A New, Twisting Idea

Thought I might try for a shorter blog entry today.  Maybe I’ll come back later with some more to say, and maybe not.

Didn’t get any writing done this weekend (well, Saturday and Sunday, at any rate) and that’s okay.  It’s okay because, um, well, er . . . I had an official BIG IDEA this weekend.

I don’t know how this works for other authors.  I barely know how this works for me.  The original “story” for Beautiful Handcrafted Animals was supposed to be a sort of Peter’s Friends affair, where a bunch of friends get together and act like asses until one of them — the ostensible main character — drops a bombshell which dwarfs all their crap and puts everything into perspective.

Hey, what?  It was supposed to be a “learning experience”.

Since that idea, the story has . . . changed.  It’s changed rather naturally, as I’ve written and thought and re-written and re-thought, and I feel it’s reached what may be its more or less final form.  The story, at any rate.  I had a great inspiration the other day about something to change which works rather better than the original something, but that’s that.

When I started writing, it was simpler.  It probably would have been easier to write if I’d left it there.

Painted Ocean started out with an interesting mental image.  Then I had some other cool ideas, a drop of inspiration brought on by (of all things) my iPod shuffling to this song instead of that song.  Somewhere along the line I realized my main character had legs and wanted to stretch them.  One book?  Pah, who writes only one book anymore?  How about NINE books (or maybe twelve)?

The point is, these started out as rather simple ideas.  Some friends get together.  A submarine accident.  Then they grew.

This story — and God only knows when I’ll get to write it — hit, fully-formed, like a bolt from the blue.

It’s a pretty great idea, if I may say so myself.  I took some notes and while I’d love to be writing it this moment, I know enough (now) to know that I need to let it germinate for a while.  At least six months.  Probably much longer.

The neat thing about this particular, nameless story, is that I think it would be a nice follow-up to Animals. This might be an odd way to think but, if I’m being realistic, if I were to get Animals out there onto the book shelves of the world, Painted Ocean might not be the follow-up to to please the folks who were into Animals.

Well, we’re in full-on author fantasy-wank here.  Go with it.

This new story is the sort of thing that could follow up Animals. Which is a nice feeling because (and again, I don’t know how this works for other authors, but this is how I think of it) while I might consider a theoretical reader for this book, it’s nice to think I’ve got something else they might enjoy wriggling away within me.

And look at that.  Not the longest blog-post in a while, but more than I think I’d intended.  I suppose there are worse things one can get on about.

The Z Hours

There are only twenty four (or so) hours in the day and, though I didn’t use to think it was so, I do need sleep occasionally.

Take those twenty-four and subtract X for sleeping, eating, bathing, exercising and other necessities, then subtract Y for work and what you’ve got left are the Z hours.

Z = everything else.

Now, in an ideal world, I’d be writing during Y and not parked at a computer or racing around the streets of Manhattan, dealing with day-job related stuff.

So it goes.

The way it works today is that Z is what I’ve got to work with.

Z mostly gets nights and weekends and the occasional afternoon or morning if I find myself not toiling away in the office.  Nights and weekends are tricky things, of course.  Other people want to talk to you about your nights and weekends.  Tuesday nights, for instance, are for gaming.  Sunday nights, seemingly — at least this time of year — is for getting together with and then recovering from my family.

When you chop your Z up into the tiny little bits it, by necessity, must be chopped into, you find a sad and small number.  Z = >0 approaching 0, if you can dig it.

I know I’ve written about this before, but it cracks me up when I see a professional writer telling aspiring folks to write four, six, eight, ten hours a day.  It’s a nice dream, is what I’m saying.  And I’m not even talking about sequestering oneself away four four hours at a time, puzzling over what to write and how to write it and does this work and maybe I’ll rewrite it four or eight or ten or fifty times . . .

I mean, hey, if I’m lucky and things are rolling, I’ll get a solid hour in in a night.  Actually, if I get a solid hour in, I’m ecstatic.  Most nights, getting a solid, productive hour is a gift.

If this sounds whiny or complainy, it’s not supposed to.  When I get that hour in, my Z is officially better than the entire 24 – (X + Y ) combined.  When you’re cooking, I’m not sure there’s anything better out there.

As I’m working on Animals, and when it’s good, it really doesn’t feel like work, I save the MS as a new file each day / night / afternoon / whatever, when I start working.  I didn’t used to do this, but I realized I might be interested in going back and checking back how things had progressed.  Plus, it was an easier way to hold onto stuff I deleted than saving it so outside files.

A consequence of this is, when I sit down Tuesday night, tired and beat, to write, and it’s May 11th, and I see the date on the most recent file is May 6th . . . I have to take a moment and sort out how that can be so.

Well, let’s see . . . the sixth was last Thursday and I wrote.

Friday was the seventh and Jessy and I tend to do stuff together Friday night.

Saturday was the eighth and we had folks over for gaming, including an internet-friend over for the first time who stayed late.  We beat the typically very punishing Witch of Salem with him, but once he’d gone, we basically called it a night.

Sunday was the ninth, and Mother’s day to boot.  We got up, got lunch and were out in Long Island — and when we came home, we were, once again, quite tuckered out.

Monday I should have written — I should have worked out, too — but it didn’t happen.  First we had a contractor over and then dinner was delayed and then suddenly it was midnight and I was tired and blech.

And then Tuesday was the eleventh.  Five days down the tube for five-plus perfectly good reasons.

So, today is the twelfth and when I save that file tonight it’s going to need to be early and I’m going to need to be fresh.  Right now, we don’t have anything earth-shaking on the books for more than a week, so the only excuse I can use if I’m not taking good advantage of my Z hours is my own laziness or lack of focus.

Sometimes I wonder if it’ll be easier when I’m writing Painted Ocean or some book or story other than Animals. I read some chapters back the other day and was very happy with what I had.  Long road to get there, though.  I’m hoping it’s worth it, that this story feels worth the trouble once it’s all finished and done.

I don’t think I had a choice; I had to write it, had to finish it.  And while it might be nice if Ocean flowed out of me like, well, water, I can’t help but also wonder if that fight, that uphill scramble, if that’s not what makes it all worthwhile.

A Big Catchup Post

I keep losing blog posts.

I begin writing them, embed a link or upload a picture, then the phone rings or something else starts happening.  A couple times Firefox has crashed (I’ve tried using dedicated blog-writing programs but almost universally I haven’t enjoyed them) and I’ve lost posts that way.  Yesterday I closed a window with a couple paragraphs in it accidentally.

Some people might take that as a sign.

Not me.

So, here I am.  Let’s see if we can’t mush a bunch of stuff into this one post and then maybe I’ll be better about my blogging (I’ve noticed I seem to exist in two states; either apologizing for not blogging and having just blogged).

I wrote last night, my, um, third stab at the start of Chapter Thirteen.  I’m closing in on it, though.  I’m thinking I might have sorted out what I want to be doing and how I want to be doing it.

Animals has been an absolute bitch to write.  Point of view keeps switching and every chapter feels like it’s its own entity.  I’m constantly hunting for the right angle, the right way to sneak into a scene and while it’s been interesting, it certainly hasn’t been easy.

I just hope the damned thing is entertaining when it’s done.

The next book, Painted Ocean, should be a more simply constructed book.  The issue with Animals is that (spoiler? nah) nothing really happens in the order I’m writing it.  Which is to say time is sort of . . . slippery in this book.  There is a definite timeline (I’ve got it written down somewhere), but presenting things like that wouldn’t be a bit of fun at all.

So it goes.  Ocean is much more straightforward, at least when you ignore the fact that it’s the first book in a nine to twelve book series.  And even then, things still go more or less in the order you’re reading them.  The order I’m writing them, too, come to that.

Which I suspect will be nice for writing.  One point of view.  One main character.  I haven’t sorted out if it’s going to be first person (like Animals) or third person, and whether or not it’s going to be present tense (sigh, like Animals) or past tense (like, um, almost every other book in existence).

It’s just possible I’ve aimed too high with this, my first “real” novel.  I figure, if you’re going to shoot for the stars, shoot for the ones that are far away, right?  It’s the hard road or no road for me.

Within Chapter Thirteen, I know what actions are taking place (some of my favorite scenes in the entire book, including probably my favorite single bit of imagery in the entire story), so it’s not the What that I’m wrestling with but the How. How can be very vexing and, sometimes, even more vital than that What. Oh, not at the expense of What, certainly, but it needs to be spot-on or what’s the damned point?

——————–

Okay, so I said I had some links I’d lost.  Let’s see, first is this pretty awesome trailer for Batman XXX: A Porn Parody.  It’s safe for work, true to the 1960′s Batman show and looks funny enough to watch even if everyone kept their clothes on:

Here’s another trailer, this time with a political slant.  Robert Rodriguez has a movie coming out, what he calls a “Mexploitation” film.  It started as one of the fake trailers in Rodriguez’s movie, Grindhouse, with Quentin Tarrantino, but it’s a real movie now, and due to be released relatively soon.

This trailer is Rodriguez’s and star Danny Trejo’s response to the recent insanity in Arizona over immigration reform:

Slightly less explosive but very interesting in spite of that are these Color Survey Results from XKCD.com.

Jessy and I have certainly had a couple mild disagreements over what to call certain colors.  Over 222,500 user sessions, the folks at XKCD have gathered some cool information about how men and women relate differently to color.

And because that sounds really, really dry, and uninteresting, here are a couple examples to pique your interests:

Five color names disproportionately popular among women:

  1. Dusty Teal
  2. Blush Pink
  3. Dusty Lavendar
  4. Butter Yellow
  5. Dusky Rose

And, of course, from the opposite side of the spectrum, five names disproportionately popular with men:

  1. Penis
  2. Gay
  3. WTF
  4. Dunno
  5. Baige (not a typo — and when you read the article you see it’s based on the number of unique people answering this way).

And, I just want to say, I know how to spell “Beige” even without the spell-checker.  Also, I’d like to know if folks associated a specific color with “WTF” or if that was just a generic answer then they, I don’t know, saw a color they were unfamiliar with?

Weird and fascinating.  Just the way we like it.

An Awesome Cheese Ad

It’s going to seem, about midway through, like you’re watching something you should turn off.

Don’t turn it off.

This is, in a word, awesome:

And, if I’ve still got your attention, oh mystical internet peoples who maybe don’t even exist, last night was one of those late start, but very productive evenings.

I tied together all the old stuff from the First Draft and finished the longish Chapter Five.  Even have a couple paragraphs for Chapter Six (though, that may change tonight).

What I’m finding is, in a given week, unless I’m lucky or incredibly inspired, I’m getting maybe three our four actual nights of work in.  Tuesdays are taking up by boardgaming (though not this week) and the weekends seem to get busier and busier.  I always plan to steal some time on Saturday or Sunday but something always comes up (please note: “something” could very easily be “my desire to lay down and relax for a frigging change”).

So, let’s see, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday are my “sure” evenings.  Fridays can be rough if I’ve got a job going (or, if we have plans).

Saturdays are almost always shot, and Sunday nights, if I can get started early enough (because I’d prefer not to start the week exhausted), and that’s the size of it.

What’s nice is, this pass on Animals seems to have less fumbling and misstarts than the previous pass.  I feel more sure of myself.  What I’m doing, more so than reinventing the wheel, is tidying, streamlining and making the each of the characters has a more distinctive and singular voice to themselves.

It’s immensely fun and it’s making my virtual mouth water at the prospect of starting Painted Ocean in earnest; I’m curious to see if I can bring this sort of energy to a first draft, or if this — take a pass to get the story down, then go back and fluff — is how I just need to do things.

Getting an Early Start is a Grand Thing

A very good night of writing — something like 2,000 words and I’m not sure if I want to cut Chapter Five off or let it go long (I’ve got probably another 2,000 words to go on that, and it could wind up being rather a long chapter.

Also, I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about Painted Ocean.  I think I know the Mariner’s name now.  Not going to tell you until, um, the ninth book, I think.

See what getting an early start does for me?  Good things, I’d say.  Good things.

Painted Ocean

For whatever it’s worth (I’m stroking my ego here) posterity or whatever, I think I just officially started Painted Ocean. I had a notion which turned into an idea which I figured I’d jot down.

The jotting morphed almost immediately upon finding the page and, boom, I think I just started the book.

So, well, that’s something, I figure.

Edit: heh, we had company tonight, like 10 people over, and juuuust as I typed that (but before I could add tags) everyone showed up.

That was about ten to seven, EST.  Again, just in case someday, someone cares.

Hey Check Me Out — I Finished Chapter Four!

I finished Chapter Four (Second Draft) tonight.  This is an official Big Deal because the story bits making up Chapters One through Four were the bits that needed the most rewriting from scratch from the First Draft.

So, I’m pleased.

It’s going to need some work, I expect, but these four chapters (about 10,000 words) accomplish much, much more than the corresponding story bits attempting to cross the same ground did in the First Draft.

Tomorrow night, then, I can start in on Chapter Five and see how that goes.  I feel like Galen’s voice (he’s the first-person narrator) is much more clearly defined in this draft than the original.  I’m getting a better sense of him and Kara and Joe (China’s not in the book yet, not really) than I did this far in the first time around, too.

Plus, this should be about 1/6 to 1/7 of the total book that’s in the can.  That’s an official Big Deal too, I suspect.

I’d meant to post something on Tuesday, the fifth of January, as that was the official one year anniversary of my beginning this iteration of Beautiful Handcrafted Animals.  I suppose it’s not such a bad thing that the reason I forgot to blog was that I was too busy writing.

Never something to complain about.

It took me something like, what, ten or eleven months to push out the First Draft?  Now we’re a good way into the Second.  I’m hoping I can keep this level of productivity (and, subjectively, quality) going throughout.  The next few chapters are going to go in a different direction than the first four.  Have to see how that affects things.

Still, four chapters in the can, about 1/6 of the way home.  Every day I feel Painted Ocean drawing closer and closer.  Not that I’m neglecting Galen and his friends, no.  But this next project is going to be huge.  There’s a lot to think about and I find I’m enjoying the experience of that world developing.  First I had a little idea.  Then that idea turned into another, bigger idea.  That grew, and so on and so forth.

We’ll see where it ends up, if it ends up, and how it ends up.  Right now, though, I’m just thrilled to have pushed through these beginning chapters, and more thrilled to be happy with what I’ve got.  Tomorrow (or, later today, I suppose), we’ll move into the next section of the story and see how that goes.

The World is Noisy

First off, before we get into the post proper, here’s this: Happy 2010!  A new year, a brighter future.  Here’s hoping you and yours are healthy, happy and doing something, sometimes, that you love.

================================

Now then . . .

One of the things I really enjoy reading — don’t ask me why — is an author’s introduction to their own book.  Afterwords are great, too.

It doesn’t even matter if the introduction / afterword has anything to do with the book itself.  I remember reading one introduction where 95% was the author talking about how silly writing an introduction to your own book was.  Then a quick sentence along the lines of, “here’s the book, hope all the words are spelled right, thanks to my wife and kids.”

One thing I always think, reading these things (I’m just going to say, “introductions” from here on in) is this; wow, these guys don’t seem to remember what it was like squeezing that lone hour out of the day for writing.

Here, I will explain.

Most writers, well, most of the writers I seem to read, have been writing professionally for a long time.  Inevitably, whenever one of them decides to talk about the process, I wind up feeling like I’m — pardon the language — a goddamned slacker.

I think I remember Stephen King writing recently — this would be in an article discussing his latest book, the 1,000+ word opus, Under The Dome — that he writes for six to eight hours a day, gets 2,000 words a day, and sees no reason an author shouldn’t put out like that.

Um . . . hey there, Steve-o.  I sometimes manage 2,000 words in a day — sometimes more, sometimes a lot more — but I can’t remember the last time I was able to steal 8 hours to sit down and write.  Hell, I don’t think I could — right now — actually write for 8 hours at a stretch.

I can remember nights in college where I sat crouched in front of the CRT and wrote entire stories, multiple stories, even, in a single sitting.  My life was simpler then.  First off, I was either single, or dating someone who didn’t, you know, live with me.  I had schoolwork — easily manageable, easily postponeable.  I volunteered at a radio station and a newspaper (the radio station loved me because I typed faster than anyone they’d ever seen and was great at punching up stuff off the AP wire).  I went out with my friends.

But when I sat down to write my time was my own.  If it was ten o’clock at night, I could literally write all night and all morning until I had to move out for class.  Sleep?  Crap, when I was in college, I lived on 2-3 hours of sleep a night.  I thrived on no sleep (I could also drink like a fish and wake up without a hangover — ah, youth).

Now?  I’ve got a wife.  A dog.  A cat.  A job.  More email coming in than I know what to do with.  Projects that might be going on at ten o’clock at night, midnight, even later.  A cell phone that doesn’t care if I’m sleeping.  An iPhone that seems genuinely interested in disturbing my state of mind.

Now, I can shut the door, lock the door.  Turn all that crap off.  I can.  I really shouldn’t (a work email just came in as I typed that sentence.  It’s like the universe watches me and laughs) but I can.  Most of the time, if I turn all the crap off, nothing bad happens.  Every now and again, though, something does.  A job screwed up.  An “important” call missed (important to them, but not to me, not like it matters).

The point is, the notion of vanishing for six hours is, right now, today, almost completely fantasy.  Some days, trying to write, the cat walking back and forth across my keyboard, iPhone buzzing, Jessy coming in to tell me to open the dishwasher before I go to sleep (she’s not wrong, it’s just bad timing) I imagine what it would be like to do this full-time.  To have a place to vanish off to and write.

And, yes, I’m a moron.  I’d likely being Jack the Dog.  I’d probably have internet there, or a phone “in case of emergency”.  But I’d be able to vanish and crank for six to eight hours at a stretch.

Here’s another thing: Neil Gaiman.  That guy blogs and tweets and seems busy as all get-out.  Only rarely, however, do you see him writing about, well, writing.  And it makes me think, when does Neil write?  And I realize, he probably does just sneak off for hours on end.  Also, before he was a novelist (or, before he was doing that as a job) he was a reporter.  Imagine that: once upon a time, maybe his editor loved to give Neil Gaiman the AP wire to “punch up” because he typed really fast.

So, what, then?

Well, I get an hour here, an hour there.  And sometimes it takes me an hour — or more — to get into my own head.  I’ve spent entire evenings writing and rewriting the same scene, only to toss it the next evening.  Now, that “wasted” writing is not a waste at all.  It’s vitally important and it helps me break away from the direction I’m wrongly going in to do something right.

Hurts, though.  Just as it hurts to lose a night to sleep or plans or whatever.  To be interrupted just at the crucial moment when I’m finally getting somewhere.

I still like reading those introductions, though.  Like to see the author’s “real” voice (even if it’s only a manufactured “real” voice).  Like to peek at the gent behind the curtain for a moment, see who’s pulling the levers and throwing the switches.

As an example: I haven’t blogged much the last month or so.  Hasn’t been much to talk about.  Well, there has — holidays, new years, lots of games and lots of writing — but it hasn’t felt, well, bloggy enough.  But as I’ve been plugging along (if I do my job well tonight, I’ll finish the bits of Animals that needed the most rewriting and will — possibly — be moving along rather more quickly) on one story, I’ve been dying inside wanting to work on the other story.  Painted Ocean.  I need to do more before I can start on that and one of the things I need to do is finish Beautiful Handcrafted Animals. The Second Draft, that is.  It’s the task before me and I will not shirk, no matter how I may want to.

Ocean is an almost completely different story from Animals and it may seem odd to think of this as a sort of precursor to that story.  It is, though.  Not in a story like way, but for me, personally.  I need to finish this, need to have this book sitting in a neat pile, before I can really commit to that one.

It may be that only a handful of people ever actually read Animals. Strictly speaking, I don’t think the book has much market potential.  The story is small in scale and may not be really relateable to people who aren’t, you know, me.  I’m worried about spelling out too much and so I’m worried I may not be spelling out enough.  Past all that, it may be that this little story of Galen Winters and his friends and family may not be all that much for folks to read.

A while back I considered the idea of graduate school.  “For what?” was the issue and I decided that, rather than dump a bunch of money in a degree I didn’t want (a MFA felt like a waste and a MBA felt like paying someone to slam my hand in a car door — or maybe my head) I’d concentrate on writing this book.  “It’ll be my grad school,” I thought, with no real idea how solid that idea was.

Writing Beautiful Handcrafted Animals has been my graduate school.  I’ve learned more from writing this story (and rewriting it) than I think I would have from any class.  I’ve attended creative writing seminars and I’ve attended workshops.  Imagine a room with twelve “writers” where eleven have handed in nearly-identical stories about their first love, falling in love, etc., and you’ve handed in an eight-page vampire scene.  Or a story about a family that practices ritual cannibalism living in suburban Chicago.  Yeah, they loved me to bits there.

So, here I go.  Stealing an hour (or so) to see what I get.  The steady goal of the evening is usually, “whatever I can get”.  Sometimes its a sentence.  Sometimes its a changed word in just the right spot.  And sometimes its words, hundreds or even thousands of words, pouring out of my head like there’s a tap knocked into the side of my temple.

Six to eight hours a day?  I wish.  I’ll take my hour (for now) and whatever I can get.

Merciless Cutting

This feels like one of those posts that doesn’t really need to exist.  What happened, after all, anything good?  Anything interesting or noteworthy?

Well, not really.  I mean, sort of, but I’m not 100% exactly what it is that I’ve done here and what the implications of it may or may not be.

Listen: if this doesn’t get at least marginally interesting, I won’t post it.  So, if you’re reading this then — one some level, at least — there may be something worth reading going on here.

Tonight I sat down to work on something different.  Just a short story, something I’ve been kicking around a while.  The issue (we never say “problem”, we say “issue”) is that I know what the story is, I just haven’t sorted out how to exactly go about it.  Honestly, there’s not much story there.  I’d be writing it more as an exercise than anything else and, as such, it hasn’t exactly been lighting my world on fire.

But, I figured I needed to change gears slightly.  With Animals, I’ve been seriously considering junking the last two chapters (read: argh) and doing things differently.  The issue (ah ha) is that I’m not SURE if this is something I want to do or not.  I very much like the two chapters in question but I’m starting to feel they may not be *right* for what I need them doing.

So, yes, you’re reading that right: I love what they do and how they do it, I’m just not sure if I, um, love them enough.

If this were high school, the chapters would dump me for someone a little better organized.  So it goes.

I worked on the short story, tentatively named, Leaving The Trees.  I got some nice work done, a good start and all that (not like I haven’t started it before), and then I got an itch to try something new.

It’s, well, it’s something that’s been on my mind a lot lately.

“Self,” I said.  “Maybe we should take a crack at Chapter One again.”

Yes, again, you’re reading that right.  Second Draft.  Back to the beginning.  Heaven help us, worlds without end.

I’m not entirely sure what I was thinking.

But, I did it.  I went back, opened a new document, copy/pasted some text so I didn’t have to redo all the formatting the way I like it, and I set to work.

I reworked two sections from the first chapter.  It’s all I dare do without more of a concrete plan for where I want to go.  The first section, about four hundred words, offers a nice introduction to Galen and Kara.  The second section starts the ball rolling (though in a very unassuming fashion).

So, now what?

Well, I could sully forth and knock that last chapter and the epilogue out.  Don’t have to be “right”, just have to exist.

Or, I could keep rolling on the Second Draft.  What I’d need to be doing is chopping the first two chapters of the First Draft — together about 20,000 words — and paring that down to about 6,000 words total.

No, really.

I’ll be doing this a lot, if I’m really starting in on the Second Draft.  I fully expect the 100,000 words I have right now to lose a lot of weight between now and typing THE END.  The beginning of the book is where I see a lot of that cutting coming from.

Essentially, I’m tossing a bunch of stuff I was doing, back when I wasn’t sure what I was doing.  Some will only be adjusted or revised (as I did tonight).  Some will be discarded whole-cloth.  Some will be completely new.

Most of what I’m doing is simplifying.  Is it really necessary for the guy getting on Galen’s nerves at the start of Chapter One to fall down and have coffee spilled on him?  Probably not.  It’s satisfying as hell and — yes — does actually work as an Official, Licensed Plot Point but . . . well, it’s too clunky.

So, cutting and rewriting and cutting some more.  Merciless cutting.

I will also say that Painted Ocean has been on my mind a lot lately.  Sorry, did I say a lot?  I meant to say A LOT.

I think I know how to start the book, which means I know how the first chapter goes.  I need to talk to some folks who know about submarines and the navy before I’d go past that point, but I may have a bead on that sort of thing already.

Failing expert help, I’ll just watch Crimson Tide, The Hunt for Red October and Down Periscope a few dozen times each.

I will be ready.

That’s where I am, though.  Add to that a vague sense of guilt over skipping National Novel Writing Month and I’m just happy I spent the night writing something.  Writing something.  That’s what it’s all about, isn’t it?

A So-So Night of Writing and Daydreaming

Tonight was one of those nights where I built up to writing for hours and hours, then wrote a bit that was good, a bit that I think, right now, was terrible (though I could be wrong) and suddenly it’s time for me to go to sleep.

Early meeting and all that.

I had an interesting realization today, the kind of thing which should be completely obvious and yet, somehow, was not: the more I think about writing and stories when I’m NOT writing (i.e., on the train, at lunch, etc.), the more productive I become when I get home to write.

I’m not talking about note-taking — I do that all the time — I’m talking about blatant daydreaming about stories and characters.

For example, I’ve been working over the story arc for Painted Ocean in my head the past week or so.  If I could somehow just expel the book from my brain out onto the page or screen, I really think it’d be quite reasonable and complete.  Granted, the act of writing and 9-book saga will invariably change the story, grow it, turn it into things I couldn’t have dreamed when I first started thinking about it.

That’s happened, is happening, with Animals.  Even tonight, even with the stuff I think was crap, I came up with some interesting stuff I wouldn’t have thought about otherwise.

Even the bad nights are good nights.  Even the Sit-And-Waste-Time-Surfing-The-Net nights are good nights.  If nothing else, they serve as excellent indicators that the route I’ve planned for myself is flawed.  Let’s try something different.

Tomorrow is early meeting, then boardgaming so I don’t know if I’ll get any writing done.  I will try, and I’m going to see how much daydreaming I can let myself do.  I’ve got about two chapters, figure 5,000 to 8,000 words to go before I finish this draft.  Don’t think I’ll get it down by November 5th (10 months to the day from starting this book), but I’m hoping it should be close.

Editing will be . . . whatever it is.  I’ve been plotting out exactly how to do this, thinking I might do one no editing pass on the book to take notes for continuity’s sake.  Maybe highlight things I really like.  Then go through and do a pass cutting and rewriting and see where that leaves me.

My birthday is in February.  I think it’d be a really nice gift to myself if I could bear down and have a finished Second Draft by the time I’m blowing out my metaphorical birthday candles.