Mal: Gotta say, doctor, your talent for alienatin' folk is near miraculous. Simon: Yes, I'm very proud.

'Safe'


The Great Write Way, Act Three: Where's the gun?

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


Amy - Mar 01, 2011 10:01:24 am PST #4134 of 6690
Because books.

How come, Barb? Which book?


hippocampus - Mar 01, 2011 10:06:35 am PST #4135 of 6690
not your mom's socks.

Holy crap Barb! that's amazing!


Barb - Mar 01, 2011 10:18:19 am PST #4136 of 6690
“Not dead yet!”

Thanks guys-- I did take a drink after I did it and have been supplementing with iron and chocolate. (Not at the same time, but you know...)

How come, Barb? Which book?

It's the 60s book, Amy-- the WF/Mainstream/whatever it is. I finished it in October, thought I'd nailed it, thought for sure this was the one that would help me break through into the adult market, except... NSM. Essentially, what happened was all the left turns to Albuquerque the plot took, coupled with all the stops and starts in the writing, since I was writing and editing STARS in there as well, plus the utterly different feel of the book as a whole, culminated in, what my agent rightly said was, "two different books."

At the point after which I took the longest writing break on it (which was about the halfway point in the manuscript as it happened), the tone of the book changed considerably. More importantly, the plot really took a seismic shift-- all the left turns wound up with my main character changing from an active protagonist in her own story to more of a passive narrator to someone else's story.

It's not that the second half is bad per se-- it's just not the same story.

I couldn't see that four months ago when I finished. I thought it was just the niftiest thing since sliced bread. But Adrienne is absolutely right. No one would have bought it in the state it was in. Understandably I was more than a little upset that two years' worth of work was essentially going down the toilet and I very nearly came close to chucking the whole thing out the window and saying "Screw it." But we've come to a compromise. Given that I have nearly 200 pages more or less intact I asked Adrienne if I came up with a solid direction in which I could take the story and write it up as a synopsis, could we submit the extant 200 pages and synopsis to at least test the waters and see if there's any potential interest in the market for this sucker before I go writing a whole new second half. She agreed, so basically, that's what I'm doing.

Honestly, though, what I should be doing is writing more on Haunted, the ghost YA, but I'm a little stuck there, too.

But this is FUN, right??

::headdesk::


Amy - Mar 01, 2011 10:29:12 am PST #4137 of 6690
Because books.

Sounds like a plan, Barb.


hippocampus - Mar 01, 2011 12:42:22 pm PST #4138 of 6690
not your mom's socks.

I need some of that editing mojo Barb. I just finished a somethingorother that's an inconvenient word count - 10,000. Why can't it be 5k or 50k? Bother.


Gudanov - Mar 02, 2011 10:18:44 am PST #4139 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

It's a Novelette!

Cog is coming along nicely. I just finished chapter 4 and I'm at 7,500 words.


Gudanov - Mar 03, 2011 7:21:10 am PST #4140 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

I've started work on chapter 5. There are trolls and pneumatic tubes. Everybody likes pneumatic tubes!


tommyrot - Mar 03, 2011 7:23:40 am PST #4141 of 6690
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Even the trolls?


Gudanov - Mar 03, 2011 7:32:44 am PST #4142 of 6690
Coding and Sleeping

Well, they mostly use them to send incendiary devices.


tommyrot - Mar 03, 2011 7:33:37 am PST #4143 of 6690
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Cool!