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~ We hunt the white whale, and we'll no be goin' back!

The Salamander's Quill

Category Archives: Observation

A Good Writing Day – Again On Routine

26 Tuesday Jul 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in JulNoWriMo, Observation, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

Before I begin my writing sessions for today, I thought I’d warm-up my fingers and de-fog my 5:30 am mind with a blog-entry/note on my routine that others may find interesting or at least comparative. What follows is a somewhat typical day. I was behind where I wanted to be goal wise in the number of words written.  I wanted 3k a day but was down by about 5.5k altogether. This is doable in a day for most, especially some of you amazing word factories who can really crank out the words. For me, it was a challenge because of the way I write. I am a more deliberate writer that most. I have a hard time simply writing as much as possible for volume’s sake. I can’t work that way as it’s too far beyond my comfort level for many reasons.

First, I feel that if I pay as much attention as I can to grammar, punctuation and usage while I compose, the job of revision and editing is then made that much easier. Don’t get me wrong, I am charging through, but old habits, especially the good ones, die hard and this is one I don’t want to lose.

Second, I have habit of developing background materials, my blessing or my bane either one. A thorough and complete background on a character, place, organization, culture or item makes it that much easier for me to compose. I feel I write my stories more quickly and confidently with a well developed background to support it. Now, what is ironic about this is that I’m probably writing just as many words when I pause to develop background material as I would simply powering on and later making all kinds of logic corrections and additions later on. It is also true that I am making changes as I compose that sometimes render my background material moot, but like I said, it’s all about comfort level.

Third, I do re-read and revise. I don’t do anything major, but repeated words or logic problems are like tiny burs under the saddle of my writing horse. They’re no real big deal, but they worry me nonetheless. I’ll move a sentence, or if it’s a major problem and rather prickly, I’ll simply rewrite the whole passage. I won’t erase so much as strike-out text to keep the numbers accurate. I know I’m going to have a major re-write session when I’m done with the first draft in which I start at the beginning and revise the whole shebang to catch such problems, but, like I insinuated before: a ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure in terms of time and makes my writing sessions more enjoyable.

What follows is a timeline of my day yesterday. It isn’t necessarily typical as it’s a summer writing day while on vacation and I was desperate to get my numbers back, but it is what I consider for me to be a Zen-like “good writing day.” Maybe some of  you will see yourselves in it, others will realize there is no “perfect” way and still others will have their own writing routines affirmed—“I like my way better! This guy is crazy!”

05:55 – Rise a little late; start coffee; feed dogs and cats; clean cat-shit 😦 ; check emails; check forums; shop Pipers’ Dojo and Acheltibuie Bagpipe specialists; grab coffee; let dogs out.

06:49 – Writing Session One: 531 words

07:31 – Coffee warm up; stretch (rather drowsy); check out Rosie O’Grady’s Highlanders site as promised

07:52 – Writing Session Two: 638 words + research on birth-defects and genetics

09:05 – Wife is up :-); coffee break with her; discuss birth-defects (she is a nurse-practitioner); visit Jake Powning, sword-smith’s site for research; text exchange with my brother

09:53 – Writing Session Three: 516 words

11:05 – Early lunch; phone conversation with Lexie

11:46 – Writing Session Four: 408 words; I’m fighting the urge to take a nap

12:37 – Give up for a bit and take a reading break; make a trip to store for groceries; make smoothies; clean-up kitchen

14:09 – Writing Session Five: 1,954 words; high-five myself

17:05 – Trip to store with my wife; prep dinner; make appetizers

17:40 – Writing Session Six: 375 words

18:07 – Dinner; watch Torchwood with the wife; clean kitchen; play with the dogs; prep for bed (comfort)

20:40 – Bagpipe Practice; check emails

21:42 – Writing Session Seven: 801 words

22:40 – Crash

By the end of the day, I was seriously tiered, for as most of you know, writing is hard work, especially when you try to add “living life” to the mix. For those of you doing the math, you probably noted I’m still a bit down on my goals by 777 words. Today’s goal therefore is 3777, and I’m off to see if I can have another good writing day.

Originally posted in the now deleted “Marchers of Khaldenthea” blog and The Salamander’s Quill 1.0

I…I Got Better

18 Monday Jul 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in JulNoWriMo, Observation, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

I got too it and just wrote until things started to make sense and did 2,417 words on “The Kevodran.” It’s still nearly 2708 words behind schedule, but if I stay on target from here on out at 2000 a day, plus say 200 more, I’ll make the JulNoWriMo goal of 50k+. I’ll pat myself on the back having confirmed I can stay with one subject and crank out that many manuscript words.

I need to tighten up the writing routine though. If I don’t, more interruptions will intrude: birthdays, leaky ponds, etc. All of these things are legitimate concerns and need my attention, but so does my writing. Too long I’ve allowed others to dictate my writing routines and habits and as a result I have none. I have nothing but the hunger to want to do it and the guilt for failing. Case in point, I signed up for the AugNoWriMo. I have only two weeks in August and that is putting it nicely as I’ve got to go out to school and work during those last two weeks. If I don’t have a tight strict writing schedule, the school year will start and all my efforts will have gone to waste as academic demands once again eclipses my literary dreams. If I can finish convincing myself that I can sit and crank out 2000 in three hours, I might be able to carry on after August 16th. The sitting alone part in the quiet just me and the ‘puter’s blank page is no problem; it’s not answering the tiny distractions that bug and juggling the big distractions I can’t avoid (job, home, family and other passions) that robs my writing.

13-days and counting to build a fortress that will protect this vulnerable habit from the howling horde of high school don’t-give-a-shits (both student and staff) that will kill it. I’m planting my flag, here and now! I must write. If I cannot write in a significant way, I’ll have to learn to live without doing it. I cannot daily witness the love of my life, my most beautiful muse taken from me by barbarians. Better to move on and give it up than to go insane with frustration and have my dreams abused for yet another year.

Originally posted in the now deleted “Marchers of Khaldenthea” blog and The Salamander’s Quill 1.0

Losing It

18 Monday Jul 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in Observation, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

Since Thursday last, I’ve been out of it, writing very little, a few thousand words at most on stuff that isn’t my manuscript–like this. I’m not stuck. I have ideas. I just have little motivation. All I seem to want to do is sleep. I wonder if I’m in Postpartum Potter depression, or simply overwhelmed at how impossible it seems to get published. Well, I guess I need a finished manuscript before I can let that start bothering me, now don’t I?! Thus, mildly depressed, in the writing doldrums and feeling sorry for myself as a writer…all of which means I need to shut the hell up and start writing on my manuscript.

Originally posted in the now deleted “Marchers of Khaldenthea” blog and The Salamander’s Quill 1.0

My Gloriously Flawed Writing Routine

14 Thursday Jul 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in Observation, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

My writing routine is a bit problematic. It’s not that I don’t have one. Oh no. I have a writing routine; indeed I do. The problem is the routine! It’s not the routine I want. It’s not the routine I need. Rather it is a dishonest routine that reinforces mediocrity, hardens bad habits and as a result, showcases my compositional insincerity and bolsters my less than spectacular output. Let me describe it for you.

For the most part, my laptop is the medium of choice on which to compose, but I take/make notes, play with names, compose outlines, make story maps or plot centered ‘blue prints’ in subject specific hand-written journals from time to time as well.

My favorite environment by far is my wonderful personal home library—a room dedicated to books and writing with easy chairs, reading lamps, filled to bursting book shelves, a huge desk, doors that close, internet access, multiple outlets and a large 145 pound Irish wolfhound/Great Pyrenees mix thrown in to make one feel rather…ehm…lordly. I am extremely lucky to have such a refuge and because of it, I don’t need to go to the local coffee shop to get my writing ‘groove’ on. The kitchen and coffee pot are but steps away. Speaking of which…

Music is not a premium requirement for me. Though both the computer and stereo in the room have wonderful sound. I have no problem with the silence having grown up without ipods, mp3-players, iphones, smartphones, unmonitored T.V. etc. I know some of my students are seriously tech-dependant and must have background noise to function productively as that’s the way they’ve conditioned themselves. For me, I work better in the silence, or at most with Baroque music playing very softly in the background, as it allows me to ‘hear’ my characters more clearly and ‘listen’ to my inner muse more attentively.

I have a natural rhythm when I’m in the groove and things are good. I usually have two documents open: an outline and the manuscript. I work much better when I have an outline. Sometimes these outlines are extremely detailed, so much so that often they evolve organically into manuscripts themselves. At other times, the outline is but barebones and as I work on my manuscript, the outline builds and becomes more detailed as I add notes and make changes.

I usually set a goal for myself and my writing session: this scene, that character encounter, a set number of words or section in an outline. I write for about 30 minutes to an hour, or about 500 to 600+ words, and then seem to need a break. If I’m being honest and true, this break lasts but a few minutes: bathroom, more coffee, water or a snack, check a reference here or there. At most I might play some exercises on my bagpipe practice chanter—maybe a tune or two—while my mind is subconsciously working over a scene, character or just ‘what comes next?’, then it’s back to it for the next 30 minute/hour long session. Thus, in the summer time, on weekends or during vacation, I hammer for three to six honest hours in a series of sessions.

If I’m not careful however,—and this is where things get just plain ugly—more often than not it becomes a long break filled with email, forum checking, Internet shopping, blogging, eating in front of the T.V., skimming the pool, practicing my bagpipes, phone calls, minor writing, re-organizing files, starting the wash (which I need to do), a trip to the store, etc. When I do get back to it, I find I have “wasted” more time than I “invested” in writing. My sessions end up truncated like plants without enough sun or water and before I know it, I’ve lost a whole day. I’m grouchy and grumpy for the rest of the day.

More than once I’ve made handwritten logs of my activities during my “writing time.” If I am honest and list everything down, from bathroom to book reading, it is a dismaying exercise in self-examination. I have come to the conclusion that it isn’t the dogs; it isn’t the phone; it isn’t family; it isn’t other legitimate interests; it isn’t my profession; it isn’t my spirituality; it isn’t even the internet; it’s me. I am my own worst enemy and to make things even more ironic, I have trained myself to be so.

I joined the JulNoWriMo to see if I could instill a new habit and write not so much a novel as a decent working manuscript—I think the term ‘novel’ is used a bit too casually, but I won’t go there in this post. I wanted to see if I could actually write 50k+ in a concentrated space of time and based on the experience honestly evaluate if I have the dedication required to farm and husband a manuscript into something that might be worthy of refining into a novel. I’m happy to say things are close to being on track word-count wise, but I am dismayed at the obvious weaknesses that have risen to the surface in my less than dedicated and productive routine. Fortunately, it is a conclusion I suspected all along and realize there is no magic to writing other than plain honest, and sometimes ruthlessly, hard work. If I want to produce…honestly become a published author…I need to make a serious change. Otherwise I’m no less spinning my wheels now as when I write at any other time and casually approach it. I have a deep seeded feeling that it is the lack of an honest and productive routine that separates the wannabes from the writers and ultimately the published authors.

Luckily I have 15 more days in which to write and observe, to attempt to “ruthlessly” weed out the self-distractions and instill a more sound work ethic and productive writing routine. I have to, because in mid-August school starts again and I’ll have to re-adjust the whole damn opera! LOL!

P.S. That was 1003 word which might have been better spent adding to my manuscript word count! Oh, I mean 1020, er 1023—ah, oh never mind!

Originally posted in the now deleted “Marchers of Khaldenthea” blog and The Salamander’s Quill 1.0

Why Are They All So Young?

10 Sunday Jul 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in Observation, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

Things are changing. The Autumn Leaves are still out on the Sundancian. The raid on the shipyards will have to wait a bit longer. I’m presently in the 10th day of the July Novel Writing Month and am happy to report that things are progressing nicely toward the 50k word-count mark unlike last year’s disaster. I wanted to do 60k and still may, but if I only get to 50, I’ll consider it a victory. I have no illusions or delusions of grandeur, so I won’t honor 50k with the appellation of “novel.” Even “novella” is a stretch in the true Decameronian sense of the word.

The story, “The Kevodran” is set in the same world and in generally the same time frame as “Marchers.” Its genesis was as a final in a Fairy Tales class I just finished in June. I wrote close to 12,000 words of it before July and since the start of the NoWriMo added nearly 17,000. I have a feeling, however, that this particular story will be done as a first draft long before the end of the month and before the 50k mark. If that is the case, then I’ll shift gears and pick up a story I started for my Fairy Tales mid-term in December of ’10, “The Three Moon Maidens” which will close out the word requirement nicely. It too is set in the same milieu, albeit a little earlier in the timeline.

Why the short stories? I don’t know. It could be because I can’t think of how to get the equivalent of an ancient army across a countryside prepared for war without being detected. I keep thinking of reasons the plot won’t work…everything from supply problems to the rationalization for why citizen farmers from another city-state…on the far side of a very tall mountain chain no less…would be even remotely tempted to invade a country that boasts a professional legion. I don’t really know. I just know where my heads at and it’s in Anchetai’s Royal Tomb complex on the Heluj’jin Plateau with the Kevodran Efrahm of the Hailahss and the irreverent Selt the tomb robber.

I have an observation to make about the JulNoWriMo. Actually I have more than one, but as they are all pretty cranky, I’ll curtail the rant and field just this one: why are they all so bloody young? Why in the hell are none of them born after ’91? I swear, its HOL all over again: I’m the old guy. I won’t talk to them. I mean they call 50k a novel. Holy-crap! Do they realize that Homer’s Iliad is 140k? JKR’s HP and the Order of the Phoenix was over a quarter of a million words? J.R.R.T.’s The Lord of the Rings a cool 470k? And the Bible, an amazing million words! And they call 50K a “novel.” Many of them even claim more than one novel. Few if any seem to have revised or edited their RDs into something better.

I guess maybe it has a lot to do with not having limits. God Bless ’em no one told them how ridiculous is sounds to claim over 100,000 words in less than 10 days! And that’s why they do it.

Originally posted in the now deleted “Marchers of Khaldenthea” blog and The Salamander’s Quill 1.0

I think it is raining in Khaldenthea

07 Wednesday Jul 2010

Posted by André J. Powell in Disgusted, Observation, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

“The cohort stands ready, m’lord. The wagons are assembled; the livestock are prepared. The invasion force but awaits your command.”

Wouldn’t that be peach?

The reality of it is I am most decidedly not ready. My research is not finished and my reading is not done.  My month has been compromised. Too many interruptions have occurred and are pending; in an hour and 48 minutes I’ll be at the SCOE for a second day of the HOLT training seminar. The time is not right and I am just not a writer.

I suppose though that is exactly what really is…if I allow it to.

“Your focus determines your reality.”

The “time” will never be right and I am a writer. For crying out loud, what have I been doing all summer if not writing? I’ve just not been writing what I hoped to.

Oh shut up and just write…

Originally posted in the now deleted “Marchers of Khaldenthea” blog and The Salamander’s Quill 1.0

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A wanna-be writer and sometime poet trying to live, love and learn as much as I can with the time I have left.

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