Mar 122010
 

So the short story currently stands at 12,000+ words. And thus the short story is not short at all, particularly given the fact that there are great, enormous gaping holes all throughout the narrative. And thus the short story, in addition to not being short, is not actually a story (yet) either. (Two criteria, and it hasn't achieved either. Poor story is currently suffering a quite severe existential crisis.)

Normally, I'm of the "write, keep writing, don't stop 'til you get enough finish a first draft" school of thought. Because otherwise I'd have a perfectly polished paragraph which may or may not be the beginning and nothing to hang off any side of it. But there's always a tipping point, a point where I abandon the not-draft I'm working on and call it finished enough and start revising said not-draft into a proper first draft. And two days ago I hit that tipping point because I don't think I can fill in those narrative holes without actually knowing, well, the narrative. So back to the start it is for me.

Those of you who've been around for a while will know that my normal routine is to write sans outline, but also sans narrative order. I write a scene, or half a scene, or even just a line of dialogue, and figure out where it fits in the entire story only once I have the entire story. I even write scenes and paragraphs this way — leaving a couple of blank lines and just pouring sentence fragments onto the page, and then I go back and start writing up to and around them. (Writing paragraphs this way is actually probably approaching normal – it's just my way of both editing as I go and at the same time avoiding the "can't write because my brain is trying to edit it!" dilemma. Writing scenes this way gets a little trickier, but it's not so bad because a scene is small enough to keep the whole thing in your head at once. Short stories and novels, not so much.)

Which is why Tessa, for one, gets a wild and panicked look in her eye whenever we discuss this scattershot/jigsaw habit of mine, as if I've just confessed I've decided to take up juggling pissy cobras and I don't need to practice with inanimate objects first, really, how hard can it be? She's right, really. So much to go wrong! So much does go wrong! My first attempt, the not-draft, is appalling. It's basically one big tangle of continuity errors, ambience at the expense of narrative, characters with no names, clues about what the story hinges on that my subconscious has oh-so-conveniently dropped rather than just, yanno, telling me outright, and notes in the margin. (Normally the latter are of the FUCK FUCK FUCK I DON'T KNOW WHAT? variety. Or sometimes the equally amusing, ER, REALLY? variety.) Seriously, those tangential illogical outlines that pour out of a fevered brain at 2am in an illegible scrawl are cohesive in comparison to the not-draft. Hence the tipping point.

The not-draft, being so very appalling, does then present serious difficulties when it comes to revision time. It's basically like doing a jigsaw — one where some of the snippets have been jammed together incorrectly and need to be undone in order to be put together correctly, where some of the pieces are missing entirely, and where some of the pieces may, in point of fact, belong to your Aunt Mildred's puzzle depicting a vase of gladioli and she's been wondering where that got to, thank you dear. Thankfully, I've gotten a little better at this jigsaw revision process, so that the official first draft doesn't (always) look like I've pieced together bits of the cat's vomit.

Part of this improvement is learning just how ruthless and brutal to be. Answer: exceedingly.

I've spent the past two nights — two weary, post-dayjob-wrung-out sort of nights — painstakingly massaging this one particular scene, getting the words just right. And last night, as I fell asleep, I realised that this one particular scene has to go. In its entirety. Because it's the second scene, and a giggle in a doorway, while important, is not enough to justify an entire scene, particularly the second scene in a story that should have started by now. Fuckit.

All of which is a very long way of saying Note to Self: Every scene and paragraph and sentence must accomplish more than one important something. Kill your darlings. YOU KNOW THIS ALREADY.

So tonight I'm going to spend my evening excising that painstakingly-revised scene out of the story, leaving no traces behind. I'll scavenge some of the passages, and weave them in among the rest of the story as appropriate, so the work (and the time spent on it) is not lost entirely. And any work that gets you to realising precisely what you need to do to fix or improve a story is never lost.

But it FEELS like lost and wasted time.

Aug 142007
 

Drafting, drafting, drafting, and I look up to find I have quite literally just written the words "You have no power over me."

Ha!

Oh, yes, they're staying. They amuse me too much to cut them. I'll cut them in a later draft. It'll be a nice surprise, when I'm revising, to find a laugh buried in the script.

Mar 252007
 

I'm into the deathmarch on the revision now. It's getting hard to find room in my head for not-novel stuff.

Only some 4,000-odd words to revise of the rough draft. And then all the new words I need to write to tie things off1. Which will include, you know, an ending, since the rough draft sadly lacked one altogether.

Some of the new words will be snippets, closing or opening paragraphs I couldn't summon the deftness to write at the time. Some are new scenes to replace deleted scenes, or to paper over that enormous plot hole. Some are spaces in the text where I have to go back and change my already-changed text. Yes, that's right. I need to revise my revision.

I'd always thought the point of a revision was to make the necessary changes, and move on. Turns out, my process is a little different. I revise, make unnecessary changes (obviously this is the point at which I fail to clarify what, precisely, is necessary and what is polishing crap), consider the text fixed to first-draft status, and move happily on.

Then, twenty thousand words further down the line, then the epiphany strikes and I realise there's a vital change I needed twenty thousand words ago. A far-reaching change, like deleting a character or altering a motivation.

Still, at least some of the plot dropped in to my head this morning which gives me a better motivation for the !not-ending I have. Now to figure out the real ending.

  1. Conveniently marked in the manuscript by the phrase OH GOD I DON'T KNOW — NEW STUFF HERE! They make a nice change from the RESEARCH THIS, DUMBASS! comments. Not that I'm an alarmist author at all. []
Mar 152007
 

Manuscript comment du jour: I'm always letting my characters say everything that pops into their heads. They're far too fucking honest with each other. Always. Le Sigh. Maybe I'm just not a subtle writer.

The MRI report is in: my brain is officially normal. (Again, we are only investigating the tissue itself. Normality and functionality of thought patterns are left to the reader's judgement.) Normal vascular flow, and no plaques. I could tell the news was good when my ophthalmologist talked in normal and conversational tones; the more worried he gets, the softer he speaks, until sometimes he talks fixedly to the desk. Of course, this does mean we still have no idea what is causing my eyes to misbehave, and does not absolutely rule out the very bad possible diagnoses. But it puts a stay on them for now at least. So we are officially relieved. Tess, you can put a hold on the sandwich services ;)

Just in case the MRI missed something, today I had a dye test. This is a dandy little procedure whereby the ophthalmologist dilates the eyes, puts your dilated eyes in front of a tear-inducingly bright light, pumps you full of a dye which turns your skin not quite yellow and not quite green but a lurid shade somewhere in between, has his nurse hold your head so you can't move and thumb your eyelid back so you can't blink, and then takes photos of the back of your eye. With a very bright flash. Your vision turns black initially, and then it dances through various shades of vermilion, crimson, purple, and lurid mauve. I imagine like the circle of hell which holds all the people who loathe hippies' penchant for eye-twisting colours.

I suspect this little test was actually developed in the middle ages as a form of torture. The medical benefits obviously only came later, once we invented the camera.

Right. Back to work. That is, as soon as my eyes figure out that little trick known as focussing…

Feb 142007
 

Away, Come Away
New Words: 1,196 / 1,330
Total Words: 2,500

Dead Queen
New Words: 83 / 90
Revised Words: 1,530 / 1,680
Total Revised: 38,274
Manuscript Comment du jour: For some reason I have an image of a hen with mercury poisoning. No, I don't know either. (No — I really don't know. I just live inside my head. I can't explain it!)

I've settled into something approximating a routine, so far as my writing goes. Said routine involves dragging myself awake at 7 (thank goodness for starving cats or I might never get up), staggering through the dayjob until I can have a nap when I get home. Then staying up ridiculously late chasing words.1 It works, sort of. I'm a night-owl, after all.

But I'm noticing the side-effects of a schedule which relies on two substandard dozes rather than a sound night's sleep. My brain is kinda … fuzzy. This is probably not a long-term solution.

Finds of the day:

  1. Tonight, being a day off from the dayjob, I am in fact finished early. Hours and hours early. []
Jan 232007
 

Revised Words: 1,191 / 1,220
Previous draft comment du jour: This is possibly, without question, the worst simile ever coined.

I am so in the zen of pressing Ctrl+S whenever I pause to think that I quite often end up saving webpages to my hard-drive out of sheer absentminded habit. Most of these pages are my blog editor's compose screen. Go team me.

Jan 212007
 

…is the sound of this story wiping the floor with me.

It just took me an hour and a half to come up with a new way of beginning this story. An hour. And a half.

It's not even in the final perfect and polished form. There's a little note next to it which says "Erk. Fix this so it's, you know, readable."

Okay, so it's an awful lot better than my first attempt at starting this story — which was very clearly me wandering around the setting I'd created, humming to myself and wondering how and when and precisely why all the characters got together and started, you know, storying. Whereas now those first six pages have been condensed into one sentence1.

So, yes. Progress. In its way.

On the upside, now that I've figured out the new structure for this story, there's a chance the rest of it might fall into place. That's tonight's writer's lie, anyway. :| Wish me luck.

  1. No doubt everything in those first six pages which didn't make it into that one sentence (namely, everything, since that one sentence is entirely new) will in fact be dissected and threaded through the rest of the story. But still. []
Nov 122006
 

A week and a day since the evil illness struck, and I'm finally feeling normal again. Well, the majority of the time I'm feeling normal again. I'll take what progress I can.

I wish I could say the same for my work. The dayjob is in a state of flux since my boss' resignation, which makes the atmosphere … not tense, exactly, but it's certainly not as relaxed as I've known it.

And my novel? The one I want revised by the end of the year? Yeah, I'm behind on that. It's hard to concentrate on revising stuff when you can't make your eyes focus, and let's just say I can't trust any of the thoughts I had while sick, since they mostly involved things I'm very sure I don't want in the novel. Like dragons, specifically purple polka-dot dragons. Dragons need not apply for this revision, thank you very much.

The good news is I've been reading the manuscript over, and it's not nearly as bad as I thought. Oh, there's scaffolding (oh my Lord, the scaffolding!) and squidgy spots in the plot and characters who switch names on every page and magic injuries that hurt like the billy-oh on receiving but then magically vanish. Those, given enough time, I can fix. The dodgy ending is a little more problematic. I'm hoping that I'll have come up with a fix by the time the revision reaches the final pages. Optimism much?

What's truly entertaining on a read-through are the comments I've left myself during the first draft:

:: Kamikaze!

:: What the hell am I talking about?

:: Anachronism much?

:: Um, no.

Sep 282006
 

And… book.

I think, anyway. The problem is though, I ended with the climax. No denouement, no catharsis. Now the book is really half of a story, in that there's a sequel (this time I was clever enough to stop at a more commercial length ;) ), so it's normal for not everything to be tied up. Heck, it's normal even for a stand-alone for not everything to be tied up. But ending on the climax feels… weird.

I tried to write a denouement. Wrote 700 words, deleted them. Wrote 1400 words, deleted them. The problem is, any scene I come up with now is actually starting new stuff rather than tying up old stuff, so it all feels like it belongs in the next book.

Rather than worry about it needlessly, I've typed -30- into the manuscript, and right under that a little note to myself: um, catharsis, maybe? You know, for those of us who hate cliffhanger endings?. And I'll worry about that in the revision.

But for now! Book!