Monday, June 21, 2021

My New Project (2021)

One of my guilty pleasures is reading romance novels. I have favorite authors and series, but I'll read passably edited self-published digital work as well. Admittedly, this is a waste of time. But maybe... maybe it's research?

An idea came to me mid-winter. An idea for a romance novel. A reverse Notting Hill, where the famous movie star is British and is rescued and enchanted by a book-loving American gal. During a Minnesota snowstorm. I ran with it and spent Christmas vacation of 2020 and January-February of 2021 collecting ideas, creating my protagonists and their world, and digging into the characters' psyches with a goal of actually having character arcs from the get-go. It was distracting, indulgent, energizing work. 

And then the defunct spring musical sprang back to life. I had to choose a direction; with the time-consuming demands of teaching both face-to-face and distance learning simultaneously (a fresh hell), there was room for just one creative endeavor in my life. I couldn't imagine not being a part of the musical, so I chose that direction. By the time it ended, my focus was on graduation activities and the romance was pushed so far to the back of my head I had literally forgotten the characters' names. 

But now it is June. Summer. My time.

First, I printed all my notes from last winter. Aha! Elly Calder. That's your name! Or Charlie. I was thinking about changing it. And Eddie Ashton-Clarke. Plus all your cohorts and family. There you are.

After reacquainting myself with the world of Hartley, Minnesota, I reread Jessica Brody's Blake Snyder-inspired Save the Cat! Writes a Novel to reacquaint myself with his beat system of outlining a plot. 


Next comes the actual outlining. I had solid progress working off a well built outline for SPOTD, so that's the plan. Lio and Lamb probably suffered a bit because I outlined less, unsure of exactly where the story was going. I had a double column day progression excel sheet at one point, but it was more reactive than pre-organized and mostly built to help me follow separated characters over time.

Then it'll be off to the races! For the first time, I'll be using Microsoft 365 instead of installed software. The dynamism of Word + the device sharing of Google Docs? Yes, please. 

I have two favorite bits in the new series. The first is where the female protagonist lives. Instead of a row-house with a striking blue door, Elly (for now) lives in a white farmhouse in Minnesota's rural lake country. It's based on a farmhouse I visited last summer when I was considering a premature end to my teaching career and a move closer to family. I fell in love with the house, but I realized the timing for such a drastic move was wrong. Using it as my character's home was a way to own it without buying it. 

There are very few parallels between my first series (middle grade modern fantasy), my second series (YA traditional fantasy in a created world), and this piece (contemporary romance). And yet, one major inspiration for each was a physical space. For SPOTD, it was the barn at the end of the street where Chase lived. For Lio and Lamb, it was castles. And for Dash Away, it is the farmhouse. 

My second delight is Eddie's imdb.com filmography list. It was delightful imagining a sort of Downton Abbey meets Bridgewater series that has made Eddie famous, although that fame was disrupted by the pandemic. I based the series off actual historical figures from a precise time and place, bringing together people who may or may not have actually met in the 1800's England. 

And nearly as fun to work out was Eddie's next move, which involves one of my favorite London performance spaces, the outdoor theater in Regent's Park. Even though I won't be visiting London again until travel is less fraught and shows have returned to the West End, at least I can visit in my mind. 

Monday, March 23, 2020

Renaming


I think I have stumbled upon a half decent comp for the first novel in my new series: It’s my Martha Kent story. Imagine Martha Kent if Jonathan had wanted to turn over the alien baby to the authorities, and she went on the lam to keep Kal El/Clark safe. In a medieval fantasy world.




This brings me to my topic:

CHARACTER NAMES (symbolic)

When I teach archetypal criticism, we discuss character names quite a bit. I have the students take notes on various ways that authors use names on a deeper level. Then we check for them when we meet new characters. Here's my list, with a few examples.

# 1
Names that are words, with denotative and connotative meanings. "Sweetie Pie" is adorably lovable and loves Opal instantly in DiCamillo's "Because of Winn Dixie". Porter's "Granny Weatherall" is old (and dying) after "weathering all" of life's hardships. In The Lord of the Rings series by Tolkein, "Grima Wormtongue" uses his tongue (language) to worm (burrow) Saruman's messages into King Theoden's ears, with quite grim consequences. "Cinderella" cleans her stepmother's hearth, getting "little cinders/ashes" all over herself. Disney's "Scar" has psychological scars from not being the king, and literal scars on his left eye.

It helps to know some foreign words (or to look them up). Two quick Shakespeare examples: "Benvolio" wishes good things for his cousin Romeo, while "Malvolio" wishes bad things for Toby Belch.  The legendary "Tristan" is destined to be "sad." I could go on all day...

Sometimes, a character is so indelible, his very name becomes a word with connotative meanings. Case in point: The miser, Ebenezer Scrooge. 

So, class, you don't know why Alice Walker picked "Myop" for the name of her young heroine in "The Flowers?" Look it up! Does the naive character see the world in a nearsighted way? Does that change? Because...

# 2 
Irony.

As Thomas Foster is keen to repeat, irony is an author's trump card. It's delicious!

# 3 
As are, of course, allusive names. You know quickly what a character is like (or not like: IRONY) or have been given a heads-up about what kind of journey she is about to go on when names recall other characters or historical people. I like to play a little game with my students. Who is referenced?

Scrooge McDuck? (We start easy!)

Anyone named Juliet, Sherlock, Pollyanna, Jack, Gretel, Alice, Alexander, Diana, Jesus, Mary, Samson, Delilah, Abraham (double dose of reference!), Noah, Adam, Eve... You get the idea. Knowing Shakespeare, Greek myths, fairy tales, and one's Bible really helps.

So when Jafar's hench-parrot is named Iago, it's not an accident. (I usually have to explain that one, which is easy because I have an 8' mural of Othello and Iago on my classroom wall.)

Just for fun, we usually spend a moment considering the name Harry, which now alludes to a certain boy wizard. But for Rowling and all the British kids reading about Harry's adventures for the first time, his name must have evoked Prince Hal (eventually Henry V) from history class and Shakespeare's version of the Hundred Years' War. Even if Rowling picked the name just because she liked it, that resonance is there. And it couldn't be more perfect.

#4
The lack of a name may have deeper meaning. Nameless characters are often generalized, anonymous representations of struggles that all of us endure. Or characters without names are being dehumanized... When one character refuses to learn another character's name, or refuses to call them the correct name, or uses a belittling nickname rather than a given one, that character is demeaned. It can also dehumanize a character to refer to him by his title alone. He becomes his job, not a full person. This extends to women who are referred to only as Mrs. [surname of her husband]. 

Finally,

#5
When a character's name changes, it marks a change in character. 

That seems too simple, too obvious. And a good author will handle this name change business subtly. We read several short stories where the main female characters are defined first in reference to their husbands: Mrs. Marroner. Mrs. Mallard. Mrs. Hale. They do not "earn" their own names (Marion, Louise, Martha) until they gain control of their personhood and are no longer purely defined in relation to someone else/their husbands.

Digging deeper, why do two of these three random characters' names start with MAR?

It's right there in #3: allusion to Mother Mary, the spotlessly perfect mother. The chosen one.

BACK TO LIO AND LAMB...

When I started writing Lio and Lamb's backstory (Haven), I needed a name for their mother. For several important plot reasons, I didn't want her to be too lovely, and I picked a name that I didn't like much to reflect her physical plainness: Thora. It's not a bad name. Thora Birch is a lovely actress. And there's some irony in naming a fairly powerless, southern islander after the Norse god Thor.

But the more I got to know her, the more I realized that she wasn't an ugly girl, or even plain. She had just been isolated too much as a child, so no one had told her she was beautiful. No one was there to say it.

The name I've been using for almost two years started to grate on me. I would type the letters, knowing that they were bound to disappear one day in the twelve seconds it takes to do a Find>Replace all.

When I realized my comp, that this is my Martha Kent story, it hit me. I had been using the name Marjaana for Thora's mother, a minor character who doesn't even appear in the story. I could steal that more lovely, resonant name for my main character.

I love that her name holds the traditional MAR, as her key role in the overall story is being my main characters' mother.

In twelve seconds, it was done.





  

Saturday, January 25, 2020

Feeling Capable

As a writer, there are days I feel so clever and legit. Those are the days I allow myself to imagine an end to the day job (and all the correcting of others’ writing that being a full time  language arts teacher entails) and the beginning of a full time writing career that takes me into my retirement years.

I see myself sitting on panels and playing goofy games on stages at cons. I picture myself wearing “Presenter” badges all across America (instead of "Attendee" badges). I picture my agent and a publishing deal and seeing my books on the end shelves at Target.

Then there are days I feel like a dense sham. I suspect my work is okay, even good. But all of those pie-in-the-sky dreams feel out of reach. Silly, even.

Alas.

For the third year, I am keeping track of my writing life in this journal: 


It starts with several pages of reflection and goal setting, which I like. I have to admit, my pattern is to overestimate the amount of work I'll do in a year. By the end of the year, I will have finished my January-February writing goals. But the outline of the story I've made each year has worked as a roadmap. I'm on the path, moving in the right direction, and I know where I'm headed. I just don't make the progress my optimistic January self thinks is possible. 

This year, my main writing goals are:

* To finish draft 1 of Lio and Lamb: Haven
I had hoped to accomplish this in January and February, as March and April will be filled with the spring musical. But January is almost done and the musical has already started. It might be my summer goal.

* To refine my character arcs
"Refine" actually means "make them happen." Thanks to a class I took at The Loft last November/December, I have some good ideas jotted down. Right now, my characters are too similar. Probably too much like me, to be honest. I need to complicate and gunk and weird them up. 

* Deep revision on Aco
I need to use the advice  Matt Bialer offered in his critique to do more than surface level revision. I'll concentrate on making decisions about POV characters, examining chapter length, and introducing the main plot more clearly/earlier. He also voiced an interest in a small, throwaway detail that I've decided to amp up in the earlier volumes so it will resonate later.

With hope, I will move along the path toward my goals and feel even more capable when I fill out my goals for 2020-2021. 




Saturday, January 4, 2020

A New Website

Sometimes I feel competent when it comes to technology. Sometimes I don't.

For many years, I had a simple website at snowmoonpublishing.com to share SPOTD with the world. I built the site on iWeb, bought my domain name from GoDaddy, and had it hosted through iPage. More than once I had problems getting GoDaddy and iPage to work together, but with a little patience and grit, I figured it out.

Somehow, at some point, everything stopped working. And I no longer had the patience to fix it.

Over this Christmas break, I finally decided to do something about my lack of professional web presence. The least "banging-my-head-against-the-wall" solution seemed to be starting from scratch. So I bought my name as a URL and set up web hosting -- both products from the same company this time.

There was a definite learning curve as I built the site using WordPress. But an afternoon's work was all it took to get a basic site live.

Ta-da!




Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Thanksgiving

What???!?! It's not Thanksgiving, it's New Year's Eve.

Yeah, but the end of the year is a great time to be thankful. Besides, I wrote this post a month ago but never posted it. Out with the old, as they say.

Jump on the metaphorical TARDIS with me, and let's visit November, 2019...

NOVEMBER, 2019

Nanowrimo. It was fantastic. I admit, it wasn't my most successful as far as writing new words or writing every day. As usual, book club did me in. But I did (mostly) revise and (minimally) draft 45,000 words.

The reason it was so great is this: I found my ending!

During a Writing Excuses podcast, I have no idea which one, Mary Robinette Kowal advocated for the writing of short stories, if only because it forces a writer to write endings. And the panelists agreed.

Additionally, they said that it is better to finish works, even poor ones, than to leave them undone, because that is how you learn how to write endings. And I completely agree.

I felt great after finishing Aco this summer. In fact, it was a high from which I did not recover well. After I found and drafted that ending, I revised (minimally) for the rest of the summer. I wrote very little new material. I sent it off to my alpha reader and shifted attention to my day job. Until November and Nanowrimo.

So today was Thanksgiving. I was stuffed and bored with watching television. Most of the extended family had gone home many hours before. Knowing that there were only three days left in the month (and in Nanowrimo 2019), I decided to at least work on my outline for the final chapters of Haven…

And VOILA! Several important plot twists practically wrote themselves. Each event led to the next, inexorably and inevitably. The direction I thought it would go? Wasn’t how it went. And I’m pretty happy with how it went. Still a little jiggling and chapter POV manipulating to do. But it’s there.

I remember getting to this point last July and feeling capable. Not brilliant, just capable. It’s a good feeling. I am thankful for it.

DECEMBER 31, 2019

Now I'm in the throes of making that ending happen. Christmas break was lovely, with lots of time for writing. I added around 7000 words to the draft and have roughly outlined the final chapters. If I can keep going in January, I'll have complete drafts of two volumes in the new series. They'll both need work, especially character work, but the stories will be there.

Looking back, I am pleased with my progress this year.
Looking forward, I am excited to continue the Lio and Lamb series.

Full of thanks, I sign off for 2019.






Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Writing Books

One shelf in my library is devoted to books on the craft of writing. As an instructor, it's easy to justify their purchase. As an author, it's easy to justify their purchase. As a fan of so many writers, who eventually share their writing wisdom with the world, it's easy to justify their purchase.

But the truth is, I haven't read most of them.

These are my two most recent additions:


I bought the Warren because of (digital) cookies. After perusing it at Amazon, it kept popping up on my entry page. I had looked "inside the book" and copied from it a short list of character questions that I wanted to answer for my own characters, and I felt beholden. Also, that subtitle is brilliant. What's the "one powerful question"? I simply must know.

But I've had the book for three weeks now, and I haven't opened it to find out. 




I bought the Nanowrimo young writer's guidebook because I have an enthusiastic student interested in writing his first novel. It is VERY geared toward the novice, young writer, which fits him well. During class, I have to ask him to put it away and rejoin our classwork. So, yeah. He's thirsty. 

I know this: Even though (most days) I feel accomplished as a purveyor of words, there is much to be learned. 

Maybe I'll dive in this weekend.







Saturday, September 21, 2019

The Season's Harvest









Tomatoes have been picked, sunlight hours are growing noticeably shorter, and my day job has resumed. It's already past Labor Day, the unofficial end of summer. Seems like a good time to consider the "labor" that occurred this past season.

I had a decent summer of writing. Better than most. Spending my fun money on house repairs rather than travel and feeling the internal pressure to have more to show an agent kept me focused.

June was my most productive, with 18,600 words written and the first draft of a novel (Aco) revised and finished. I wrote for 4+ hours each day, which added up nicely.

July was okay, with another draft (Haven) mostly revised, though left without an ending (for now).

August FLEW by, and I didn't make as much progress as I planned or hoped. It doesn't help that my day job recommenced exactly halfway through the month. My most satisfying accomplishment was listing out my chapters, with POV and summaries, in an effort to see the chronologies of Queenswood and Storm side by side. After fixing some of the timing, it does look like I will be able to switch back and forth between storylines without too much confusion for the reader.

Goals for this fall:

I am hoping in September and October to finish revising Haven. As I work, I'll weave Queenswood and Storm together to see if they gel. Then in November, when my students are finished with their writing workshop, I can make a final push to write the ending. It may be a Nanowrimo year.

The middle volume will probably have to wait for 2020. But we'll see. It doesn't have a name yet, though there are various large concepts that define parts of it... Overall, I still call it "the middle book," "the quest section," or "the coming of age part." Wolf, Burn, and Crossing are potential section titles.

I'd also like to watch more Masterclass videos, as I'm a full member right now but not taking advantage of the masters' expertise. I've watched all of Aaron Sorkin's brilliant videos but only dabbled in Baldacci, Patterson, and Gaiman.

Personally, I am working on more restful sleep (a new mattress is helping immensely) and daily exercise (I've made my step goal ten days in a row, which is a record). I should also have a goal of eating less bread, but the BLTs are too tempting of late.




It's important to enjoy the fall harvest, however lean or fattening.