Finding home, finding love – writing romance, making clothes, growing food, and growing up

Adventures in living an authentic creative life


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A fab article on romance writing – and Little Yellow Writing Shed progress

One of my critique partners, fab rural romance writer Rachael Johns, published by Carina Press and Harlequin Australia is featured in an article in a major Australia newspaper! That’s her in the pink. You can read “Romance writers share love of success” here. I’m looking forward to being able to buy Rach’s book when I’m next in Australia. I just missed out last time, going a few weeks before her release date, and I really want to read it!

I worked three days at the Day Job last week, but the bonus is I now have four days off, work one, and have another four off. That’s a work schedule I can live with. 

So today, I’m back working on the Little Yellow Writing Shed. The current job is lining the inside with foil and foil taping the joins. Fiddly. It took a while to find the best way to do it, and the cheap crappy staple gun I bought caused a lot of swearing, but once I worked a system out I got in a good flow with it. I’m being meticulous about it, excessively meticulous, some might say. No one will ever see the interior work I’ve done so far, as it will all be hidden away. But it’s worth the effort. I hope so, anyway. I want the shed to be comfortable in winter without needing a huge energy input to keep warm. Insulation and gap sealing is essential. I think there’s still a day and a half’s work to get it done. Then I can start on the finishing work, the bits that will actually show – the tented ceiling, and the timber lined walls. That’s when it starts to get a lot more exciting!

I really want to get the guttering up and the water tank in place, but the outside needs painting first. My lovely husband is doing that for me, but veeeeeeery slowly! Poor man has a chronic connective tissue disorder and he’s in a flare up. Anyway, it hasn’t rained again, so no rush.

Lots of writing ideas popping up while I’m doing relatively no-brainer building tasks. I love the process, those little bubbles that pop on the surface, deciding if that’s something I want to play with or not. There are a couple of things in today’s batch of ideas I can really have fun with!

I had a great haul on the 50p rack at the charity shop today too. A big pile of stuff for just seven quid! My favourite is a  top that’s way too big for me, but in fabric I adore. I’ll have a go at fixing it to fit. I’m thinking I’ll try some shirring, in places on clothes that aren’t usually shirred! If it works, I’ll do a post on it.

I’m planning a blog overhaul. Possibly a different WordPress theme, so it may look different. Adding more new pages. Mainly, adding some different content. I want to post more regularly, and mix in some new stuff. Like photos of my thrifted buys. Raw vegan recipes. How-I-done-it sewing posts, mostly refashioning those thrifted clothes. Still lots of writing, because that’s my number one thing. But more of the other things I love, too.

If it makes me either smile or swear, it’s probably worth blogging about!


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Is this the most gorgeous romance cover ever? And a book giveaway.

Isn’t this just the most gorgeous cover! Love love love those big strong hands! And the story inside the cover more than matches it for gorgeousness. 

I’m so pleased to be able to say my lovely CP Robyn Thomas is finally published and to unashamedly plug her book!

She’s not just a wonderful writer, she’s the sweetest, kindest, most supportive person ever, so nobody could deserve this fabulous cover and hopefully huge publishing success more.

If you like sweet sexy romance with a touch of humour, Robyn’s your girl! She writes the way I want to when I grow up.

Her first published story, His Unexpected Family, has a sassy heroine, a cute baby, a small town Australian setting, and an awesome extreme sportsman hero. Here’s the back cover blurb-

Sometimes you have to take the leap… again.Newly widowed with a new baby, Ren Jamieson is putting her life back together after her thrill-seeking husband’s death. But when she’s called to show a high-end property to a prospective client–a commission she desperately needs–she meets a man who makes her pulse pound like nothing she’s ever known…

Cole Matthews is more than he seems. Real estate is only part of the reason he’s in Australia–the other is to see Ren, and make amends somehow for the life lost. The last thing Cole expects is a woman whose humor, sweetness, and sexiness give him a rush greater than any he’s ever experienced…

Torn between her growing feelings for Cole and the risks of loving yet another adventurer, Ren will have to choose between keeping her feet on the ground… and taking the most dangerous leap of her life.

So if this sounds like a story you’d enjoy, why not take the leap yourself? His Unexpected Family is available as an ebook from Entangled Publishing, on Amazon or at Barnes & Noble.
 
I’ll be giving away a copy to a commenter on this post, so just leave a comment if you’d like to win! And Robyn will be blogging here on August 8, talking about hanging in there through rejections and landing a multi-book contract.


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Work in progress- the writing shed, days 3 to 6

Work in progress

Still exhausted and doing no writing, I’ve been working eight hours a day on the shed. It’s coming along.

Slowly, a lot slower than I’d like, but I’m getting there. These jobs always take far longer and cost far more than planned, and the shed is no exception.

The photo is where I was yesterday morning. Today, the whole interior – walls, ceilings, and even the z-framed timber door, have polystyrene insulation. It’s not beautiful. I patchworked a lot of odd size pieces together to reduce the amount of wastage. But it should be functional, especially when I add a layer of foil over the top, which I hope will seal all the gaps well enough.

I don’t know how my husband worked in the shed when it was his computer workshop. He must have frozen his butt off in winter and barbecued it in summer. I grew up in Australia. Heat I’m okay with, but my cold tolerance is minimal. I normally wear three layers of thermal underwear under my clothes, and fingerless gloves inside our house in the British winter, so a freezing drafty shed is not doing to do it for me. Insulation is more important than how it looks!

I’m hoping I can achieve both a comfortable and an attractive writing space though.

Next comes the foil, and taping all the gaps in that, then I’ll staple up a tented ceiling from an old white sheet. Don’t want to risk anything heavier on the ceiling, there’s not enough to nail into. It would NOT help my writing to have the ceiling fall on my head! The walls will be light spruce tongue and groove boards.

I’ll need to ensure I fix the leaks, before I start that. There are a couple of broken edges on boards outside that I’ll patch. I’ve put new support under the shed and stopped the water tracking up where it rotted out in that damp corner. I’ve ordered better window perspex, and guttering and a water tank. My lovely husband is painting the outside for me.

Luckily, we finally have summer! No rain at all the last two days. It’s been beautifully sunny and all a British summer day should be, after raining heavily every day so far this month. I hope it stays dry. I won’t get much more done until Thursday now, between the Day Job and visiting the MiL.

The lovely thing about this sort of physical work is that my mind has been free to wander. Yesterday, I came up with a new story idea. It will be fun to write. At last some characters based on my Flying Doctor days I feel happy with! I don’t think they’re romance cliches. It doesn’t feel like it at this stage. I’m looking forward to mining that period of my life. The story needs a lot of development work yet. Mind mapping, and finding out more about who these people are.

But I’m resisting the temptation to chase the bright new shiny. I’ll edit the Christmas story first. I’m almost to the stage where I have enough distance from the writing of it to do the edits justice, and to want to start back into it again. With no words count constraints, I think it will end up around five thousand words longer than the version I submitted. I’ll address the issues the editor pointed out in the rejection. The choppy jerky writing and the lack of clarity, product of cutting too much to get word count within limits.

I know it will take a lot of work, and I’m looking forward to that!


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The writing shed, day 2. And another writing decision.


Photo by timsnell

I’m exhausted, and I’ve done no writing today. Lots of thinking.

I worked in the shed all day today. Doing work I hadn’t planned on, caulking all the gaps between every single board, between the walls and the floor and the walls and the roof, down the corners where the wall panels meet, and that 10mm (3/8″) gap under the windows the wind howled through. It took three tubes of gap filler! Worth it, I think, even though time-consuming. It should make a big difference to how weatherproof the shed is. I didn’t take any photos as there are only so many photos of an empty shed anyone will want to see. Just imagine three huge tubes worth of white lines across the last photo!

I’ll be back at the Day Job tomorrow, but Thursday I can start putting up the foam insulation panels.

And hopefully start work on the rewrite of the Christmas story.

I’ve been thinking about it all day. I’m glad I left it a few more days to start. I need that extra distance. before I change anything.

Though I’ve made a big decision. I’m going for an idea I had early on in the development phase of the story, and was strongly tempted by but ultimately rejected as less suited for the particular Call for Submissions I wrote the story for. I’m making the hero and heroine much older. Late fifties or even early sixties instead of twenties.

It works far better for me that way. I just like it. I think it will add more poignancy, too.

It will mean more of a total rewrite. It also means it won’t really be a category type romance any more. It will be a feel-good Christmas story that also happens to be a love story with a happy ever after. So I’ve pondered the differences between single title and category romance.

How to know- this idea is category, this idea is single title? What’s the dividing line between category-style romance, an ST romance, and an ST with strong romantic elements? How does the  writer’s mindset need to change when approaching the story?

I’m guessing it’s the tropes, the focus on the relationship, the need for secondary characters, just how big a canvas the story needs to be told the way the calls for. Discussion with my CPs suggest that ST can get away with more humour, less of a black moment.  Many of the romantic ST’s I’ve read have been fairly light and fluffy, a kind of grey moment and not the real black BM needed for category. More feel-goodish. But there still needs to be some sort of ”all is lost” moment, or there’s no story. The sh*t hits the fan moment (the nursing meaning of BM!).

So, I’ll be writing the story as a single title, with older protagonist. It will be unsaleable, of course, but at least it will be unsaleable as the story I wanted to write, not the story I thought I ought to write!

A lesson I need to learn.

Still waiting to do the post on my CP’s wonderful debut. Launch is delayed a couple of days. My next post… fingers crossed.

Oh, and the photo has no relevance at all to the post! I couldn’t find one I liked that did, and I love this one.


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Working on the writing shed, anticipation, and a new plan

So I haven’t done any writing, since submitting the Christmas story. I played with some ideas for the next story, and know which one I want to go with, but haven’t done anything more than note down a few ideas..

It feels strange not to be writing. I’m restless and antsy.

That’s good. When I start back into writing again, I’ll be raring to go. I’m using that energy getting a lot of other stuff done, all that decluttering and sorting out stuff I don’t usually have the time or the oomph for. It shows just how much energy writing uses. Those last few days working on the story I ended each day exhausted. And how much energy the Day Job sucked out of me. I’ve achieved more in the last two weeks since dropping back to part time hours there than I did in the preceding two months or more!

Today, the big job was clearing the shed, ready to start the fixing up work on Tuesday. I’d hoped to start sooner, but today is the first day it hasn’t rained, and I’ve been waiting for supplies to arrive. Anyway, we got it empty, and I got an unpleasant surprise. One corner has rot. The whole side wall was mouldy where something was leaned against it, trapping moisture  that never dried out as it’s the shady side. And the supporting timber under the corner has rotted right out, letting that corner get damp.

So that meant a lovely few hours scrubbing the entire wall with bleach. Three times!

Luckily, now it’s clean and drying out, it’s only a tiny patch of the floor that’s soft. I’m hoping I can just fix the underfloor support and the damp issue and get away with it. Because fixing it properly by replacing that floorboard would mean dismantling the entire shed, and that is NOT going to happen. The other surprise is a patch of what looks and smells like engine oil on the floor, but that’s not a big deal.

It’s also been a day of anticipation.

It’s release day, for one of my CPs., Robyn Thomas  Her first book, “His Unexpected Family”, a contemporary romance with a thrill-seeker mountain climber hero and a newly bereaved mother heroine.  Tagline- ”Family may be the biggest adventure of them all.” It’s a wonderful story, tenderly emotional yet sexy too. I adore her voice and can’t wait to read her final edited version. If that story sounds like something you’d enjoy, come back tomorrow for some cover love and a link! We’re all desperately waiting for it to go live on Amazon so we can buy copies. Clicking and fricking, as Jilly says, hitting refresh constantly on the search box and getting nothing. Grrr!

So I’ve made a decision on what to write next, too. Rather than dive into the rewrite of the last story, I’ll wait a couple more days, then edit Believe in Me again. Let it be the length it needs to be to tell the story best. I suspect that will be around 20k, maybe a little longer. I’ll sub it out to some other publishers who might take a Christmas romance novella. I’m thinking Samhain, Ellora’s Cave Blush, and Grand Central’s Forever. Maybe Carina.  If I work on the other story first, it’ll be way too late to sub a Christmas story by the time it’s edited up.

I’ll combine working on the shed with editing fours or five hours a day, so I don’t get burned out on either job. By mid-August at the latest, I’ll have a finished writing space, and a story that’s really ready to go, not rushed to meet a deadline and mangled to meet a word count.

If I can get it out again within a few weeks, a month tops, I’ll still have time to self-publish if they all reject it.

Though that depends on the reason for rejections. If I get form rejections, or rejections with criticisms, I need to reconsider. Maybe the story isn’t as good as I think it is. I don’t want to put it out there if it’s truly not good enough for publication. Of course, some epubs, like Carina don’t give encouraging comments on R’s. Nothing in between form rejections and revise/resubmits.

If I consistently get the sort of r’s that are along the lines of they liked it, but it’s just not what they are looking for in their Christmas list, then self-pubbing is the way to go. Of course, those sort of R’s may just be a politer way of saying it’s still not good enough! I’m sure most editors would find space for a sensationally good story, even if it didn’t quite fit that month’s list.

Maybe I can start working on the story tomorrow. Take it on the train to read and annotate. I’ll know if it’s too soon to start edits, if I can’t see anything wrong with it! If I can see the issues that need fixing, and I’m pretty sure I will as I knew before I even subbed the thing, it’s time to start the next round of edits. Put back in some of what I took out. Add what’s needed for readability, flow, and reader understanding.

Then it’s time to take a deep breath and hit send again.


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Rejection- and a lesson on how I need to write


Image source sawyeriii

I’m Autumn, and I’m an optimist.

There, now I’ve confessed the terrible truth, I can start the change process, right?

Optimism is normally considered a good thing. And it can be. The hope of a good outcome lets us start ambitious new projects. It keeps us going when times are tough. It lets us bounce back from defeats, because things are bound to get better. Even when we have defeats and face disappointments, at least we’ve felt good along the way.

Optimism is good. But it can also cause problems. Unrealistic expectations. Look where optimism got Mr Micawber.

Now, that doesn’t mean I want to be a pessimist. I’m married to one. Believe me, one in any household is enough. Pessimism has it’s own set of problems. I’ve had pessimistic periods in my life, and I’ve worked hard to leave that behind.

Pessimism leads to ideas that never get acted on. Projects abandoned at the first road bump, because “It was never going to work out, anyway.” Yes, pessimists can be pleasantly surprised, while optimists are often disappointed, but oh my, the misery along the way for the pessimist.

Problem is, optimism can lead to taking on too much. Overestimating what we can do and how long it will take to do it. Setting deadlines (or accepting deadline requests from someone else), that we just can’t meet. Or we bust a gut to meet, but with work that’s not as good as it could be, bent out of shape to meet the deadline. Saying “Yes” to things we’d be better saying “No” to.

I want to be a realist (better yet, an awesomist!).

I don’t have an editor dishing out  writing work to me specifically yet, but I have a nasty habit of setting self-made deadlines that are just plain crazy. Like seeing a Call for Submissions with an impossibly close due date and deciding to go for it, because idea machine my brain is, I can’t see a Call without getting at least one idea.

The answer may just be to avoid reading those Call for Submissions posts on editor’s blogs. Or if I’m gonna read them, read them when they’re first posted, not a month and a half later!

That alone might not help me, unfortunately. Long deadlines do the “I’ve got ages to write this so I’ll do that first” thing for me. Without the time pressure, getting down and doing the work easily slides to the end of my To Do list, because I optimistically hope it will take a lot less time than it actually does.

*sigh*

If I want to write full-time, knowing what makes a realistic deadline for me and how to keep it is one of the first lessons I need to learn.

The trigger for this ramble was this post, and my Christmas story getting rejected.

The email waited when I got home from visiting my mother-in-law yesterday (as if that wasn’t enough bad for one day!).

Now at least I didn’t have a long wait. But I had hopes for this story. I worked so hard on it. I do believe it’s the best thing I’ve written. I truly thought I’d cracked it with this one. I won’t pretend the rejection didn’t hurt, it did. When I read the email, it kicked me in the guts. I had a little cry. But I can’t stay hurt, unless I want to give up writing.

Here’s what he said-

I adore your premise, but the writing is a little too choppy/disjointed, and it’s hard to get a clear sense of what’s happening.

He’s right.

I knew this when I submitted the story, but I simply didn’t have time to fix it. To reduce the word count, I mangled the story. Too many short sentences. Missed words that really need to be there. It doesn’t flow well. I dropped two and a half k in the first round of edits, a lot on a twenty k novella, and lost more than just excess words with those cuts.

Trying to avoid my usual sin of rambling and overwriting, I took my writing spare to the point of losing the meaning and readability. The story needed to be twenty k. Yes, I needed to trim my first draft, tighten it and lose some weak bits and strengthen other things. But I didn’t need to damage my story so badly in the process.

Anyway, I know what to do now. I’ll let the story sit for a month or so, get some distance from it while I work on something else. Then I’ll come back to it. Do another round or three of edits and put back in much of what I took out. I’ll let the story be as long as it needs to be to tell the story right, without drifting into overwriting.

Then I’ll probably self-publish it, just for the fun of it and because I’ve wanted to have a go at self-pubbing for a long time.

Anyway, that’s down the track a bit. What’s immediate is deciding what story to start on next, and learning the lesson here.

I already have plenty of ideas for my next project, rewriting the rejected Valentine’s Day novella, set in my imaginary Australian country town of Koowindra. From that starting point, I have three or four possible stories, all different enough I could write all of them without self-plagiarism. Now I need to develop each idea enough that I can see which one grabs me the most to start first. 

I can write so many variations on this story. Coming home is a recurring theme for me. Whether it’s the hero or the heroine, someone who’s never had or  who has lost their sense of home is finding what their home is. And who their home is with.

Finding home, finding love.

That’s the truth of all my stories. Home means love, and love means home. Either they go to the place that’s home for them, and find love there waiting for them; or they find that love gives them the sense of home they’ve been missing. Either way, the theme is the same. I have so many possible variations on this. Five or six different ideas just for Koowindra stories. The Haven Bay series, another five or six stories. All different, all with the same core theme.

That’s okay, I think. It won’t make my stories too samey. I’m writing what’s important to me. I hope that will resonate with my readers too. The key to writing authentic romance stories is coming from my own emotional truth, I believe. Not writing cynically, writing what I think will sell. Writing from my heart- what I hope and believe and know.

And that’s the lesson. Not so much “don’t set unrealistic goals”. Not so much stop being an optimist. But be true to what I know about my stories.

I knew once I got to the halfway point in first draft that the story needed around twenty k, way over the required word count. I changed the outline, to keep it going even further over. That was a good choice, it strengthened the story structure.

The bad choice was then hacking the first draft not only beyond recognition but beyond readability to get word count down.

I had two other options at that stage- let the story be what I knew it needed to be, and sub it long anyway, to the same or a different publisher through regular submission routes. Not  through the Call for Submissions, as it didn’t meet what the editor requested. Or if I really desperately wanted to sub to the Call, start a new version. Change the story and the characters and the conflict enough to fit the requested word count. That’s what I’ll need to do when I’m a published writer, working on contract, with deadlines that have to be met. I need to give the editor what I promised.

It’s about staying true to the integrity of the story, and keeping my promise as a writer, both at the same time. If I sub something to an editor, it must  be what they’ve asked for. If the story isn’t they asked for, I shouldn’t sub that story to them. Doesn’t make it a bad story, it just means it’s not the right story for that particular editor for that particular request. Destroying the integrity of the story isn’t the answer. Keeping my promises is.

So back to the beginning again- the need for realistic promises! Maybe, knowing I’m an optimist, what I need to do is guess the time I think something will take, and double it.

Now on to fixing up the writing shed. It needs insulating, lining, and decorating. I can do that in a weekend, right?


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Hit send – and wait!

I’ve done it! Submitted my novella to a lovely editor at Entangled.

I’m happy with what I sent. Okay, I did attach the not-quite-optimal version of the synopsis (hint: if you decide to do some last minute tweaks, DO NOT attach the document while the tweaked version is still sitting on your desktop unsaved, you will be sending the old version!), and my blurb for the query letter sounded a little too generic rent-a-romance for my taste (by that stage I was way too tired and last-minuted to do a good enough job on this, unfortunately).

I just have to hope the story speaks for itself and he likes it!

I’ll know within the next three weeks, anyway. The great thing about Entangled is the short wait times. Also, everything I’ve heard (and my personal experience with my last sub) says the editors there give the best rejections around. Getting R’ed sucks, anytime, but a nice friendly personal rejection is soooooo much better.

So, tonight I’ll just wait for the post-submission crash. I’ve run on diet cola and adrenaline the last five days, getting this story written and edited.  Off to the Day Job in the morning. The Thursday I can start work on the Writing Shed. Sitting crosslegged on the bed with my laptop on my knees works okay for short stretches, but can be a killer for twelve hour plus writing stints three days in a row! My back and neck are not happy right now.

Getting back into some carpentry again will be fun. I’ll be insulating the shed, and lining it with pine tongue and groove boards, then building in a desk and shelving. After that, once I’ll make curtains or a blind, and a couple of cushions, it’ll be ready to move in. I got a lovely white cane office swivel chair on ebay for £8, which made me happy (compared to £60 for a new one)!

My Writing Shed will rock!

In the meantime, I’ll move on to a different writing project too - the rewrite of the Valentine’s Day novella to send to Entangled. Seeing an Entangled editor say in the July Wish List she wanted small town romances made me very happy as well - maybe the Haven Bay series? They also need complete rewrites, but I love those stories!

I also need to catch up on the lessons and homework for the online writing course I’m doing, which will mean more planning on the big fantasy romance.

I just found out (thanks to Lacey!) that Harlequin are doing So You Can Think You Can Write 2012 in September, though they’ve changed the rules (again!) and it’s more like last year’s Mills and Boon X-Factor style New Voices contest. Guaranteed publication for the winner again. I’m guessing that means NV won’t be happening this year. Interesting!

I’m not sure I’ll enter, as I’m feeling I want to be monogamous with Entangled right now.

 


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Happily ever after


Photo by {eclaire}

I’m discovering what hard work full-time writing can be.

I edited for about sixteen hours yesterday, with only short breaks. Finished second draft at 3am.

Today, I’ve done another pass through. So much that still needed work. My morning pages today were three pages of all I wanted to make sure I’d fixed. Mainly character arc stuff. Making sure the throughlines are clear. Fixing or at least explaining the inconsistencies in the heroine’s voice. Showing the emotional changes they catalyse in each other, the things that make it possible for them to be in a relationship.

To me, that’s the heart of a good romance. Not so much the romance stuff, but the believable emotional growth of each main character. The changes they have to go through to make their happy ever after happen. Their journey from living behind a mask to living their truth.

I’ve lived my truth, this last week. I truly have transitioned from being a part-time writer to a full-time writer.

Third draft is now done.

I think I’ve nailed it. I hope I’ve nailed it, anyway. So hard to know.

The black moment makes me cry. The happy ending gives me the aahh factor. I feel the meaning of Christmas in my heart, as Scrooge says at the end of A Christmas Carol. I’ve tried to capture the flavour of a London Christmas, all the things I love and hate about it. It works for me.

But I wrote it! Will it affect a reader the same way? I don’t know.

I do know, this story is the best I’ve written. I know it’s as good as I can get it now.

I won’t do another pass through. This will have to be it. Deadline for submissions is today.

It’s still too long, over required word count by way more than I’d like. I can’t do anything more about that. I’ve cut out as much fat as I can. I can’t tell this couple’s story in fewer words. Praying the editor will like it enough for it not to matter. Dear God, I hope so!

Even if it gets rejected, the twenty-four days since I saw the Call for Submissions have been the best adventure in discovering my writing process. I’ve learned so much. And I still have the other idea to write sometime in the future, the one I spent the first ten days working on before I realised it would be even longer!

I hope this story won’t be rejected though! I believe in it. I want Cara and Nick’s story out there. I feel it’s a story worth telling, and a story worth reading.

I’m pretty sure I’ll self-pub, if Entangled don’t buy it. But oh my, I hope they do!

Okay, more work to do.

On to formatting, a query letter, and tweaking the synopsis!


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Red pencil day


Photo by Rat Phlegm

Editing is fun, but hard work!

I had a great day today editing my novella.

Progress is slower than I’d like, but I love it. Today feels like a good, satisfying got-a-lot-done day. I’m certainly exhausted.

All I really managed was to write a not very good synopsis (too much emphasis on what they do, not enough on how they change, and why) and edit three chapters. That took me all day. I stopped at around 10pm, when I finished chapter 3, suddenly realising I was starving and had to eat straight away or I’d go all wobbly!

I’m quietly happy with this story. It still may not be good enough to sell, but it certainly is the best thing I’ve written.

Only problem is- 11 more chapters to go, two days to do them in. You do the math. I’m just hoping the later chapters, once I had a clearer idea of the characters and their story, won’t need as nearly much editing.

There’s still the synopsis to tweak again too, and a query letter to write. All before midnight on Tuesday.

Wish me luck! I need it!


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A writing free day – getting ready to edit

I’m up against an insanely tight deadline to get this story ready to submit. Despite that, I took the day off writing today.

I got loads of other stuff done instead.

Went to my favourite charity shop (thrift store in the US, op shop in Aus!) to shop their 50p rack. I love wearing my £1 and £2 outfits! It’s a great source for clothes for refashioning too. Nothing spectacular today, but I picked up a pretty white embroidered shirt that I may dye, a nice  orange linen vest top, and a couple of soft lightweight jumpers a couple of sizes too big to turn into cardigans or shrugs.

So that meant spending some time browsing crafting blogs for refashioning ideas.

Then time for some raw vegan food prep. While doing the grocery shop I picked up 2.5 kg of bruised bananas for 25p! Time to make carob banana pudding (see photo. I’ll post a recipe soon- it’s delish and one of my favourite things to have for supper when I get home late from the Day Job) and cut up the rest into 2 banana batches to freeze. Then I made tomato & spinach linseed crackers (again- it’s yummy, I’ll put up a recipe for that soon too), and seeing I had the dehydrator going put in a batch of halved cherry tomatoes to make some semi-dried tomatoes for salads.

Then out to the badly neglected food garden, mostly in pots. I repotted the apple tree I bought because I felt sorry for it as the last broken pitiful dead looking stick in the bare rooted tree bin. It’s doing well but needed a bigger pot. It’s now at the writing shed door. Repotted the goji berry (no idea if I’ll ever get fruit off this) which was looking very sorry for itself and found despite regular watering the compost had completely dried out, the poor thing had dehydrated. Harvested the garlic I planted from a couple of supermarket bulbs that sprouted. Planted a thornless blackberry and some strawberries that weren’t happy in pots into the rose hedge, which I’m slowly adding more food plants to. Took out the saladings that had run to seed and put in some lovely pink flowered strawberries I got for half price because they’d wilted. All they needed was a good drink! Planted out the few tomato seedling the slugs hadn’t got. We’ve had such a wet cool summer, the slugs are a nightmare.

I wanted to get some reading done too, but it’s late here now!

Anyway, tomorrow I need to start on the edits. No more time to put it aside. But I needed to empty my mind of my own story. I did think the last four chapters I did on Friday were pretty good. I’m sure muse was at work, because I had that lovely experience of writing something and being surprised, in a where-did-that-come-from? way. Wonderful!

But the problem with that is , I’m too close to it. The early chapters will be easier to edit, because I have a week or so of distance from when I wrote them. The last chapters – not so much. So the glamour and the love of my own words and the ooh-aren’t-I-clever will still be stronger than is helpful.

I really need my CPs to rip into this one hard for me.

And I need to be without ego in the process. I need to be honestly willing to admit where my work sucks. Sometimes that global “My story is crap” is a cover for very deep pride in it. And partially, that’s justified. Anyone who’s completed a first draft has done something so many other people who dream of writers but don’t put in the work will never do. But it’s also a trap. Because it stops us looking at what is really there. Finishing first draft is only half the writing process.

Now I need to lose my love of what I’ve written and examine it honestly, with a surgeon’s eye. There are parts that needing cut out. There are parts that need repair work, sometimes just  cosmetic surgery, sometimes deeper more structural work (orthopaedics, to stretch the surgery analogy!).

The story, as it is now, is not fit for reading by anyone else. It’s full of typos. It’s full of cliches, where I just grabbed the first easy way of saying something so looking for a better way to say it didn’t slow me down. There are some places where my words are just plain clunky. There are too many repetitions, I know I do that a lot. And there are places where because I understood what was going on, what the character was doing and why they did what they did, I didn’t explain it enough to the reader.

 There are other places where I didn’t have a clue why the character did what they did, I just knew they did so I wrote it and hoped I’d get the reason why later! Well, I have those reasons now, a whole little scene for the heroine came in yesterday’s morning pages, and the hero’s motivation will be just a matter of sprinkling in a few additional sentences here and there.

Word count will be my biggest issue. This is supposed to be a very short novella, ten to fifteen k. what I have tips in at closer to twenty, before I add the extra material!

Eep!

So some serious word cutting is needed. All my repetitions. All my redundant words. Sentence structure needs tweaking to trim words (often a good way to eliminate passive voice, too, I’ve noticed). Any scenes or parts of scenes which don’t do enough to move the story forward need to go.

That will be the biggest challenge. This is essential a date story, with characters who superficially are complete opposites but under that are very similar. Neither of them want a relationship. They’ve just agreed to a series of very specific dates. So the conflict is in the push-pull of the developing relationship. The pull of their deep Essences calling them to each other, the push of the superficial Identity keeping them apart. I’m not sure that’s enough.

We’ll see.

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