The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
My pantry full of marmalade? My crazy-quilt pillow top? Helllooooo to the avoidance.
Cat vacuuming! Don't tell me you've all forgotten that that's cat vacuuming?
Dang, I missed the only burst of real chatter in Write in the last few months.
Just to throw my stats in, I write at the end of the day (whenever that is.) My brain has to attain a certain level of fried-ness over the course of the day - somewhere between "beer battered" and "classic McD's fries"; if I go all the way to "KFC Extra Crunchy", I'm just delusional, not actually creating - to achieve a good writing groove. Proper applications of music and alcohol are also important.
I keep extensive notes in my 5x7, unlined, ringbound journals (from www.mrogerpress.com, I love them!!!) and I type my first drafts, edit on paper.
There was a big gap in my writing, about eight years, that ended early in Y2K. Since then, six novels and a handful of short stories. You know how they say your first million words don't count? I'm well into the counting. And the word mountain is only looking taller and taller, the more I learn about what I don't know about literary technique. Publication might be up there somewhere, but it's about the climb, not the peak itself.
Well, it's also about crash-bang action sequences and steamy bedroom scenes, but...
How did New Hampshire get named?
Hampshire is a part of England. Southerly, I think? FayJay? Am-Chau? My hometown, Hampstead, is a neighborhood of London, I think...
I mostly write at night. My best stuff normally involves insomnia. But then, I was born about eleven pm, so I still fit the theory.
Names for fantasy places have never been a problem for-- when I need a bunch, I go around for a day or two muttering nonsense under my breath until I get some good sounds together. I play with real names all the time anyway, so it's not hard. And onomatopoeia helps, too. My first fantasy world (an island) had a magical waterfall at its center, known to one and all as The PlishPlish. Stupid story (it featured what I now recognise as a group of five Mary-Sues), good name.
When I've been blocked, it's sometimes been depression, but more often I've been reading books on writing and how you should do it. It took me ages to connect "bought a book about how to write" and "having trouble writing". Illogical, but the case. The more I try and take other people's advice-- not about the story itself, always, an editor always helps rather than hinders, but about process ('write every day'/ 'always write long hand'/ 'always change your first draft'). Sometimes it was just because I used take one author whom I really admire saying 'I always write in long hand' to mean 'writing in long hand is the only way'.
On the other hand, I think I should use the WWJD mantra more often. It might stop me being too nice to my characters all the time.
Hampshire is a part of England. Southerly, I think? FayJay? Am-Chau? My hometown, Hampstead, is a neighborhood of London, I think...
Hampshire is indeed a county in southern England, just about the Isle of Wright-- contains the New Forest, for example (See this.), and Hampstead is a part (a borugh?) of London. Hampstead Heath is the famous part, although Hampstead School seems to come up most often in a Google.
Um... yeah. Right.
For names (place, character, and otherwise), I often go to [link] and browse the online foreign language dictionaries. [link] is a fun place to browse for names.
I went to South Hampstead High School and lived in Hampstead Garden Suburbs.
It's all connected.
It occurs to me that this thread hasn't seen poetry for a while.
This is from the project I'm currently doing, where I write an acrostic, and then rewrite it into a poem that's a sequel to the first, or enters a duet with the first, or is just a revision of the first.
THE FLICKER SPEAKS
Listen. Unless some small things are come to pass (pebbles and grass, dead leaves,
Ants crawling over rocks) you will not pull for the last moment. I've never
Not been benevolent, munificent, magnanimous, let you to use all of
Those little words you dreamed up. Frost traces your windows now.
Every moment inside your skin; don't dare forget. I wait; a moment later you are
Righted and set to minute. Counting your chickens. The wolf draws
Nearer to your homestead, your small lantern burning, your wooden door.
THE FLICKER SPEAKS II
The wolf draws nearer. Here, it's cold. Mildew grows on the back walls.
You wait, and shiver.
Every moment inside your skin--
don't dare forget. I watch you.
There's a lesson lost. Breaking out like crocuses.
Another forty days of rain. Every bible's just
another love story, sweet heart, time slowing.
The arc's been sighted. The candle waits.
Hampshire is a part of England. Southerly, I think? FayJay? Am-Chau? My hometown, Hampstead, a neighborhood of London, I think...
ita! You lived in Hampstead Garden Suburb? Damn, woman, our old postal code was first N10 (we were Muswell Hilbillies) and then down the hill slightly to N8. And Jo was born at Whittington.
Rebecca, damn.
Trice.
my 5x7, unlined, ringbound journals
Carla, I started journaling this way, in a 3-ring 5x7 binder which was also my work day planner. I set aside a section for journaling at any time, anywhere. As I filled pages I'd remove and replace them. I bought paper stock that took fountain pen ink well, colors and textures I enjoyed, and had it cut to size and hole-punched at a printer's who did it free, for all the business my office did with him. When I had about an inch's thickness of written-on pages I'd bind them, cover hardboard or cardboard end boards with handmade paper, or giftwrap, or collage, and bind with twine or leather lacing. I still have those "journals." And I still use the planner, though now I journal elsewhere.
For those of you who like NaNoWriteMo, it's NaNoEdMo. [link]