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Every Writing Milestone Counts

March 10th, 2009

It’s been about a month and a half (both since I blogged and since I worked on my novel). Last night I finished off Chapter 11 with nearly 1,500 new words. Tonight, I’ll go back and see if any of them are worth keeping. I’m sure a few of them are.

Actually, it felt good to get back into the story. I don’t know why I always feel surprised that I enjoy the creative writing process. I spend so much of my time not writing that it often feels like I’m avoiding it. Then, when I start up again, I feel rejuvenated, which makes it hard for me to fathom why I have such a hard time keeping up with it.

But then I realize it isn’t writer’s block, or procrastination, or lack of ideas, or any of the other excuses writers often manufacture to explain why they aren’t writing. It’s that I have a life outside writing. Family, work and other pursuits take up a lot of my time–and that’s not a bad thing, either.

I enjoy spending time with my family. I enjoy going to the movies with my wife, going to three different kids’ sporting events on a Saturday, even helping the kids with their homework.

I enjoy my work (most of the time). Recently I started a new venture, which you can see over at www.greenmfgnews.com . So, in addition to my full-time job as magazine editor, I also am trying to start something new on my own. And when I have a chance, I poke away at this novel of mine.

So I write when I can. I feel good about it when I do, especially when I’m able to make real progress. For example, last night I finished off a chapter. I also passed the 40,000 word mark, which I figure is about a third of the way there.

Fantasy Novelist’s Progress Report:

  • Consecutive days of productive writing: 1
  • Chapters complete: 11
  • Word Count: 40,582

How to Write a Fantasy Novel in 4.5 Months

January 27th, 2009

If you read yesterday’s headline, and then today’s, you can probably guess that I’m back in the writing habit. (woohoo! two days in a row!)

I wrote about 1,000 words last night and got myself about halfway through Chapter 11. After several months of slacking off, it feels good to get back to this project. I found that I’ve missed spending time in the world I’ve created. I’m finding that the more time I spend with them, the more the characters come to life.

So now I’m full of fresh energy and enthusiasm. Forget about what I wrote yesterday. 4.5 years? Absurd! My new estimate is 4.5 months, and I have a track record of two whole days to back me up.

All I have to do is keep writing 1,000 words a day.

Fantasy Novelist’s Progress Report:

  • Consecutive days of productive writing: 2
  • Chapters complete: 10 (and a half)
  • Word Count: 39,016

How to Finish a Novel in 4.5 Years

January 26th, 2009

Ok, so it’s been a little while since I posted anything here about my novel in progress. I’ll be honest. It’s been a little while since I’ve worked on it. I think I’ve spent about three days writing this whole month.

So I looked at my last post, got out my handy calculator, and figured out how long it would take me to finish this novel if I continue at my current pace…

Today is January 26. My last post about the novel was November 4. That’s 82 days between posts. I’ll admit that I haven’t blogged every time I’ve written. But I haven’t written that much either. One chapter and about 3,000 words in 82 days.

This is where it starts to get scary. Assuming the novel will be about 30 chapters and 120,000 words, I figure I should be able to wrap things up in approximately 1,640 days, which equates to 4.5 years.

Gosh, I hope I don’t get carpal tunnel syndrome from all that typing.

Fantasy Novelist’s Progress Report:

  • Consecutive days of productive writing: 1
  • Chapters complete: 10
  • Word Count: 38,233

Pyr to Publish “Premium” Mass Market Paperbacks

November 11th, 2008

Pyr, a science fiction and fantasy imprint of Prometheus Books, will publish Crossover: A Cassandra Kresnov Novel in the premium mass market paperback format, with dimensions of 4-1/8 inches x 7-3/8 inches and priced at $9.98, according to the publisher’s newsletter. Premium mass market paperbacks are taller than the traditional mass market size, allowing for improved readability and cover image area. Crossover, by Australian author Joel Shepherd, was previously published in trade paperback in August 2006.

The Cassandra Kresnov novels Breakaway and Killswitch will follow at the same price and format, to be published in June and July 2009 respectively.

“We’ve had significant interest from the major booksellers in seeing Pyr enter the mass market format, and a great deal of interest in this trilogy in particular,” says Pyr Editorial Director Lou Anders. “Joel’s series is smart, sexy, action-packed, and features a very well-rounded and admirable female lead. We’ve been very happy with their performance thus far in trade paperback, and feel they are especially suited to lead our charge into mass market, a perfect example of the type of smart, action-packed and engaging read that Pyr is becoming known for. I’m thrilled that Cassandra Kresnov is poised to entertain even more readers with her mass market debut.”

From the newsletter:

Cassandra Kresnov is a highly advanced hunter-killer android who defected from her League Dark Star special ops assignment, seeking the quiet life of a civilian, but then becomes unwillingly embroiled in dangerous interplanetary intrigue. Shepherd is known for his strong female protagonists, his gripping action sequences, and his rich depiction of Byzantine political machinations. Tobias S. Buckell, author of Halo: The Cole Protocol, called the series, “A blast to read,” while Publishers Weekly described it as “Robert Ludlum meets Elizabeth Moon.”


Todd McCaffrey on Tour

November 11th, 2008

TODD MCCAFFREY will be appearing at the locations below to sign copies of Dragonheart, the new novel of Pern.

Huntington Beach, CA
Wednesday, November 12 @ 7:00 PM
Barnes & Noble
7881 Edinger Avenue

Northridge, CA
Thursday, November 13 @ 7:00 PM
Borders
9301 Tampa Avenue

San Diego, CA
Saturday, November 22 @ 4:00 PM
Mysterious Galaxy
7051 Clairemont Mesa Blvd.
Suite #302

Source: The Del Rey Internet Newsletter


World Fantasy Award Winners

November 5th, 2008

The World Fantasy Awards were announced at the 2008 World Fantasy Convention, held in Calgary, Alberta Oct. 30-Nov. 2.

  • Life Achievement: Leo & Diane Dillon
  • Life Achievement: Patricia McKillip
  • Novel: Ysabel, by Guy Gavriel Kay (Viking Canada/Penguin Roc)
  • Novella: Illyria, by Elizabeth Hand (PS Publishing)
  • Short Story: “Singing of Mount Abora” by Theodora Goss (Logorrhea, Bantam Spectra)
  • Anthology: Inferno: New Tales of Terror and the Supernatural, Ellen Datlow, editor (Tor)
  • Collection: Tiny Deaths, Robert Shearman, editor (Comma Press)
  • Artist: Edward Miller
  • Special Award—Professional: Peter Crowther for PS Publishing
  • Special Award—Non-professional: Midori Snyder and Terri Windling for Endicott Studio Website

AliensAndElves.com congratulates this year’s winners.


Every Month is Novel Writing Month

November 4th, 2008

It’s National Novel Writing Month. According to the NaNoWriMo website, “National Novel Writing Month is a fun, seat-of-your-pants approach to novel writing. Participants begin writing November 1. The goal is to write a 175-page (50,000 word) novel by midnight, November 30.”

So what? National Novel Writing Month appears to be geared toward amateurs. Their focus is on quantity, not quality. Just get the words down on paper. What you do with them after that is up to you.

Except that my goal isn’t just to get words on paper. That part is easy. It’s getting the right words that’s difficult. Maybe that comes from my being a professional magazine editor in my real life. Maybe it comes from the fact that I don’t just want to write a novel. I want to write a good one. I want to have it published and be successful.

I spend far more time planning, editing and rewriting than I spend writing fresh material. To me, that feels like the better approach. I don’t have a problem coming up with ideas or ways to express them. It’s not about writer’s block. It’s about blocking out time to keep making progress.

Like NaNoWriMo, I use word count to track my progress. But they’re not just words. They’re the right words. Counting them just gives me a way to see my progress and stay motivated. Two months ago, I had 23,000 words and six chapters. Now I have 35,000 words and nine chapters.

I hope the good folks at NaNoWriMo will forgive me, but I’m not participating. They had more than 100,000 participants last year, with some 15% actually completing the 50,000 words.

I’m just going to keep doing what I do. My goal isn’t just to have a certain number of words and call it a novel. My goal is to write a cohesive, interesting epic fantasy page-turner. Whether it ends up at 50,000 words or 150,000 words doesn’t matter.

Fantasy Novelist’s Progress Report:

  • Consecutive days of productive writing: 1
  • Chapters complete: 9
  • Word Count: 35,300

World’s Greatest Fantasy Writer?

October 21st, 2008

The world’s greatest fantasy novel writer is back on the job. No, not J.R.R. Tolkien, although that would be news, wouldn’t it. No, not Terry Brooks. Who then? George R.R. Martin? Nope, not him either. I mean me, of course. Last night I wrote for about two hours.

Ok, maybe “world’s greatest” is a bit of a stretch, but I am writing fantasy, after all, and half the fun is just making stuff up. The point is, I’m back in the writing habit. Exactly one day in a row. OK, maybe “habit” is a bit of a stretch, too, but I feel a lot better about making progress than the alternative.

I worked on a new scene last night, the last scene of Chapter 9. The main character is about to get himself into a whole new mess, and it should be interesting. But he’ll also meet a new ally, whom I’ve already introduced. Together they’ll be able to get out of the mess, but not in this chapter. All I have to do tonight is finish getting our hero into the trouble. Throw in some bad guys and the scariest fantasy monster you’ve ever come across, and we’re in business.

I should be able to finish at least the rough draft of Chapter 9 tonight, and then get a good head start on Chapter 10.

In the early stages of writing a novel, there’s a lot more planning than writing. I feel like I am getting to the point in the story where the planning has mostly been taken care of, and the action of the story begins to drive itself. I don’t have to think about what is going to happen next, because what happens next follows naturally from what happened previously. That makes the writing part a lot easier.

Let’s hope it continues.

(World’s Greatest!) Fantasy Writer’s Progress Report:

  • Consecutive days of productive writing: 1
  • Chapters complete: 8
  • Word Count: 33,808

Where Did All the Magic Go?

October 20th, 2008

Ok, so it’s been about a month and a half since I wrote my last post. Not good, really, considering that this blog was supposed to help keep me on track with my writing habits.

Unfortunately, writing every day is a much harder habit to develop than not writing every day.

I haven’t been totally inactive since the last time I posted, but I haven’t written that much either. I am about two-thirds of the way through Chapter 9, which is about a chapter and a half further than I was late in August. I have somewhere around 33,000 words complete, and I hope to get through Chapter 9 tonight.

In the meantime, I finished reading the latest from Terry Brooks a few nights ago ( The Gypsy Morph, book 3 of the Genesis of Shannara series ). It was a good book, well written, with Terry Brooks’s usual style, and I consider my time spent reading his work as studying as much as reading for pleasure.

I admire Brooks for his pace and writing style, and if my writing can come anywhere close to that, then my “studying” time will have been well spent.

So, with inspiration anew, I’ll tackle the rest of Chapter 9 tonight. Wish me luck.


Changing History: Rearranging Chapters in Your Fantasy Novel

August 29th, 2008

I’m still in the revising, rewriting and editing stage, but I’m close to moving on to the next scene. I’ve spent the last few nights revisiting old chapters and old scenes and my notes and chronology of events.

In the first version, I didn’t necessarily write the chapters in chronological order. But in order to avoid confusing the reader, I’m going to rearrange.

So, what used to be Chapters 7 and 8 are going to become 3 and 4. Not only does this help me keep the sequence of events in the proper order, but it also lets me stay with the first group of characters a little longer before switching to my second main story line.

Moving these chapters meant adding a day to one story line and starting the second one a little bit later, but the changes were minor, and the whole thing makes a little more sense that way. I don’t want the reader to have to figure out that I’ve just jumped back to yesterday, and I certainly don’t want to have to explain it. And time travel is just not possible in the universe I’ve created.

Working on Chapter 8 (now Chapter 3) last night, I reworked a lot of the first scene, resulting in a fair amount of new material, which is good. I’ll be moving on to new stuff over the weekend.

Although I’m nowhere near the initial goal of writing 1,000 words a day, I’ve been working pretty steadily. I think I’ve taken two days off over the past two weeks. And despite all my editing and revising, the word count keeps growing, too, which means I must be getting somewhere.

Fantasy Writer’s Progress Report:

  • Consecutive days of productive writing: 7
  • Chapters complete: 7
  • Word Count: 28,206

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