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2020: Week 34

(August 24 – 30)

Wrapped up a ten-day stretch of revisiting yet another old story this week. This is one I’ve already revisited once before, but somehow haven’t been able to get right—which is frustrating because I know there’s a good story in there.

This was another interesting editing process—a nip and tuck here, a lift and shift there. 

However, there were two things that changed significantly during this rewrite. The story in question is probably one of the most descriptive that I’ve ever written, but on rereading it I noticed that there were some sections that fell a little flat in comparison (most notably, the opening of the story!). So I’ve gone through and really pushed the prose to its limit. The story is not about language, but there is a subtext about communication which probably makes the wordiness an appropriate stylistic choice.

The other change was to the main character. In the original version of the story, he has a bit of a secret agenda. During this rewrite, it began to seem rather superfluous so plucked out those threads. I find this interesting because it slightly changes the dynamic of the story, but in an entirely non-destructive way. It’s almost as if it never needed to be there in the first place …

Perhaps the part of the process I’m most proud of is the two huge chunks I cut out that really slowed things down. It’s never easy to excise words that you’ve slaved over, but it’s always satisfying to step away, with your knife dropping fresh prose, and see that you’ve done the right thing.

2020: Week 33

(August 17- 23)

So it turns out that all the work on the ‘cave’ short story was worth it, as I found out this week that it’s being published by Kyanite Press. This is tremendously exciting: two stories published in one year, and both being projects that were written specifically for the eventual publishers. In fact, both of these stories are the first ones that have been picked up through submission (my previous credits are due to publishers stumbling across my self-published tales and making an offer).

While I’m under no illusions that this means I’m suddenly going to get everything published from now on, it may well encourage me to focus more on writing for specific submissions rather than just writing what comes into my head (although the two are not mutually exclusive, of course).

November update: don’t get too excited: Kyanite Press sadly ended up closing shop before this anthology could be released.

2020: Week 32

(August 10 – 16)

The writing continues to be a struggle this week. I effectively have three separate projects to work on, but I can’t seem to get my head properly stuck into any of them. Pretty sure the problem here is having three things to divide my attention, instead of just one to focus on. The trick is trying to figure out which one is demanding the loudest to be written, but they all seem to be on a par at the moment.

My three projects are:

  • A new short story, as mentioned last week;
  • Restructuring the penultimate chapter of the novel (the lot was a little lacking in oomph, so I’ve added some new bits – and I still need to finish the damn thing too)
  • Writing the final chapter of the novel (for which I’ve, insanely, decided to try something new and ambitious).

I’ve started on each of these, but I seem to keep flitting back and forth instead of getting properly stuck in. Will I end up picking just one? Which project will be the lucky candidate? Tune in next week to find out!

Or, maybe, not …

One good thing

One of my potential projects (the ‘new short story’) is starting to follow an interesting path this week. I’ve had this idea for a long while about a character who remains in their tiny apartment on the understanding that this is the only way to remain safe from a deadly plague. Yes, this has taken on a lot more resonance over the last few months!

The story then started to evolve around the idea that maybe the plague was long gone and is being co-opted as a means of keeping citizens under state control. While that was a fun idea last year, I’m not very comfortable writing it this year as I don’t want to give even the remotest shred of fictional credibility to people who are genuinely claiming that Covid is some sort of conspiracy.

But some of the ideas remained (and I won’t give them all away here) and began to take on an eeries sort of prescience when I started reading Nineteen Eighty Four this week (the Elderbeast is reading it for school, so I thought I’d join him). I’ve not read it before, and I’m only familiar with the broad concepts, but it turned out be exactly the sort of background reading I needed to help solidify some of the ideas in this story. Some of them proved to be quite uncanny: for instance, I was going to include TV screens in the main character’s apartment; and the character would maintain a suspicion that maybe they were also being used to observe her. Of course, it turns out there is something exactly like this in Nineteen Eighty Four.

I should add that my story is nothing like Nineteen Eighty Four, but it seems like the novel will be the perfect background reading to help me knock this one into the right shape.

2020: Week 31

(August 3 – 9)

It’s proving to be a very underwhelming writing week. Lots of oversleeping and missing my morning writing shift, lots of staring at screens. I’ve been plotting and planning the new short story. It’s one of those frustrating ones that’s there in my head, but I’m struggling to translate it into words. 

Also, the ideal plot structure has been evading me a little: I know what needs to happen in the story, just not the order in which they happen. I tried a little reverse plotting (starting at the end of the story and working backwards) which seems to have helped. The next problem is the style: should it be short and punchy? Wordy and descriptive? Slightly obscure with an unreliable narrator?

This one may require a little trial and error.

2020: Week 30

(July 27 – August 2)

I’ve had an idea for a new short story—which is not ideal, given I should really be focusing on finishing off the novel. It’s quite a compelling one though. It started off—sometime last year, in fact—as an interesting idea that didn’t have a compelling story attached. During the last week I stumbled across a different angle for it, one that finally got me quite interested in telling this story. 

Unfortunately, I didn’t have an ending. Well, I did have an ending but not one that was really enough of a payoff for the reader. Then, one night, the ending suddenly dropped into place—this time, one that really makes the rest of the story worth it. I actually got so excited by this idea that it kept me awake for a while thinking about it.

Now I just have to figure out how to write it.

And when.

And if …

2020: Week 29

(July 20 – 26)

Lots of work this week on the ‘cave’ story, which I actually managed to finish off and submit in time for that July 31 deadline. I did extensive editing, which was quite instructive. A lot of it turned out to involve switching between passive and active voices, and shifting tenses. I suspect a little homework in those shadowy grammatical areas might help me get some of these things right the first time around.

That said, writing is fluid, and part of the reason I enjoy editing is seeing how much the meaning and impact of a line can change just through altering a few words, or changing the order of sentences around.

2020: Week 28

(July 13 – 19)

I’ve taken yet another break from the novel in order to write a new short story. I’ve had this idea bouncing around for some time about an underground phenomenon that turns out to be a portal into another universe/dimension (but think Event Horizon more than Stargate). For at time, I was struggling to find the right setting and premise for the story–it ranged from undersea drilling, military operations, abandoned mines until–I finally remembered a visit to Giant’s Cave last year. That gave me the setting, and the premise slotted into place quite nicely after that.

It’s turning out to be a different kind of story for me. A bit of a slow burn, more about the place than the characters, and with not a whole lot of plot. It’s a fun challenge and I’m enjoying what I’ve come up with so far, though I’m going quite heavy on the edit.

This is for a submission deadline that’s happening on July 31, so fingers crossed I can get it done in time.

One good thing

I know I’ve been talking a lot more about things I’ve watched lately, rather than reflecting on things I’ve learned, or things I can improve, but I want to give a quick shout out to Relic, which is an amazing Australian horror film.

I won’t say too much about it as I don’t want to spoil it but it does an absolutely remarkable job of representing the horror of dementia. And it is bloody scary in the bargain.

2020: Week 27

(July 6 – 12)

This week I’ve continued with editing the real Chapter One of the novel (as opposed to the Prologue, a.k.a Fake Impostor Chapter One). There’s not a whole lot to say about this that I didn’t say last week, so if you didn’t read last week’s entry this is a really good moment for you to go and do just that.

One good thing

Last week I finally watched Hamilton (thank you Disney+, I bow down at your corporate all-media-consuming altar). I tried listening to the soundtrack last year, following in the eardrums of thousands before me, but I struggled to get into it and decided to ‘save’ it.

I’ve realised from this that I tend not to listen to music anymore—I just enjoy having it on in the background—and Hamilton is something that absolutely needs to be listened to. So, as soon as the film of the musical arrived I realised this was my … chance (sorry, just couldn’t go there). And now I have that visual reference, and the story, themes, characters, and setting locked in my memory, I’ve been listening to the soundtrack almost constantly.

Yes, I look almost fondly back on the days when I didn’t have one Hamilton song or another playing on constant repeat inside my head.

Anyway, while I think Hamilton is something that I could spend years studying and learning from, there were two main takeaways for me on this initial viewing. The first was a reminder that genre is not fixed. Hamilton switches effortlessly between musical genres, picking whichever one is appropriate for the mood/character/story beat at the time. The second is the wordplay. Part of the genius of Lin Manuel Miranda’s writing (and the delivery of the cast) is his ability to write dense layers of rhyme that play with but never stray from the meaning of his words. Furthermore, the structure of the rhyme isn’t imprisoned by the meter (e.g. the rhyme doesn’t always happen at the end of the line, as is traditional, nor do his sentences wrap up at the end of the line, instead but they break free and flow on and create an entirely new structure). It’s the sort of wordplay you don’t see/hear enough of. I’m not sure how I can use this to improve my writing, but I know that I want to … somehow.

2020: Week 26

(June 29 – July 5)

It’s been a slightly patchy writing week (mostly due to me coming down mildly sick at the end of it) but an interesting one. As you will doubtless know by now, I’ve embarked on some mid-week evening writing sessions which I’m using to edit the earlier chapters of my novel. Over the previous weeks I’ve been working on the Prologue (which would probably just be Chapter One in most books, but just let me do me). Meanwhile, in theory at least, the mornings are for me to continue writing the first draft of the closing chapters of the novel. In reality I’ve ended up getting more into the editing than expected.

It’s been a really interesting process; trying to stitch the start of the novel more firmly with the rest of it. When I started this project I had some reasonably good ideas about the characters; about where they start out, and what their journey through the narrative is. What has been surprising is discovering that the versions of these characters in the early chapters are actually quite different. I would have expected that the characters would develop and grow over the course of writing the novel, but what seems to have happened is that they’ve started from a very different point than (I thought) I had in mind. In many ways they’re both bolder and brasher than I realised; the characters are still the same, but turned up to 11.

Consequently there’s been quite a lot of stitching required, particularly in Chapter One (more so than the Prologue, because Chapter One is where my two main characters really start to interact and learn about each other). As part of this process, there are scenes that have been moved around wholesale from one end of the chapter to another. There are even moments where I’ve swapped the dialogue between the two characters (while noting that these characters are meant to have distinctly contrasting personalities).

Another advantage of going over these early chapters before I’ve even finished the first draft of the novel (and I’m so, so close to that now) is that it gives me plenty of room to play around with the ending if I need to—and, more importantly, it means that I’m excited to go back to the end now that I’ve revisited where these characters come from.

That being said, I’m equally excited about continuing this exploration of the early chapters so a little discipline will probably be required over the coming weeks if I’m to get any new words written.

Learned from …

This week I watched Death At A Funeral (the original version) and enjoyed it very much. However, I started wondering why it hadn’t been a bigger hit: it’s just as funny as Four Weddings And A Funeral, for example.

Then, in comparing the two films, I realised the answer. Four Weddings really takes you on a journey with the characters, even the supporting characters get moments where their lives change. Most of this is missing in Death At A Funeral. There is one character who gets a moment (finally standing up to her domineering father), while the others brush very, very close but don’t quite get there. 

As a consequence, the film, while perfectly enjoyable, becomes far more transient. You enjoy your time with the characters while you’re there, but very little of it sticks with you since you’ve not truly been on a journey with them. And it’s a shame, because all the building blocks are there, and all it would have taken is a few lines of dialogue here and there; a moment for each character to reflect, or to express what has changed for them.

Either way, I still recommend the film as it’s a blast: I just wish it had been a bit more than that.

2020: Week 25

(June 22 – 28)

I’ve decided to take a break from the novel and am instead revisiting a short story I first finished back in 2013. It was the second or third story that I wrote (following Graves and Colder Still), but I never truly felt that I’d gotten it right, hence it never got to sit on my Smashwords page alongside my other stories.

I won’t say that the problems (and solutions) jumped out at me right away, but there was one point where my ‘mind map’ of the story (the version of the narrative path that sits in my head) diverged quite significantly from what was already on the page. In short, there was a whole section in the story that I didn’t expect to find there. Naturally, this ended up being cut fairly swiftly, and the story is hopefully much stronger for it.

There has also been some minor knitting required at various points. I decided to change the secondary character’s progression through the story, which necessitated some story beats being shuffled around or omitted entirely.

I’m still not 100% convinced I’ve got the story right (though, in all honesty, I rarely am) but I’m hoping I’ve excised some of the more obvious errors and crafted a far more naturalistic version of this tale about a single mum finding a living skeleton in the local park …

One good thing

My good thing this week is that I’m getting a story published! Yes, I have been shortlisted for the KSP Writers’ Center annual spooky stories competition. Pretty exciting. 

One bad thing

My bad thing this week isn’t really a bad thing, tho it is a bad film. I decided to check out Io on Netflix as my Sunday night sci-fi. It wasn’t good, but films that fail to be good can still be interesting to study as it’s always useful to note what prevents a story from working.

In the case of Io, it came down to weak direction and an underdeveloped script for me. The film has a reasonably interesting idea, two great actors, and looks gorgeous. It reminded me very much of the sort of science fiction movies we’d have seen in the seventies (Silent Running, for example) where the idea is the big thing, and the character’s journey is what carries you through it.

In the case of Io, the idea alone isn’t strong enough to carry a story and there’s not enough else going on to maintain interest. A more developed script would have teased out stronger characterisation, or drawn more drama from the situation (particularly when the two characters finally meet). Meanwhile, a stronger director might have worked harder on the performances, found ways around the weaknesses in the script, and possibly drawn more from the setting. Not a disaster, ultimately, but kinda boring.

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