Yesterday was the beginning of the new year. Like most people who haven't given up hope that they can create meaningful change in their life, I've decided that I wanted to make a resolution. The problem I find with resolutions is that the people I talk to don't allow themselves any leeway in what they are trying to do. Most of them aren't even willing to consider the a resolution and have written the chance of change off as an instant failure.
(You're not a failure, I believe in most of you)
"I will go on a diet, and work out every day, and clean my house," they say. Then by day five they're ready to kill someone because they gave themselves no wiggle room. They try to fill all of the time they typically use for decompressing into these new goals. The new year along with other major milestones (birthdays, engagements, etc) aren't the time to make all sorts of life changing goals. Start small. Baby steps.
So what kind of resolution did I make? I resolve to TRY to create something everyday. There is room to miss a day or three. Sickness happens. Life happens. Sometimes there is no way you can do something meaningful due to obligations. I'm allowing myself little failures and a chance to get back on the horse. No reason to lose everything because of one or two missed days.
Today is January 2nd and my goal for today is to revive my blog. I thought about creating an entirely new blog. I don't know whether this will be more author stuff. I don't know if this will be about me getting on a soapbox and decrying the cost of a loaf of bread or delicious cheese.
What is the overall goal then? My goal is to flex my creative muscles. My goal is to get outside of my comfort zone and try new things. A few weeks ago I started making my own bread. I've branched into homemade pizza dough now as well. There will probably be pictures on here in the near future of my bread.
(This is a warning so you can cover your keyboards with a napkin due to all the drool. I imagine there will be rivers.)
I may throw down some short stories. I see that there are still stories up here if you haven't read them in the past. I'm going to consider writing the story of Nurse Summers. I spent a lot of time thinking about the concept of those vampires and would love to see more. Perhaps I should read over it to review my own memory.
I tried at one point to keep my blog to specifically my writing related stuff. I learned the hard way you can't pigeon hole creativity. I've burned out on the blog. I've burned out on writing in the past. I've let life get away from me. Yet when I create stuff I'm happy. This left me feeling like a failure because I didn't succeed in something as simple as letting people glimpse into my life.
That's okay. My goal is to try, and some of my experiments will be put on here for successes or failure. After all, if worse comes to worse the blog will go away again. For now though I'll see about breathing some life into it.
*ignores the sudden urge to create a Frankenstein type set for no reason*
Perhaps someone will even read my words.
Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 2, 2019
Saturday, July 2, 2016
Antibiotics and Camp
I'm doing an update to say a few different things. The first is that nothing kills my will to live more than a regimen of antibiotics. They kill live, oh how they kill life. Every so often I smell something completely rancid that no one else can smell. My appetite is down to nothing, and that is saying a lot. When I don't find food, any food, appealing then there is certainly something wrong with my life.
It isn't so bad as it sounds, I'm in the process of getting better. This time though I'm ten days into a thirty day treatment cycle. From that point we hope everything is going well, otherwise... Well, let's not get to otherwise.
So what have I done to stem the tide of non-caring? I've decided to jump into CampNanowrimo for July. The goal is simple, like the goal I discussed in my last update. Alright, it is the goal from my last update. 600 words a day for one month. 18,600 words to freedom and productivity. It doesn't seem like much, but it's a start.
Also, if any of you are doing Camp I'd love to hear from you. Feel free to comment, or to blow my goal out of the water. The goal isn't to compete against others, it's to compete against your life.
It isn't so bad as it sounds, I'm in the process of getting better. This time though I'm ten days into a thirty day treatment cycle. From that point we hope everything is going well, otherwise... Well, let's not get to otherwise.
So what have I done to stem the tide of non-caring? I've decided to jump into CampNanowrimo for July. The goal is simple, like the goal I discussed in my last update. Alright, it is the goal from my last update. 600 words a day for one month. 18,600 words to freedom and productivity. It doesn't seem like much, but it's a start.
Also, if any of you are doing Camp I'd love to hear from you. Feel free to comment, or to blow my goal out of the water. The goal isn't to compete against others, it's to compete against your life.
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Learning about other Authors
I love to learn about other authors. I love to listen to them explain where their ideas come from, their methods, and how they bring their books to light. There is a certain amount of curiosity that comes from trying to figure out where the best selling authors get their ideas, how they plan things, as well as a time table they work on. I'd like to share a few examples.
This is an interview on CBS where they discuss where Stephen King got the idea for some of his novels. They mention Cujo, and his new trilogy: Mr. Mercedes, Finders Keepers, and End of the Watch. I really recommend the watch because if you enjoy his work it is fun to see his ideas.
http://www.cbs.com/shows/cbs_this_morning/video/rn6dnT4WIYQ7pm411nZ02EVxbyOczGTT/stephen-king-on-inspiration-behind-end-of-watch-2016-politics/
There are other books where you can learn from other authors about their methods. In "How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy" Orson Scott Card discusses that his ideas come from maps which he likes to doodle. Others, like the battle room from Ender's Game, came from living during the Vietnam war and wondering how battles in the future might be trained for and fought. (I paraphrased this one and know it's only part of the idea. If you want to know more read the book, it's only about 100 pages.)
Both of these are great books and show how versatile the mind of an author is. Ideas are everywhere, the idea for my character Patch from my novella, A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing, came from my reflections on what happened to Frankenstein's monster. There was also a twist of Sci-fi in my thoughts as I tried to figure out what might happen to someone who lives past the normal old age, someone who begins to see normal peoples lives passing like the seasons while he continues. There is more to that, and I have more stories involving him in the future for you.
For now know that I'm still working as well as I can. I'm dealing with some health stuff that makes it hard to sit in front of a computer all day, (which is what I do at work anyway), so coming home I need to move a bit more or deal with discomfort. Until then if you want more books that shed light on the workings of authors I'll recommend the following, they all have some great insight and thought on writing, as well as showing the differences that exist between three bestselling authors.
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft by Stephen King
How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy by Orson Scott Card
Million Dollar Outlines by David Farland.
This is an interview on CBS where they discuss where Stephen King got the idea for some of his novels. They mention Cujo, and his new trilogy: Mr. Mercedes, Finders Keepers, and End of the Watch. I really recommend the watch because if you enjoy his work it is fun to see his ideas.
http://www.cbs.com/shows/cbs_this_morning/video/rn6dnT4WIYQ7pm411nZ02EVxbyOczGTT/stephen-king-on-inspiration-behind-end-of-watch-2016-politics/
There are other books where you can learn from other authors about their methods. In "How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy" Orson Scott Card discusses that his ideas come from maps which he likes to doodle. Others, like the battle room from Ender's Game, came from living during the Vietnam war and wondering how battles in the future might be trained for and fought. (I paraphrased this one and know it's only part of the idea. If you want to know more read the book, it's only about 100 pages.)
Both of these are great books and show how versatile the mind of an author is. Ideas are everywhere, the idea for my character Patch from my novella, A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing, came from my reflections on what happened to Frankenstein's monster. There was also a twist of Sci-fi in my thoughts as I tried to figure out what might happen to someone who lives past the normal old age, someone who begins to see normal peoples lives passing like the seasons while he continues. There is more to that, and I have more stories involving him in the future for you.
For now know that I'm still working as well as I can. I'm dealing with some health stuff that makes it hard to sit in front of a computer all day, (which is what I do at work anyway), so coming home I need to move a bit more or deal with discomfort. Until then if you want more books that shed light on the workings of authors I'll recommend the following, they all have some great insight and thought on writing, as well as showing the differences that exist between three bestselling authors.
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft by Stephen King
How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy by Orson Scott Card
Million Dollar Outlines by David Farland.
Friday, January 1, 2016
News for 2016
Hello to all my lovely readers. I appreciate your page views and the occasional smattering of commentary. I figured that I would go ahead and give everyone a heads up concerning my plans are for the current year. There are quite a few in the works and i'm hoping to keep things exciting in the coming year.
This is where I'm at right now as of January 1st. I've already made my first submission for the year. I'm still working and hope that you'll join my on my journey by finding my author page on Facebook. I'm also on Twitter where I post notices about updates to the blog.
- A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing will be coming off the site mid-February. If you're trying to finish it up, then please keep reading until then. I'll be making it available through the self-publishing markets so that it is in a place where people can still access it.
- A new serial is coming. I'm currently in the outlining phase of the story and am looking forward to a more consistent schedule than I had for A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing. If you would like a sneak peek of the first chapter then click on the link for "The Nurse Summers Serials" My goal is to tell this characters story entirely through the serial format.
- My first full length novel will be out through self-publishing as well. For those of you who have read A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing, it's the modern day story of Patch. This is where he started for me, and his story is one that I have planned for four books.
- Lots of work editing and finishing novels. As of right now I have three half written novels that need to be finished. I also have two finished novels that need to be edited. One of them is the one from item number three, while the other is one I'm looking to submit to traditional publishing houses.
- There will also be plenty of other short stories that I will be playing with over the next year as I try out new ideas. Sometimes they work while at other times they are little more than a train wreck. But stay tuned as I might share pieces of them here.
- I will also be trying to get pieces that I think will sell into magazines and homes throughout the year. The goal is a submission a week, this will be tough, but if you're going to set a goal go big.
This is where I'm at right now as of January 1st. I've already made my first submission for the year. I'm still working and hope that you'll join my on my journey by finding my author page on Facebook. I'm also on Twitter where I post notices about updates to the blog.
Friday, August 28, 2015
Irons in the Fire
An author friend of mine once commented that he felt the need to keep many irons in the fire. It worked well for him to rotate through stories. When one wasn't speaking to him he'd rotate out and work on another in order to keep himself writing.
I love this analogy. There is a bit of a geek inside me that would love to work a forge, but that aside it speaks of something true. A story and a piece of metalwork have a lot of similar properties. Neither are going to be perfect on the first try. Both need to be tempered, cared for, and worked carefully under a watchful eye. What someone who has just written their first short story sees as beautiful, someone who has put his time in at the forge will say that it needs work and can point out flaws.
I think the part of the analogy that I like best though, is both can produce a thing of beauty. The finish product can be beautiful, terrible, useful, or elegant. But once they're forged you can have them until they sell to someone who will love and care for them.
I bring this up because I've got a lot of pieces of work out right now that I'm waiting to hear back on. Nothing novel length, only short and flash fiction pieces that I've enjoyed writing. I know that my odds of success and my odds of failure are pretty much the same. But if I get rejected I can always comb over it again and try for another sale.
The hardest thing you can do is to keep producing though when nothing is selling. To keep practicing when success hasn't been around in a while. Eventually though, it's bound to turn up, I can only hope that I have what it's looking to buy when it does.
Also, check out the new chapter of "A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing" which was posted tonight. Plus, if you'd like to read more by me check out the self-published short story collection "Escaping Sanity" on Amazon. There are many irons in there that taught me something about writing.
I love this analogy. There is a bit of a geek inside me that would love to work a forge, but that aside it speaks of something true. A story and a piece of metalwork have a lot of similar properties. Neither are going to be perfect on the first try. Both need to be tempered, cared for, and worked carefully under a watchful eye. What someone who has just written their first short story sees as beautiful, someone who has put his time in at the forge will say that it needs work and can point out flaws.
I think the part of the analogy that I like best though, is both can produce a thing of beauty. The finish product can be beautiful, terrible, useful, or elegant. But once they're forged you can have them until they sell to someone who will love and care for them.
I bring this up because I've got a lot of pieces of work out right now that I'm waiting to hear back on. Nothing novel length, only short and flash fiction pieces that I've enjoyed writing. I know that my odds of success and my odds of failure are pretty much the same. But if I get rejected I can always comb over it again and try for another sale.
The hardest thing you can do is to keep producing though when nothing is selling. To keep practicing when success hasn't been around in a while. Eventually though, it's bound to turn up, I can only hope that I have what it's looking to buy when it does.
Also, check out the new chapter of "A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing" which was posted tonight. Plus, if you'd like to read more by me check out the self-published short story collection "Escaping Sanity" on Amazon. There are many irons in there that taught me something about writing.
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Writers Groups
I am a couple days overdue on a blog post and I apologize for that. I was searching for a good topic and my mind like an arid desert. Nothing took root, nothing grew, so I waited. I'm glad now that I did because I found a topic that I loved and will now happily write about: Writers Groups.
There is something enjoyable about getting together with like minded individuals which helps kindle the arts. While this isn't true in all cases, sometimes amazing things occur when minds come together. When musical groups and writers get together ideas bounce around and great things happen. Best of all, in my point of view, the people come out of it feeling strengthened and the creative juices replenished.
An example that I like to use is the song Fame by David Bowie. If you're not familiar with it please stop everything you're doing and go watch it here. Now that we're all familiar with it you'll recognize the lovely and iconic guitar part. The story I've heard about this that John Lennon used to have a place in New York where different musicians would meet and jam. The output of one of these sessions when David Bowie was there was this guitar part, it was something that David Bowie was interested in and so he was told he could have it.
Now this isn't something for everyone and there comes a certain level of paranoia. Letting someone into your creative circle can be both amazing and poisonous. When someone seems like a thief there to steal every gem of an idea it doesn't foster the creative spirit. But when respect is shown, and the ideas of each person are treated with the reverence of a fine painting, it is an amazing experience.
I know this is shorter than my normal posts, but having had my first writers group meeting in almost six months was awesome. If you're part of a writers group or circle, take a minute and thank those around you. Thank them for taking your questions about "which household chemicals could cause a laxative effect without killing the person?" or "If the sun were white instead of yellow what color would things show?" seriously. Also, should you want to know the answers to the questions, 1) Epsom Salt 2) I'm still working on a good way to figure that one out.
There is something enjoyable about getting together with like minded individuals which helps kindle the arts. While this isn't true in all cases, sometimes amazing things occur when minds come together. When musical groups and writers get together ideas bounce around and great things happen. Best of all, in my point of view, the people come out of it feeling strengthened and the creative juices replenished.
An example that I like to use is the song Fame by David Bowie. If you're not familiar with it please stop everything you're doing and go watch it here. Now that we're all familiar with it you'll recognize the lovely and iconic guitar part. The story I've heard about this that John Lennon used to have a place in New York where different musicians would meet and jam. The output of one of these sessions when David Bowie was there was this guitar part, it was something that David Bowie was interested in and so he was told he could have it.
Now this isn't something for everyone and there comes a certain level of paranoia. Letting someone into your creative circle can be both amazing and poisonous. When someone seems like a thief there to steal every gem of an idea it doesn't foster the creative spirit. But when respect is shown, and the ideas of each person are treated with the reverence of a fine painting, it is an amazing experience.
I know this is shorter than my normal posts, but having had my first writers group meeting in almost six months was awesome. If you're part of a writers group or circle, take a minute and thank those around you. Thank them for taking your questions about "which household chemicals could cause a laxative effect without killing the person?" or "If the sun were white instead of yellow what color would things show?" seriously. Also, should you want to know the answers to the questions, 1) Epsom Salt 2) I'm still working on a good way to figure that one out.
Monday, June 22, 2015
Thoughts on Writing
I was recently loaned a copy of "How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy" by Orson Scott Card. As someone who enjoys writing and has read many of his novels I figured I would love to read what he had to say. I've enjoyed Stephen King's "On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft" and found David Farland's "Million Dollar Outlines" to be a great learning tool. Going into this new book I secretly wanted to read more about Ender's Game.
I can honestly say that I haven't been disappointed and have learned something early on about the series I love. The idea for the battle came to him in the mid-late sixties yet he didn't write it until the mid-seventies. How many of us can't remember where we put our keys? How often do we misplace something we were just using? Yet to remember and develop an idea for over almost ten years is amazing.
I've had a few ideas which have stuck with me and developed for a while. The idea for the villain of my serial "A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing" came to me while I was driving to Oregon almost six years ago. The villain, which started off as a truck driver/serial killer, felt stagnant. It was an observation which came to me about the Twilight movies which gave the idea roots. It was a complaint that I had due to the lack of variety in some of the classic horror movie monsters.
At that time the major horror bad guys seemed to be zombies, vampires (twilight being an exception to the horror part), and ghosts. As an avid D&D player I know that there are many different types of undead. Ghouls, wights, liches, and other spectral menaces. This seemed to work well with the traveling serial killer, someone who was afraid to stay in one place for fear of being discovered. A creature moving among us that none of us would like to meet in a dark alley. I was struck at how well his own ideas seemed to mirror my own, the idea needing time to get its own legs and develop before becoming a story.
Another thing which he said, and something that I can really agree with, is that you have to define the rules of your world. If there is something which can kill your villain, then you need to know it. If there is a fantastic element whether it be magic, super science, or some perpetually reappearing monster, you need an explanation of how it works. If you don't pay attention to these details the story won't hold water or carry the readers attention.
I have a novel which is currently unfinished with the working title Legacy. In Legacy, there is a fantastic element that I was developing as I was writing. I never sat down and defined it, I said it was a "trickster spirit" or a "creature of chaos" and left it at that. Now I'm at a fulcrum point into the story where I will be building into the final climax of the book but it's stalled. The problem is, these spirits were still fuzzy to me. It is hard to write what you don't understand.
It wasn't until I was reading this section of his book that I realized this was the problem. It has been two or three months where I've been unable to work on that and I couldn't figure out why. But my writers block is due to my own negligence. Had I put my ducks in a row at the beginning of the story, then I wouldn't have suffered this now so close to the end.
The overall point that I was going for in this blog is a lesson I seem to need to learn again and again. Sometimes we need to read something we normally wouldn't. I consider myself a horror writer, so reading a book about Science Fiction and Fantasy didn't seem like a fit. Yet by reading a book that a friend handed me I was able to solve a problem. It doesn't hurt to get out of your comfort zone, to take advice that you didn't know for certain if you'll need. I think I'll take this advice and look for other words of wisdom from other sources. Perhaps read some non-fiction, or a cook book, or perhaps even some classic literature. Something new to add to take me out of my comfort zone, who knows what I'll learn. Hopefully it will be something I can apply to make myself a better writer.
I can honestly say that I haven't been disappointed and have learned something early on about the series I love. The idea for the battle came to him in the mid-late sixties yet he didn't write it until the mid-seventies. How many of us can't remember where we put our keys? How often do we misplace something we were just using? Yet to remember and develop an idea for over almost ten years is amazing.
I've had a few ideas which have stuck with me and developed for a while. The idea for the villain of my serial "A Wolf in Patchwork Clothing" came to me while I was driving to Oregon almost six years ago. The villain, which started off as a truck driver/serial killer, felt stagnant. It was an observation which came to me about the Twilight movies which gave the idea roots. It was a complaint that I had due to the lack of variety in some of the classic horror movie monsters.
At that time the major horror bad guys seemed to be zombies, vampires (twilight being an exception to the horror part), and ghosts. As an avid D&D player I know that there are many different types of undead. Ghouls, wights, liches, and other spectral menaces. This seemed to work well with the traveling serial killer, someone who was afraid to stay in one place for fear of being discovered. A creature moving among us that none of us would like to meet in a dark alley. I was struck at how well his own ideas seemed to mirror my own, the idea needing time to get its own legs and develop before becoming a story.
Another thing which he said, and something that I can really agree with, is that you have to define the rules of your world. If there is something which can kill your villain, then you need to know it. If there is a fantastic element whether it be magic, super science, or some perpetually reappearing monster, you need an explanation of how it works. If you don't pay attention to these details the story won't hold water or carry the readers attention.
I have a novel which is currently unfinished with the working title Legacy. In Legacy, there is a fantastic element that I was developing as I was writing. I never sat down and defined it, I said it was a "trickster spirit" or a "creature of chaos" and left it at that. Now I'm at a fulcrum point into the story where I will be building into the final climax of the book but it's stalled. The problem is, these spirits were still fuzzy to me. It is hard to write what you don't understand.
It wasn't until I was reading this section of his book that I realized this was the problem. It has been two or three months where I've been unable to work on that and I couldn't figure out why. But my writers block is due to my own negligence. Had I put my ducks in a row at the beginning of the story, then I wouldn't have suffered this now so close to the end.
The overall point that I was going for in this blog is a lesson I seem to need to learn again and again. Sometimes we need to read something we normally wouldn't. I consider myself a horror writer, so reading a book about Science Fiction and Fantasy didn't seem like a fit. Yet by reading a book that a friend handed me I was able to solve a problem. It doesn't hurt to get out of your comfort zone, to take advice that you didn't know for certain if you'll need. I think I'll take this advice and look for other words of wisdom from other sources. Perhaps read some non-fiction, or a cook book, or perhaps even some classic literature. Something new to add to take me out of my comfort zone, who knows what I'll learn. Hopefully it will be something I can apply to make myself a better writer.
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Short stories versus Novels
I love to write short stories. It seems that every time I want to try something new that is where I turn. There is something that is lovely about a short sweet story that lets you explore a new idea or style. When I wrote my short story Rapture it was to try to help cope with my recent loss of a beloved family pet. My story Save the Last Dance was a trial of meshing a dystopian story with a contrasting image. In the case of this story it was the song and dance of Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly.
While I love to write short stories I have found that I struggle to read short story collections, anthologies, and even those in magazines. I find it refreshing to sample something small without committing to an entire novel. It's like the free samples at the grocery store, all the flavor with none of the obligation of buying a twenty pound box of frozen tacos. Yet if you have too much of the same subject, writer, or style it can become stale rather quickly. This is why I can go through a novel in a week yet it can take me up to a year to get through a short story collection.
So as I was sitting at home sick this last week, unable to write, unwilling to read for fear of my brain acting up with fever dreams, I had something to ponder. I began to wonder why it was that the short story collection I was working on still had at least one hundred pages left, I'd only been reading it for about a year. In the same time I had read probably at least twenty novels, if not more.
The conclusion that I came up with is that there is a thread of continuity in a novel which keeps us reading. While a chocolate sampler is nice from time to time we generally have recipes and foods we eat weekly. We go back to the same treats, cakes, or dishes that makes us happy time after time. This is what the novel does, it prepares us something that we like just with some new developments, twists, or characters.
Let's use macaroni and cheese as our example as most people have polarizing feelings towards it. There is something nostalgic about going back to our childhood with hot dogs and mac and cheese. You can dress it up by making it from scratch, adding four, six, even eight types of cheese. You can throw a curve ball at us by adding something like bell pepper, bacon, or even some sun dried tomatoes to the mix. In the end though it is still something we know and are comfortable with deep down inside.
When you look at the stories of your favorite authors many of them fall into very similar plot patterns. These are our comfort foods, the foods for thought. For Stephen King I'd say it's a slow burn horror, the story builds pressure like a pressure cooker, and in the end you are never sure if you'll find the ending really satisfying. I know the characters are going to be well developed, and that I will find myself passionately questioning whether they really should have made key decisions. I love Stephen King and when I'm in the mood for something like this it is the first place I turn. Yet even when I find a collection of his like Four Past Midnight or Different Seasons I can't seem to read straight through it.
There is something to be said about the beauty of a novel. When done right it'll make you turn pages in the way an anthology won't. When it's done you feel satisfied and can walk away happy (most of the time) as though you'd just left an all-you-can-eat buffet. You've had your meal and you don't have a bunch of stuff still on the plate, as it often is with anthologies. The story is ready to be digested and you can start deciding what you want for dinner.
With this revelation I'll probably still read short story anthologies, but I won't plan to get through it as fast as I would a novel. Sometimes you just want a sample, sometimes you want the full meal.
While I love to write short stories I have found that I struggle to read short story collections, anthologies, and even those in magazines. I find it refreshing to sample something small without committing to an entire novel. It's like the free samples at the grocery store, all the flavor with none of the obligation of buying a twenty pound box of frozen tacos. Yet if you have too much of the same subject, writer, or style it can become stale rather quickly. This is why I can go through a novel in a week yet it can take me up to a year to get through a short story collection.
So as I was sitting at home sick this last week, unable to write, unwilling to read for fear of my brain acting up with fever dreams, I had something to ponder. I began to wonder why it was that the short story collection I was working on still had at least one hundred pages left, I'd only been reading it for about a year. In the same time I had read probably at least twenty novels, if not more.
The conclusion that I came up with is that there is a thread of continuity in a novel which keeps us reading. While a chocolate sampler is nice from time to time we generally have recipes and foods we eat weekly. We go back to the same treats, cakes, or dishes that makes us happy time after time. This is what the novel does, it prepares us something that we like just with some new developments, twists, or characters.
Let's use macaroni and cheese as our example as most people have polarizing feelings towards it. There is something nostalgic about going back to our childhood with hot dogs and mac and cheese. You can dress it up by making it from scratch, adding four, six, even eight types of cheese. You can throw a curve ball at us by adding something like bell pepper, bacon, or even some sun dried tomatoes to the mix. In the end though it is still something we know and are comfortable with deep down inside.
When you look at the stories of your favorite authors many of them fall into very similar plot patterns. These are our comfort foods, the foods for thought. For Stephen King I'd say it's a slow burn horror, the story builds pressure like a pressure cooker, and in the end you are never sure if you'll find the ending really satisfying. I know the characters are going to be well developed, and that I will find myself passionately questioning whether they really should have made key decisions. I love Stephen King and when I'm in the mood for something like this it is the first place I turn. Yet even when I find a collection of his like Four Past Midnight or Different Seasons I can't seem to read straight through it.
There is something to be said about the beauty of a novel. When done right it'll make you turn pages in the way an anthology won't. When it's done you feel satisfied and can walk away happy (most of the time) as though you'd just left an all-you-can-eat buffet. You've had your meal and you don't have a bunch of stuff still on the plate, as it often is with anthologies. The story is ready to be digested and you can start deciding what you want for dinner.
With this revelation I'll probably still read short story anthologies, but I won't plan to get through it as fast as I would a novel. Sometimes you just want a sample, sometimes you want the full meal.
Monday, April 6, 2015
The importance of reviews.
I have been wanting to write this blog for a while now, probably since I started the blog. I had just published a collection of short stories and came to the realization that reviews are important. They're not important in a way that you can pay some guy to read your book and quickly crank out a review, it is something that needs to be heart felt.
I realize that I am probably as guilty as everyone else in this. I read a book, get to the end, talk about how good the book is and move on with my day. Yet in today's market with the self-publishing options that are available to us a good review is the difference between someone buying your book or passing.
We've all been eyeing products online, or even at the store when we ask someone what they think of it. We already have a good idea of what we'll like, but we have that little nagging voice in the back of our head of self-doubt. What if the television's picture isn't as sharp as I think it is? What if there is a newer model of the phone out in two weeks that'll make anyone who owns this one look like a chump? What if we're not the educated consumer that we all pretend to be at the stores?
Suddenly, our decision is placed on Jon Doe #476 who just happened to be in Best Buy to see if they had the new Call of Duty game in stock. But what kind of feedback does he give?
"Eh, that TV's okay, but I went with the sixty inch because I have nothing better to spend my money on." he says and we're suddenly amazed that we hadn't thought of that astounding option. That decision which was almost formed is now cast back into the nebulous thought cloud to reform as something with a sixty inch TV in mind.
That's why I want to address the guidelines I use when I review books on Goodreads. This basically will tell you what you're getting if you look at my ratings. I never usually take the time to write a review as I'm usually busy writing all sorts of other stuff, but we'll do etiquette after.
- 5 Star Review- This is the most coveted review and should, in my humble opinion, be reserved for those books which changed your life. The one that suddenly made you want to go seek out the author and kiss them just for bringing those characters into your life. This is not just some flimsy review, this is enshrining the book in a museum for all the world to see. Example: Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson
- 4 Star Review - This is the kind of book I'll recommend to a friend if they've already read my five star's. The book is good, no it's awesome, but it didn't make me want to suddenly go live in that world. This review means I really enjoyed the book and can't think of anything bad to say, but it just didn't pass that threshold into amazing. Example: The Crimson Shadow by R.A. Salvatore
- 3 Star Review - The three star review for me is a sign that I've read and enjoyed the book. The book was satisfying and didn't come across as so boring that I couldn't finish it. Now, I wouldn't necessarily go out and read it again right away, but at least its on the list of books I've read. Example: A Stranger in a Strange Land by Heinlein.
- 2 Star Review - This is the kind of book that I would designate as assigned high school reading. They are books that someone told you to read, but really you find yourself almost making excuses to not read anymore of it. You know that there is supposed to be a lesson, but really, you don't know what it is supposed to be and don't really care. Ex: For Whom The Bell Tolls by Hemmingway
- 1 Star Review - This is the one that I reserve only for the worst kind of book I've ever read. The book that went nowhere and I derived no satisfaction from it what-so-ever. Above I've mentioned Hemmingway as a two star option, but as I finished For Whom The Bell Tolls I felt satisfaction at knowing that at least something had happened. At some points the characters acted on their plans and so with some conflict being resolved I was able to accept it as done. The one star books don't even give you the satisfaction of that, they are the ones that should you find yourself in hell you'll probably be reading it for all eternity. I can only think of one book that has fallen so low that I felt it deserved one star... Catcher in the Rye.
These are my two biggest pet peeves when it comes to reviews, the spoilers because it destroys the joy I might have at a well crafted ending or plot turn. The lack of a good reason because I've read books that people found horrible and loved them. Perhaps you don't like a book because of the language or the gore described inside. Please tell us that so that we can understand your rating. If you rated a book one star because it had lesbian vampires that sparkled and took tea in the sunlight every afternoon while discussing the politics of the court, tell us! I know people that would be intrigued by a Vampire version of Little Women or Pride and Prejudice, though the lesbian aspect would be entirely new. But this means that you give the author/artist/musician the best chance to succeed.
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
The spring becomes a fountain.
It seems in our world that more and more we worry about running out of resources. We're going to run out of fossil fuels, trees, animals, oxygen, space, and just about everything else you could conceive of. But it seems to me that there are a lot of things that we'll never run out of.
There is something about what we do as humans that is amazing, if we work at something we get more of it. The more I run the more distance I'll be able to do next time. The more I lift weights, the more I'll be able to lift in the future. The more I eat, the more I'll be able to. (All right, that last one wasn't the best example)
It is surprising that we see physical achievement and improvement as different than mental improvement. Society seems to have the idea that you can improve your muscles, improve your stamina, or improve your physique. Yet when it comes to your mental improvement your intelligence isn't as important.
What if the problem is the perception of the world is it is better to be physically fit than mentally fit? You could be the worlds strongest man if you work out enough, but you can't be the worlds smartest man because you weren't born a genius or a prodigy. If we were to work towards changing the picture of society that instead of valuing bulging biceps and a washboard abs we instead valued someone who could solve calculus differentials. What kind of a picture would it create for us?
I suddenly see beer commercials where engineers, and scientists are flocked over by women. I see a Chess Championship as something which draws as big a crowd as the Super Bowl. It is an interesting picture of the world, where it's not survival of the fittest but survival of the smartest.
Why did I go through this long rant? Because I've been amazed at the changes that occur in a mind when you begin to work towards something and practice at it consistently. In many writers circles they talk about you need to write every day. That the important thing is that you continue to train your mind in order to produce the ideas and to form the stories in the way you want them.
Ten years ago I made my first attempt to write a story as a novel. It came down to three pages of pencil written words that seemed to gloss over ideas but never really explored them. It was a fantasy story that I felt I could write and would explore a world where reality is based entirely on some kind of group consensus. That was when I first realized that writing was hard and set it aside.
There are days that I wish I would have kept at it, where I should have pushed the story to five thousand words, to ten thousand. I would have something that I could look back at now to see how much I've improved in my writing. Instead it took me another five years before I finally put words to paper in any concentrated effort.
Now I can look back and see Creativity is like a muscle, the more you use it the more ideas come to you. The more you work at formulating sentences, at devising plots, and at crafting characters the better they become.
There are times that I look back at decisions that I made in my life and regret them. Regret that I didn't realize that if you want to accomplish anything in life you can't take the easy route. If you want to write, put your butt in a chair, your fingers on the keyboard, and start writing. Like with sports, if you want to get better you need to practice.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Edit's underway and Writing Lovecraft
I've finally committed to a few things which i'm hoping will lead to more for you to read. I'm setting a date to have my first novel ready for Beta-reading by mid-April. That's a little over a month away and I have to go through it at least once. Also there are some things I need to rewrite as this was something first written over two years ago.
I know, two years is a long time to sit around without being worked but I haven't felt the fire under me until recently. I think part of it has to do with the lesson's I'm learning from the Fear Project. Having a weekly deadline and only a few days to turn around a finished product is tough. Though I feel my editing and proofreading skills have really started to blossom.
Another thing I've learned from this challenge is that a deadline isn't always a bad thing. There are days when I can procrastinate like the best of them. I can find excuses and distractions to keep me busy for weeks. But alas, that's one thing I love about National Novel Writing Month. There is a goal, there is a time frame, there is a deadline.
Since I mentioned the Fear Project above I may as well continue to that now. During this weeks challenge the rules changed. We received an e-mail earlier in the week warning us that things would be changing this week. The ideas which were thrown out were vague but all we knew is that everything was about to get more interesting.
This week we have a guest judge who asked us to write a story where our main character is wet, cold, and in the dark. Then, to top it all off, he would really like it if we went with the Lovecraft style. That is something that I struggle with. It is something that try as I might in the past I've never been able to pull off. I've tried for the weird, tried for the darkness, tried for his settings. Yet somehow it has all escaped me.
Now I love H.P.Lovecraft and his style is amazing in my opinion. He makes wonderful use of the first person. His work is the stuff of dreams, nightmares, or even just the weird. I feel like I did well but this week is still young and we have yet to see which of us the judge likes best.
But that is the way that of life sometimes. All we can really do is hurry up and wait.
I know, two years is a long time to sit around without being worked but I haven't felt the fire under me until recently. I think part of it has to do with the lesson's I'm learning from the Fear Project. Having a weekly deadline and only a few days to turn around a finished product is tough. Though I feel my editing and proofreading skills have really started to blossom.
Another thing I've learned from this challenge is that a deadline isn't always a bad thing. There are days when I can procrastinate like the best of them. I can find excuses and distractions to keep me busy for weeks. But alas, that's one thing I love about National Novel Writing Month. There is a goal, there is a time frame, there is a deadline.
Since I mentioned the Fear Project above I may as well continue to that now. During this weeks challenge the rules changed. We received an e-mail earlier in the week warning us that things would be changing this week. The ideas which were thrown out were vague but all we knew is that everything was about to get more interesting.
This week we have a guest judge who asked us to write a story where our main character is wet, cold, and in the dark. Then, to top it all off, he would really like it if we went with the Lovecraft style. That is something that I struggle with. It is something that try as I might in the past I've never been able to pull off. I've tried for the weird, tried for the darkness, tried for his settings. Yet somehow it has all escaped me.
Now I love H.P.Lovecraft and his style is amazing in my opinion. He makes wonderful use of the first person. His work is the stuff of dreams, nightmares, or even just the weird. I feel like I did well but this week is still young and we have yet to see which of us the judge likes best.
But that is the way that of life sometimes. All we can really do is hurry up and wait.
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Overloaded
So... I completely forgot about last weeks blog post and it is shameful. What's worse, I didn't take the time to let people know that I was too busy and forgot about this until Sunday afternoon. So for anyone who was missing my update I'd like to take a moment to say, "I'm sorry."
Well, let's take a moment and talk about projects that I have going right now. Currently I'm working on an edit and rewrite going for the novel, "A Patchwork of Graves." For anyone following me on David Wellington's Fear Project you were introduced to Patch during week three in the story "To Mend A Broken Heart". Many people showed interest which makes me happy to have created such a bad guy.
There is also the Fear Project which occupies most of my weekends. From the time the prompt posts at midnight EST Friday until I send in the submission in, all of my free time is occupied by thoughts of my story. They might be short in length, probably the length of what I've already written, but the wording is so important. I can honestly say that in the last four weeks of creating these stories I've learned about the importance of word choice. It has also helped me in analyzing what I need to cut or change in my own stories to focus on the key elements.
This week I posted a story about Nurse Summers who works in a psychiatric ward. When vampires show up trying to turn her patients into a buffet, she steps up to set things right. I have to admit that I unwittingly have fallen in love with this character. I never thought that I would want to write a vampire story. In fact one of the things that inspired Patch was the lack of a good undead alternative. But it isn't the vampires that make this story unique, this character seems to have a story behind her behavior that makes me want to explore it.
To answer a question which was posted on my comments the last name is a pop culture reference. The nurse originally didn't have a name, yet I felt having her nameless was cheating. When I was thinking of a good name for a woman who is a duty bound slayer of vampires I couldn't resist using the last name. Just think of this as an Easter Egg and move on, the character isn't Buffy and if I decide to write more with her then you'll see just that.
What has been discussed is just about a third of what my project list has on it. Needless to say I'll be busy for sometime into the future working on getting all of these done. But on the bright side, at least I won't be a writer who finds himself without an idea after writing one novel. I will have to say that I've been blessed with a mind full of fun new ideas.
Well, let's take a moment and talk about projects that I have going right now. Currently I'm working on an edit and rewrite going for the novel, "A Patchwork of Graves." For anyone following me on David Wellington's Fear Project you were introduced to Patch during week three in the story "To Mend A Broken Heart". Many people showed interest which makes me happy to have created such a bad guy.
There is also the Fear Project which occupies most of my weekends. From the time the prompt posts at midnight EST Friday until I send in the submission in, all of my free time is occupied by thoughts of my story. They might be short in length, probably the length of what I've already written, but the wording is so important. I can honestly say that in the last four weeks of creating these stories I've learned about the importance of word choice. It has also helped me in analyzing what I need to cut or change in my own stories to focus on the key elements.
This week I posted a story about Nurse Summers who works in a psychiatric ward. When vampires show up trying to turn her patients into a buffet, she steps up to set things right. I have to admit that I unwittingly have fallen in love with this character. I never thought that I would want to write a vampire story. In fact one of the things that inspired Patch was the lack of a good undead alternative. But it isn't the vampires that make this story unique, this character seems to have a story behind her behavior that makes me want to explore it.
To answer a question which was posted on my comments the last name is a pop culture reference. The nurse originally didn't have a name, yet I felt having her nameless was cheating. When I was thinking of a good name for a woman who is a duty bound slayer of vampires I couldn't resist using the last name. Just think of this as an Easter Egg and move on, the character isn't Buffy and if I decide to write more with her then you'll see just that.
What has been discussed is just about a third of what my project list has on it. Needless to say I'll be busy for sometime into the future working on getting all of these done. But on the bright side, at least I won't be a writer who finds himself without an idea after writing one novel. I will have to say that I've been blessed with a mind full of fun new ideas.
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Neglect...
Dear Blog and those people reading this.
I feel that I am in need of an apology for I neglected to update you on Friday as was my original schedule. But this weekend has been a busy one, with the first update to the fear project requiring my attention. I didn't know what it would be and the excitement totally got the better of me. That being said it really isn't an excuse for not doing a blog update. So, what has been happening?
First off we are in week one of David Wellington's Fear Project. (http://davidwellingtonsfearproject.com/) head on over and read thirteen pieces of flash fiction that are all based around the prompt "setting." Also, David Wellington has made it sound like the contestants have been kidnapped and we're trying to survive this ordeal.
"So what?" I hear you asking.
"So everything!" I find myself wanting to shout back. As one of the authors writing in this contest not only does it mean I get to put my creativity and writing skills to the test, but I also may get killed off in a story in the process.
I know many writers talk about killing off people who annoy them in our books. There meme's saying
"I'm a writer. If I'm staring at you I'm not being rude. I'm trying to decide if you need to go in my book. If you're a snot, I maybe trying to decide how to kill you."
That being said, some people would like nothing more than to be in a book. I've had several people ask if they could be a minor character in a novel of mine. I even took one of them up on the offer when I needed an administrative character and he fit the bill. But to be killed off by a no-name writer who is just getting started isn't all that exciting. But to be killed off by a horror writer who has published several novels. By a writer who has established themselves enough to make a living off their work. It is like having all your geek senses tingling because you know you could be next.
I don't know if this is really the most positive message that I should be sending. I'm comparing myself to characters in a slasher film, knowing that I could be killed off in some horrid manner, and loving every minute of it.
Sorry for the neglect Friday Blog, but I hope to have an update ready in advance explaining my feelings on Kindle Unlimited by then.
I feel that I am in need of an apology for I neglected to update you on Friday as was my original schedule. But this weekend has been a busy one, with the first update to the fear project requiring my attention. I didn't know what it would be and the excitement totally got the better of me. That being said it really isn't an excuse for not doing a blog update. So, what has been happening?
First off we are in week one of David Wellington's Fear Project. (http://davidwellingtonsfearproject.com/) head on over and read thirteen pieces of flash fiction that are all based around the prompt "setting." Also, David Wellington has made it sound like the contestants have been kidnapped and we're trying to survive this ordeal.
"So what?" I hear you asking.
"So everything!" I find myself wanting to shout back. As one of the authors writing in this contest not only does it mean I get to put my creativity and writing skills to the test, but I also may get killed off in a story in the process.
I know many writers talk about killing off people who annoy them in our books. There meme's saying
"I'm a writer. If I'm staring at you I'm not being rude. I'm trying to decide if you need to go in my book. If you're a snot, I maybe trying to decide how to kill you."
That being said, some people would like nothing more than to be in a book. I've had several people ask if they could be a minor character in a novel of mine. I even took one of them up on the offer when I needed an administrative character and he fit the bill. But to be killed off by a no-name writer who is just getting started isn't all that exciting. But to be killed off by a horror writer who has published several novels. By a writer who has established themselves enough to make a living off their work. It is like having all your geek senses tingling because you know you could be next.
I don't know if this is really the most positive message that I should be sending. I'm comparing myself to characters in a slasher film, knowing that I could be killed off in some horrid manner, and loving every minute of it.
Sorry for the neglect Friday Blog, but I hope to have an update ready in advance explaining my feelings on Kindle Unlimited by then.
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