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Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Novel writing


When someone finds out I’ve written a novel.  Automatically they say, “What’s it about?”  Ever try explaining, what it took you two years of hard work-pain, into three concise blurb sentences.  Even scriptwriters don’t stick to their original concept and bang out a treatment in twenty-four hours.
Letting them read the novel invariably creates total indifference.  It irritates me when I hear, “The words are too big.”  Not realizing their ignorance is huge.  I suggest writing children’s stories.
Then they say, “I think I could write my life story or a novel of my experiences.”  Sure it’s possible but keep your old job as insurance.  They quickly find out it isn’t like the movies.  Author gets an idea.  Sits at his typewriter and cranks it out in a week.  Bullshit!
Finishing a novel is the first step of hundreds of miles on a mountain climb.  Rewriting, then rewriting, and rewriting is the normal drudgery; trying not to be sick eventually of reading the book.  Like running in a twenty-six-mile marathon.  Both legs inside a burlap sack adding conflict.  While uphill struggling.  Beaten down in the rain and mud.  If lucky, the author will throw out half of the book and revise it while rewriting, rewriting, rewriting, and…yup…rewriting.
That’s why the majority of folks stop after the first page and throw the novel and its research, to collect yearly dust in a closet.
So many writers have told so many aspiring writers, over and over, until it became a cliché.  “Shut up.  Stop planning.  Start writing.”
I tell my friends, who are positive I’m hiding the truth from them, my secret to novel writing.  “Sit on your ass, alone, staring at a blank page or screen that contains an invisible universe, and create a world.”

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Want to...Meant to...Will do

I changed my Outlines to Acts 1, 2, 3 for simplicity.  First Act is the toughest.  All characters attitudes, hate and love, are just blossoming.  Groundwork for the Second Acts locking horns withe Aliens, Each other, Planetary survival, and struggling against Enemies.  Third Act changes each character, bad or good; completely different from the First Act.  Suspense and not-said-issues propel the stories.  My Seech Field's life has begun again.  Thanks to my ancestors.   

Thursday, June 20, 2019

Epiphany

Been six months of dribbling, rejecting, and adding words to all three books.  What a waste.  First thing I realized was I was writing too much, too many words, thinking I could revise later after editing .  Bad process.  I forgot I learned in my first book, my best writing developed from an outline  Which I then added information on scenes, character, and sights later.  Much better for me.  Moving the action on, never pausing to watch unicorns.

Second thing was my characters background had to be concise and largely back story.  Not explaining their hates, jealousies, and loves which bores me and the reader.  The same reason no one cares if Hitler was a failed painter.  His mental attitude after his war is shown, never explained, except for Satan believers.  As if that explains his megalomania.

Lastly, I found my writing voice in my book Kril.  Why the hell I tried to reinvent myself was stupid.  Costing me and my new characters wasted time.  I'm going to stop procrastinating, by going to that other dimension.  If two guys cross paths on a junction in the road aren't they still in different timelines, oblivious to each other 99.999999% of their life.

Not wanting to fill this blog with meandering.  Now to get my novel productive-writing done.      . 

Saturday, March 23, 2019

Doldrums

Two months of dribbling out paragraphs while going to doctors and hospitals.  Nothing life-threatening, but soreness reminds me I'm still alive.  I can handle the pain but I lose focus and procrastination occurs.  Hopefully, I'm back on track on Monday.   

Monday, January 7, 2019

Time-time-time

All three books are progressing but going so-o-o-o-o slow. Holidays were the reason.  Back at it in 2019.  Shooting for June finish before rewriting.