I discover a new genre like I had last fall (damned urban fantasy and lack of casual college reading turning this last year into a voracious year of book devouring)…
Who knows what October will bring?
Maybe I should make that into my own personal NaNoWriMo, but for my existing first priority project. Just word-dump until it’s done, even if I haven’t a clue of what I’m doing. (I could do that now but I keep getting hung up on the gaps. There are lots of planned scenes that haven’t been written purely because I keep staring at the gaps between them wondering what will go there and inevitably getting distracted by something shiny and wandering away to look at it being all shiny.
But I shall prevail. Optimism!!
subscribe