I haven’t been posting much, and I haven’t mentioned writing in a while, so here’s a quick update. The novel edit is on hold right now. I need to rethink my approach. There are some problems, and I have a good feeling what they are, but I’m not sure how to fix them yet. Every time I’m sitting still for 10 seconds to think about it someone gives me something to do. So I’m working on other writing related tasks. I’m doing world-building work for another novel, and I’m writing some short stories set in that world to help flesh some things out.
Category: Untitled (1st)
My first novel
Life, the Universe, and Chapter 12
Everything has been way too hectic of late. Family, work, writing, you name it. I’ve been overwhelmed, and not overly motivated these past few weeks, but I’m hoping to change that starting now.
I need to come up with a schedule for finishing this draft. Writing as time permits is pretty much a recipe for me to be lazy about it. It seems I need a deadline of some kind. I did some fairly major rewrites of Chapter 12, but I now need an entirely new chapter to stick between 12 and 13.
Chapter 11 Done
My new glasses came in. I haven’t adjusted to them enough to move around without feeling disoriented, but I can look at the computer again more comfortably. I finished up revisions on Chapter 11, and I just heard the garage door, so it’s time to go help with the groceries (as soon as I kick off the backup).
Chapter 10 done
I’m hoping my new glasses come in soon so I can pick up the pace, but I managed to finish up to the end of Chapter 10 this morning.
2005 Year End Clearance
Date: Wed, 31 Dec 2003
00:00:54 -0500
From: Jason Penney <...>
To: Jason Penney <...>
Subject: story idea
an epic battle/war is tearing apart the land. A small time thief
sees his opportunity to make good, but becomes involved in helping
a refugee family (maybe just some kids?)
I found this email earlier this week. I have a lot of these ‘story idea’ emails, but this one is the novel I’ve been working on since shortly after sending this to myself two years ago today. I’m slightly less than half way done my second draft, and while the story has changed with time, I can still see how I got from there to here.
I’ve been a writer most of my life. When I was younger I sort of just assumed that you learned to read, learned to write, and then wrote down the stories in your head, and that’s how books were made. Today, I’m still pretty sure that’s how it’s supposed to work, but three years ago I didn’t feel that way. That type of thinking was schooled out of me. I never stopped writing, but I really forgot about writing books.
Throughout high school I wrote poetry. Lots. Every emotion I
felt hit the paper while it was still fresh. I probably wrote four
or more hours a day. I have stacks of notebooks filled with the
stuff (which are fading away because I can only write long hand in
pencil). Inside these notebooks I can find a few first chapters or
unfinished short stories. I never stopped wanting to write fiction,
but I stopped believing I could (or maybe that I should). After
high school the writing mostly stopped. A few ideas here and there,
and the occasional poem, but mostly nothing.
Sometime in 2003 I decided to take this whole writing thing more seriously. I worked on short stories a few nights a week. Then, near the end of December in 2003 I found Mugging the Muse: Writing Fiction for Love AND Money by Holly Lisle. This free book on writing really got me going. It helped me organize my thoughts on being a writer, and commit myself to making it happen. I set out a series of goals and started working towards them.
Have I met them? Not exactly. I originally planned to write short stories for all of 2004, and try to have a draft of a novel done in 2008. Right at the end of 2003 Lazette Gifford posted on Forward Motion that she would be teaching a 2 Year Novel class. Moving from idea to completed novel over a two year period. I signed right up. So I missed my 2004 goals, but I’m ahead of things for my 2008 goal, so I figure I’ll call it progress and keep moving forward.
As 2005 winds to a close, I want to take this time to thank Holly and Zette. If it wasn’t for them I’d probably still be floundering around wondering how to get from A to B instead of making my way along the path. I also want to thank my wife, Denise, for being so supportive of my writing, even when she’s frustrated that I’d rather write than vacuum.
A bit of surgery, a bit of news
This morning I took Chapters 8 and 9, reshuffled the scenes, dropped some stuff, added some new stuff, and came out with three chapters worth of material. I feel that they all read better for it.
Yesterday I bought a new notebook and began tossing ideas around for my next book. Currently the plan is for another fantasy novel, but something quite different than the still untitled book I’m editing now. I’ll keep you posted.
Chapter 7 done
This morning I verified that the time line worked for chapter 6 and 6a. It didn’t, but it was a simple fix. I revised Chapter 7 and did the same for that. When I finish chapter 8 I’ll move on the the third set of clipped pages, which is something as far a progress goes.
Finished 6 and 6a
I found the natural place to split chapter 6 and finished revising both halves. I’ve labeled it 6a for now, assuming I’ll end up renumbering later anyhow.
More Progress
I’ve been doing some heavy shuffling of scenes to get them to fall into place. On the plus side, I think it’s made things more exciting. On the down side Chapter 6 now seems to be almost 9000 words long. It was already one of the longer chapters, and it now contains some of the sections I cut from earlier in the book. It’s not a huge deal. I just need to find the right place to split it.
Progress
I hoped to finish Chapter 6 this morning, but I went back over the first five chapters and plugged them into a calender to make sure all the times made sense. I had to make some adjustments, but now everything is falling into place where I had hoped.
