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Monthly Archives: October 2010

I’ve Got Brain Muscle

30 Saturday Oct 2010

Posted by Aine in NANOWRIMO

≈ 8 Comments

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NaNo

It’s almost time for NaNo – Just ONE more day!  I asked my husband last night, “So, remember last year when I sigmed up for NaNo?”  He frowned and said, “Uh, yeah.  You were excited for two days and petered out.”

First of all, it was more like two weeks.

Second, I had no clue what I was doing.  The writer I am today has a bit more brain muscle than the one that attempted NaNo last year.  I crossed my eyes at him (literally) and said, “Well, I signed up this year again.  Watch me skunk my track record.”

The race is ON, baby!  At first I couldn’t believe how unsupportive his statement was.  Then I realized he couldn’t have said anything better to me.  My desire to finish a novel in 30 days just went through the roof.  Too bad you can’t take your temperature for determination…   fever pitch!

I’ve been hashing out my plot line and doing a bit of world building.  I still have some things to work out – hasn’t been easy with him being here this week.  Granted he’s been gone for 35 days and it’s been WONDERFUL having him home, but I see the start line approaching and I don’t think my pit crew crew of ideas, character development, plot line, etc. is equipped to handle the race, and I hate taking up writing time with those things.  AHHHH!

I admit to having a bit of remorse shelving Joey for a month, but I’m sure he’ll forgive me – he’s forgiven the six month break I took from him last year.  I can say I’ve been a bit more consistent as time goes on.  Yeah, I’ve got more brain muscle, and a burning desire to see myself complete something.    I’m feeling it.

You?

 

‎”Talent alone won’t make you a success. Neither will being in the right place at the right time, unless you are ready. The most important question is: ‘Are your ready?'”~ Johnny Carson
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Writing with Feeling

21 Thursday Oct 2010

Posted by Aine in Writing Process

≈ 8 Comments

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Writing process

Recently I was in a session with a Calyco healer (healing through energy).  As we were talking, she related an interesting story.  She has a friend that has a beautiful voice and recorded a CD professionally.  The healer had bought the CD and started to listen to it, but couldn’t get through half of it because she felt anxious.  This happened every time she plugged in the CD, so she threw it away.  Later she asked her friend, “What was going on when you made that CD?”  The healer’s friend related a tale of being rushed through production, always feeling behind, and overall… anxious.

Since then I’ve noticed writers saying things like, “I just got my manuscript back from the editors, and the only chapters they disliked were the ones I didn’t like.”  Coincidence?  I’ve also talked to another author who said her bestselling book is the one she really loved as she wrote it.  Interesting.

My thought is, pay attention to how you’re feeling as you write.  We can’t help life going on around us – sometimes it’s ideal and sometimes it’s not.  Authors are human!  Imagine!  However, you don’t have to let life affect you “in the zone.”  If it’s true you can mass produce feelings, you don’t want to produce something people are going to act adversely to.

Now there’s a plot.  Someone writes a book that mass produces _________ and makes ____________ happen.  That could be a cool story!

Surviving Stereotypes

19 Tuesday Oct 2010

Posted by Aine in Writing for FUN!!

≈ 8 Comments

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No thank you

As most of you know, I homeschool and I’m religious.  This means when I hang with peers, the conversation turns ULTRA conservative.  Blanket statements that are clearly biased are applauded and held in high esteem.  Yet I am writing a YA novel – that makes me a candidate for someday having a hand in pop culture.  Something I find myself at odds with whenever I am with that group of people.

Today a friend of mine who I think is an incredible woman wrote her opinion that is sadly pretty typical of homeschooling parents, and I think it’s vile.  It might shock her to know I feel so passionately that way about something we’re both passionate about — Shakespeare!  We both love Shakespeare (maybe a better term is she relishes his work, I enjoy his works), we both have our children study him, we both think he’s a must for a good education.

However.

First, you can read her entire blog post HERE.  It’s a nice post on why you should make Shakespeare a part of your homeschooling curriculum.  That I didn’t object to.  What I objected to was her sample paragraph showing off  Shakespearean quotes in which she states her opinion, “I don’t think there is an author today that can hold a candle to his command of the English language”.

Why?

Do you realize how fast that paragraph would have been ripped to shreds by the cliché watchdogs?  The entire paragraph, even the notion that modern authors suck compared to the classics, is CLICHE!  Modern authors have the distinct obligation to create new cliché’s for the future.  In Shakespeare’s time, he wasn’t a classic.  HE WAS POP CULTURE!  I fell in love with Dave Wolverton when he told us that Stephen King had been dubbed the new Shakespeare.

Rachel would have died.

I am so sick of people telling me that I’m writing “twaddle” (thank you very much Charlotte Mason).  While I agree that some of pop culture IS tripe and I truly, truly mean that, there are some superior books out there.  The Bard focused on a gift he had.  It is ridiculous to assume that no one can or ever will be as gifted.  Will he always be a classic?  Yes, because he wraps his stories around principles that are timeless.  So do modern authors.

It reminds me of the time a kindred spirit told me that Harry Potter was a bent book and would never be in her home.  I looked at her and said, “What are you talking about?  A bent book means it portrays evil as good and good as evil.  Voldermort is ALWAYS evil, and Harry is always good.”

“Oh no,  he’s not,” she said.  “He’s always braking the rules and getting away with it.”

“That’s true,” I agreed.  “He is also the protagonist who must have a weakness to overcome.  If he were perfect there would be no depth to the character — no inner weakness to overcome.  And he doesn’t always get away with it, and in Book Five he confesses he’s been a real jerk.”  (Uh – anyone relate to THAT?)

She hadn’t made it to book five.  And a few weeks later, she was declaring her war against Harry Potter to some other unsuspecting soul that wasn’t armed with knowledge like I was.  I just shook my head and moved on.  Some will listen, and some want to remain ignorant.  Some want to believe that the only use for a bookstore is to read classics, while others will only buy what’s popular.  BOTH are missing out.

I’ve chosen not to hang out with those that preach “read classics only”.  I’m still friends with them.  We might go do this thing or that thing, but I’ve kept exposure down to a minimum.  My reasoning for this (some of you might have heard me say this before) is I don’t want my writing to die by association.  I can’t write when people are telling me that modern authors don’t have anything good to say.  Hello?  I’M a modern author!  I can’t hang around people who find evil in fantasy such as, “All that witchcraft and sorcery.  It’s EVIL, and it’s turning our children towards the occult!”  Oh yeah, I’ve heard it all.  *sigh*

Instead, I’m transitioning.  I still homeschool; I’m still religious.  But I’m also a mom with a future career in writing.  Not sappy love stories like the ones I’ve read by local authors that have everything tied up in a bow as the couple goes to the temple to get married and everyone in the book winks.  What is it with this culture and winking??  No, I write stories where evil is VERY evil and people die.  I write stories where good IS good, but have to struggle to stay that way.  I write fantasy, because I AM religious, and I think there’s no better way to use a metaphor to theology than that of the magical realm.  Call me crazy, but I think all this stereotype crap is a matter of perspective.  Give me some friends who think fantasy rocks… who thinks writing is getting better.  Some friends that see a benefit for reading the old, AND the new.  Interestingly, the authors I enjoy reading the most are those that are widely read.

And maybe someday, I’ll have a command of the English language like Shakespeare.  There are some authors that I think already DO.  But I won’t write like him, because that day is over.  Modern writers write for today – just as he did.  🙂

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Mom by day, writer by night.  And sometimes... both.  ;)

Some people see things as they are and say why. I dream things that never were and say why not? ~ George Bernard Shaw

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