Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

REVIEW: Scavenger Hunt


Scavenger Hunt by Michaelbrent Collings
ASIN: B07ZR8HBC3
Available: October 31, 2019



Not that any of Michaelbrent Collings’ novels are timid, but this journey reads the rawest and grittiest I have seen from him.  Even the grungy cover implies that the game refuses to play nice. The bloody smiley face reminds me of both Alan Moore’s Watchmen cover and the “Have a nice day” t-shirt with a bullet hole between the eyes. I think this story marks a change for MbC, a new level of maturity in his work. 

         
PLOT

          Scavenger Hunt tells us of five diverse and unique characters forced into a deadly game similar to Saw or perhaps a nightmarish version of The Amazing Race. Abducted—an event they only vaguely remember—the group wakes in a metal room with no indication of where or when it is.  A mysterious Mr. Do-Good invites them to play his game of terrifying choices or die.
Collings seamlessly weaves themes of action versus consequence. The story pits the lure of wealth against the desperation to escape poverty. Fate (and Do-Good) is an aggressive dealer of life choices within the definition of Home and Heritage. These are characters who seek danger to feel safe, and as they do, images of family take new and tenuous forms.    
And the clock is always against them.
The pace of this episodic novel tears through an urban landscape, but the characters also to come to life with their depth. I cared about each of these people and their fates. What unsettles me most about this is that some of the characters were murders, embezzlers, and human traffickers. 


THE AUTHOR


          Michaelbrent Collings seeks out what most publishing professionals advise against: He writes in just about every genre imaginable. I don’t see that this has hurt him any. While he is one of the most successful indie horror writers on the planet, MbC’s catalog also includes tales about a highly skilled “FixIt” in the far reaches of space (The Darklights), a pack of hyenas that makes the most vicious lion seem docile by comparison (Predators), and even a YA fantasy where fighters battle in gladiator-style arenas nestled among five mountain tops.
          When I saw Collings had been nominated for a Bram Stoker Award, I cheered.  It wasn’t long ago when being an indie author meant you were precluded for consideration of any award. MbC has been a finalist multiple times now. He is a trailblazer.   


ARE YOU THE AUDIENCE?

          I would recommend this book for MbC fans—especially so they might see what he is capable of when he pushes the envelope.  Thriller fans would equally be entertained by Scavenger Hunt where enemies race for a common goal to save their own lives among heists and guns and untouchable hackers.


Buy Scavenger Hunt on Amazon. (Not an affiliate link.)

Michaelbrent Collings' website WrittenInsomnia.com

Friday, October 25, 2019

Writing Quality

Writers should never settle for less than their best work. Is that mere perfectionism on my part?  Maybe.  But why put out as much effort and soul mining as writing requires for something that is only "good enough"? On the other hand, I believe the audience should be considered equally. If we write to please only ourselves, then we are just tossing our stories into the abyss.  For a story to be whole, it must have an audience. Anything else is probably narcissism.

And ultimately I believe these two goals are not mutually exclusive.

What is your opinion?

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

REVIEW: Abduction of Two Rulers

June 26, 2018

Cover design by Istavan Kadar.
Abduction of Two Rulers
by Nancy Kilpatrick (Macabre Ink) ASIN: B07DRBCHK3
THRONES OF BLOOD Vol. 3

Award-winning Canadian author and editor with nearly two dozen novels and more than 200 short stories to her credit, Nancy Kilpatrick excels at writing dark fantasy, horror, mystery, erotic horror, and nonfiction. Abduction of Two Rulers--a dark, erotic fantasy--sizzles with her veteran skill and sense of adventure.

This third novel in the series involves the betrayal, imprisonment, and romance of the vampir King Thanatos. Meanwhile, King Moarte and the Sapiens are on the brink of war. Moarte and Wolfsbane are busy trying to head off the war, leaving them unable to help Thanatos or his true love search for him until long after he is surely dead.

I am a fan of dark fantasy but not a reader of erotica. When I pick up the first in this series, and then the next, and now this one, I always say, “I am not the right audience.”  Nevertheless, I can’t help but get caught up in the story.  Kilpatrick has been a vampire fan for decades and she knows them well. Her skill weaves stories that feed the cravings of the traditional lore fan as well as offering new treats.


Tuesday, November 1, 2016

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction Nov/Dec 2016 Issue



A few days ago, I made this cryptic post on Facebook that I had placed in some sort of contest. I didn't want to say anything because I wasn't 100% sure the magazine had been released yet, but I can see that it is up on Amazon and we are now into the cover month. So, the rest of the story...
Back in early summer, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction held a contest for readers to update a single sentence of a classic SF novel. Contestants could send in as many as six entries. I sent only two, because...well, let's just say it had nothing to do with confidence. Last week, I received a package from Publisher Gordon VanGelder. When I read the letter, my hand went to my mouth and trembled. F&SF is one of the most prestigious magazines in the field. And to see something I had written within its pages has been my dream for more than thirty years. Thank you Mr. Van Gelder and everyone at F&SF.

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

People Watching, People Bouncing


          I must tell you of my recent adventure:  I am 45 years old, and for the first time in my life, I went to a public swimming pool.  My doctor said that exercising in the pool would be great for my back, especially since the buoyancy would take pressure off my disks. 
          Boy was she right!  I had difficulty with balance at first, but it only took a few minutes to find my sea legs.   I haven't swam in probably fifteen years, and for the first time in thirteen years, I had no pain from the small of my back down to my feet.  None!  I mean, it relieved pain I had grown so accustomed to that I was no longer aware of its presence until it was gone. 
          I stayed in for about thirty minutes.  It was great.  But there was one big problem. Every 45 minutes, everyone on a ladder chair blows whistles so the lifeguards can go take a break in the air conditioning.  Those whistles mean that everyone has to get out of the pool. I began to climb out.  I was all right until I once again felt the full force of gravity. 
          Instantly, I got sick.  I mean hand-over-my-mouth-so-I-don't-puke sick.
          I sat on the first bench I could find, and I was not able to get up for about another thirty minutes.  It made me so sick that I could not make myself go back into the water, even after the nausea passed.
          Why did this happen?  Had I overexerted myself without knowing it?  Did I maybe get water into my middle ear and throw my equilibrium out of whack? 
          Being benched was okay, though, because it allows me to people watch.  The world is full of fantastic characters that might one day make it into a story.  Or bits and pieces of several people might merge into one good character.
          So, I sat on the bench and people watched.  I couldn't hear the conversations because of the fountains in the pool splashing.  I did make the following observations, though:
          There were more teenagers in the kiddie pool than there were kids.
          The cadre of We Studmuffins Three kept circling the pool.  They all looked like they had been wet at some point, but I never actually saw them get into the water.  The one who strutted with the greatest amount of I-passed-the-driver's exam machismo seemed to be the leader. The two wingmen, the lesser muffins, walked a half step behind him.  They all wore similar (but not matching, matching ain't cool) black swimming trunks.  Their hair was all dark brown and cut in the same styles.  Each had pecks that shouted, "Look! Secondary hormones have kicked in!" They walked with their arms slightly flexed and their asses cocked as if they had hemorrhoids the size of a hedgehog colony.
          There was a hipster with a chest-length red beard. It looked like someone had tried to roll some dreadlocks with it but changed their mind.  I liked him.  He had character potential.  He was impressed with my horse-fly-killing ability. (Open-handed slap--Oppa, Miyagi Style!)  He said, "Dude, I'd rather get stung by a wasp than one of those things."
          My favorite was the elderly couple, though. They were probably in their seventies, both wearing floppy straw hats.  Both were a good forty pounds overweight. These old folks were the only ones of their age there, and I guess they were not satisfied sitting at the edge dangling their tootsies.  The woman slowly crept down the ladder first, followed closely by her husband.  She walked with her arms gliding at the surface of the water, as if she were using an invisible walker.  They left the 4 ft section and trudged like pilgrims fighting the elements to the rope with blue and white floats that marked the center of the pool and the 5 ft section.  The man stood with his back to the rope.  Occasionally, he stretched his arms out to his sides, airplane-like, but not very often.  Otherwise, he did not move.  He just stood there, looking put out. 
          All of a sudden, I noticed that the woman was bouncing.  Hands folded over her belly and hopping.  She kept doing this, and apparently she was not having fun.  She neither laughed nor even smiled.  The husband appeared oblivious, even though she was three feet away.  Maybe he was used to it. 
          Five minutes passed and she was still hopping.  Completely expressionless.  Just boing. Boing. Boing. Boing.
          Ten minutes passed. 
          I'm pretty sure she bounced the entire 45 minutes between lifeguard breaks.  How did she do that without having a heart attack?  And why wasn't she having fun?

Sunday, July 10, 2016

When Dad Didn't Turn 85


Samuel H. Reeves, Sr
July 10, 1929 - February 18, 2010



Just before 1 AM, hours before I went to bed, I looked at the date and remembered what today was. I found a picture of him and posted it to a few social media sites so I could say, “Happy birthday, Dad.”  Now, after I have had some sleep, I wonder whether I was doing that for attention.

It’s odd that every few minutes or so, I stop thinking about him.  I actually forget that it has been six years. Then, there are the other times....

I usually make several trips to the bathroom on this day. Not because I drank too much water. I’m hiding so my wife and son don’t have to see me randomly stop moving for minutes at a time, because I have been buffeted with a new and concentrated form of paralysis that makes me re-live, “I think we just lost Dad.”

I guess there is a reason I posted this too. I don’t know why yet, though. If I am going to be audacious enough to call myself a writer, then I know at least that our heads are less useful for figuring things out than is a blank page.

Thursday, June 30, 2016

Chuck Palahniuk - Fight Club 2 Comics

My wife typically exceeds her recommended daily allowance of being awesome.  In a recent visit to a comic book store, she held up Fight Club 2 #2 and said, "Do you have this?"

I said, "Yes, but I don't have any of the others."

Five minutes later, she handed me the stack in the video below and said, "You're done now, right?"





Friday, January 1, 2016

Year End Catch Up

Life in General...

I've been away for a few months. My only excuse is mind-boggling laziness.  A LOT has happened, especially recently, so bear with this lonnnng post while I catch you up, and then talk about my New Year's Resolution . . . er, Self-Challenge rather.

In the middle of October, someone hacked into our bank account and stole what money we needed to survive the rest of the month. In fact, we would not be able to pay our electric bill. To our great relief, the money was returned a few days later, when the bank verified the charges were fraudulent, and none of our financial fears came to fruition.

A few days later, someone knocked on our door not long before bedtime, lightly as if not to offend. It was a young mother with a baby on her hip.

The baby coo-ed excitedly. The mother responded, "Yes, pumpkins," and pointed to the three sitting on our porch. Each year, my son asks us to buy three pumpkins to represent each of us. We set them on the front porch and decorate them (eventually).

The woman looked at me through the closed screen and said, "Um, do you have any clothes hangers I could have?"

The unusual request puzzled me, and I turned to my wife, who sat on the couch. "Do we have any extra clothes hangers?" I knew we did, but asking her gave me time to process.

The mother said, "If you don't have any, that's all right."

My wife went to our laundry alcove and grabbed a handful.

I handed them to the woman. She thanked me and left.

Normally, when something like that happens, I feel good. This did not feel like a good deed. I felt suspicious. It was just odd for some reason.

The next morning, my son whisper-shouted, "Our pumpkin is gone!"

Sure enough, one was missing. Not the biggest, but the most unique. It was the one my son picked out for me because it had a big wart on the side, and he thought I could make something funny out of that.

Did the mother steal it? Seems likely, but still circumstantial. I guess they needed it more than I did. . . . But they didn't take it from me. They took it from my son. This was just confusing, ethically. I'm not sure the lesson here.

The end of October involved a lot of Brillo pad sensations in the throat, fever, and gargling various home remedies for fighting infection.  I also inexplicably lost 38 lbs -- this was the precursor of something else happening.  More below.

The first week of November, I got sick again.  Cough-flu-wheezy-crud stuff.  It probably had something to do with having spring temperatures in November.  By November 7, I had lost 42 lbs.  I was neither dieting nor exercising.

By Nov 12, the flu-like symptoms started to break.

Nov 16, migraines became more frequent, and by Thanksgiving, they struck daily.  I was having trouble focusing my eyes. I attested this to eyestrain and getting older.

A couple days later, taking my morning medicines brought on intense heartburn and continued each day for two weeks. My doctor assured me that none of my meds caused heartburn.

Ongoing issues with my back, issues with anxiety and depression.

Dec 3, I started having pains in my legs. Internet research led me to think I probably had a blood clot. It was in both legs, however, which the Internet said was rare. Also, my feet were itching around the ankles. I noticed a slight rash.

Dec 4, the rash turned to what I thought were ulcers but were actually large blisters.

Dec 6, another migraine before I went to bed, which was 10 PM, and I didn't wake up until 10 AM -- 12 hours!  Most generally, I roll out around 7 or earlier.  Again, I attributed this to stress.  It is so easy to rationalize individual symptoms and ignore what they could mean collectively.

Dec 7, the apartment issue turned out to be a non-issue, which unloaded a mountain of stress from me.

Dec 8, my legs and feet were getting worse. At this point, a nurse friend of mine and I thought I probably had stasis dermatitis. Aspirins (as blood thinners) and ibuprofen and hydrocortisone helped . . . well, not at all.  Maybe it was fungal?  Anti-fungal medication did nothing.  That night, my right foot started turning blue.

Dec 9, the rash, which had merged into zombie-like sores and blisters, actually looked a little lighter in color.

Dec 12, I went to the doctor. She did not think all the pains in my hips and thighs and the rash was a blood clot. She said I had folliculitis that got infected.  Gave me antibiotics.

Dec 13, got word that doctors said my brother-in-law would likely pass away in a few days. He and I were not close, but he is the man who got me interested in reading. So, I owe him what I consider one of the foundational defining aspects of my life.   My sister asked me to write his eulogy, since I had done so for my dad almost six years ago.

Dec 17, at 5 AM, I started chilling.  It was just once for a short period, then it was over.  After daybreak, I got up and saw that I still had the rash. The antibiotics the doctor gave me did not seem to be working. I had decided that it was probably shingles, since it was starting to hurt. I couldn't even stand clothes touching it. Both feet had begun to swell -- seriously abnormal for me.  Then, mysteriously, at about 8:30 AM, the pain dropped to about 30% of what it was.  I called the doctor again and spoke with the nurse. She said they would have to review my chart and that they would call me back. 

At 2:24 PM, my niece messaged me that we lost my brother-in-law.

Dec 18, I woke up after sleeping 12 hours. Rash still hurt and itched like crazy. The sores looked bigger. Still thinking it was shingles, I thought maybe this meant they were flattening out and getting ready to crust over, which the Internet said was a sign of the ailment ending. By 10:30 that night, I could not walk. My wife took me to the ER. The physician seemed to think my problem was unusual, and she even called in a few coworkers to "take a look at this!"  They swabbed the blisters, took blood, and came back an hour or so later.  For the first time since 1976, I was admitted to the hospital.  One of the doctor's main concerns was tachycardic and that my blood sugar was 320.  I had no idea I was diabetic. They started an IV of medicines, one of which the nurse called, "The mother of all antibiotics."  I even got to experience what a shot of morphine was like.

The doctor came in the next morning and said, "Have you recently lost a lot of weight?"

My jaw dropped.  "Yes."  That explained the 38 lbs that fell off me inexplicably.

He asked, "Have you had blurry vision?"

"Yes."

"Frequent urination?"

"Yes"

"Thirsty?"

"Yes"

Every question was yes, yes, yes.

Finally, he said, "I don't need no A1C to tell me you're diabetic."

Over the next couple of days, my blood sugar slowly came down and the rash started to fade once they got the test came back that told them the correct dosage of vancomycin to give me. I was released in the early afternoon on Dec 21. 

I still have the rash.  Still have the infection.  Still am on antibiotics.  But I am getting better.  The diabetes is forcing me to eat better.  And, best of all, I have lost 52 lbs -- on purpose, now.



The Writing and Current Projects...

In October and November, I was still working on the Alaskan Fantasy novel, but I kept yearning to write a short story.

I did some content editing for my best friend, Yancy Caruther's, second novel.

Days and days and days and days passed with me waffling over whether or not to outline or discovery write:


Don't know whether this idea cluster thing is going to work out or not. For the last several days, I have been tempted to just start writing blind again. I can't see the story do anything but wander if I do that, though. . . .

I did a 5-minute writing sprint, and now Ch 3 is 318 words. That's the fastest I have written yet at 1,836 words per hour.

I think I am seeing something in outlining vs pantsing. With an outline, yes, my ideas are better, but they come VERY slowly. Why? Because I am constantly second guessing myself. "No, that's not good enough. How can the situation be worse? More interesting?" Obviously, a good plot needs these questions, but I am getting hung up on them.

With pantsing, I don't have time to do that second guessing. Maybe I should write at 1800 word per hour. If I wrote for 3 hours per day, my productivity would go through the roof, and if I wrote the same scene 3 times, I would probably see ideas of similar quality to the outline.

The problem is that it won't work that way. If I actually wrote for an hour, I'd be really jazzed to continue writing, but I would also be too close to the material to see how to truly improve it. I would need a couple of days.

Maybe I could take a week per chapter, though. That is stupid slow for the indie circuit, but it might not be bad for my first try. New Chapter Monday might not be a bad thing.


I tried a free month of Kindle Unlimited and read several books on writing -- and, to be honest, got my first taste of books that were not really ready for publication.

Even though I have nothing ready to publish yet, I wasted time wondering about traditional publishing vs. indie:


Many indies say there is absolutely no reason to go traditional. Trad publishers take all rights and you get a much thinner slice of the pie. True, but I don't see that it has hurt the NY Times bestsellers. That slice is like comparing a Generic Brand Pizza Roll to one of those monster wheels that restaurants take out of the oven on a ginormous boat oar.

I don't know, man. I love writing, but it is because I love it that I don't want to piss away whatever talent I may have forcing myself to hit quotas of 80K words a month. If I were 20 years old, instead of nearly 45, this decision would be much easier to make.


Then a friend told me, "It's not like this is a career plan, anyone who thinks otherwise is a fool." I don't take it well when someone shines the abyss in my face and, wrong or not, I was a little too aggressive in my response:

I don't have to get rich, but for me, it is a career plan. If the world's dilettantes want to call me a fool, so be it. These are the same people who vomit shit like "real job" and pontificate that trickle-down economics is the only American way and all poor people are poor because they are too stupid to manage their own money

Near the middle of November, I started experimenting with lots of timed writings, Pomodoro Techniques, etc. My efforts produced words, but I am not sure how much quality.  I kept remembering Dean Wesley Smith's blog posts about not writing sloppy first drafts.

In combination of the timer, I am using a modified Snowflake approach. The standard method is to write a sentence encompassing the entire story. Expand that one-liner into a paragraph. Break up the paragraph and expand each sentence into paragraphs. Those are essentially your chapter outlines.

Since my Stepping Stones chart worked so well yesterday, I am replacing the initial paragraph snowball with the chart. I take the chart as far as I can, meaning that when I get stuck I move to a different technique that takes me closer to manuscript. I look at clusters of boxes and circles that imply a beginning, middle, and end, and start turning those into a scene-sequel outline. Scenes and Sequels take the haphazard ideas from the Stepping Stones and add structure that creates continuity and suspense.

Next, I plan to move onto something that resembles a cross between a high school English class outline and a screenplay. This will help me nail dialogue and optimize scene organization.

Finally, will come manuscript.

That sounds like a lot of work. And it is. I am taking all the techniques that have worked on some level since I started writing, and I am combining them.

But it is not as complicated as I make it sound. Really all that is happening is that I am starting with a sketchy plot skeleton and continually filling in the gaps until it starts looking like a manuscript. One stage is not that much different than the next, except I think about each stage differently. Mixing up the approach keeps me on track and breaks the doldrums of routine.

It's an experiment. I don't see that my productivity has anywhere to go but up.

In the middle of November, I started hating the outline I had for my novel, which was only up to Chapter 3.  Around this same time, I became obsessed with increasing my productivity.  I experimented with voice dictation a little. This resulted in 100 words LESS per hour than typing -- and believe me, I'm not that fast a typist.

Nov 23, I converted what I had written of my novel into an epub file and uploaded it to my tablet. Wow! Did that ever make a difference in being able to see mistakes.

Nov 28, I spent failing to write on the novel because I was stressing out over issues with our apartment.

I am about >< this close to shelving the idea and going onto something new. Something where I can start with the hero having something to do other than look up and say, "Oh, that's big!"

I have been working on this idea for years. It is becoming an albatross.

I think I will. Maybe even switch genres for a while.

That evening . . . .

Well, my old dilemma is whether or not to outline. The writers I enjoy reading the most don't. However, when I try to wing it, I wander aimlessly.

This afternoon I began to wonder whether I could develop some sort of iterative drafting process. Essentially, it is simply writing several drafts to figure out the story, rather than outline. It would be slow as smoke off molasses but not any worse than never getting to the manuscript when you outline.

I think the difference this time will be that I now know that I need to quit concentrating on the language so much. It's better to be a good plot builder than be a good word smith. If you can do both, great, but if you can only pick one, tell a good story. . . .


It's the psychology of one process versus another. The old saying is "Writers are readers moved to emulation." Drafting without a net more closely mimics reading for enjoyment. Plotting/outline is more like planning a budget so you can go on a vacation.

One has a sense of wonder, the other a sense of responsibility.

Oh damn, I think the Tylenol is finally kicking in.

Only my right eye hurts now.

Dec 5, my friend Yancy drove from Missouri for a lesson in both Photoshop and designing book covers.  He did most of the work himself and did a surprisingly good job.

Dec 10, I finally shelved (perhaps not forever) the novel I had been working on.  I had been reading quite a few short stories recently, and the pull to write them was growing.

Christmas Day:  Ray Bradbury said something along the lines of "Write one story per week and do that for a year. Nobody writes fifty-two bad stories in a row."  So, I decided to do a little messing around with titles and eventually came up with "The Stranger from the Crater's Rim."  That sparked my imagination, and suddenly I was writing about a frail man climbing the side of a mesa. 

I'm thinking about taking on Bradbury's challenge of writing a story per week.  The story I started on Christmas Day was kind of a warm-up exercise.  To fulfill the requirements, I'd have to finish it by Dec 26, and I'm only half way done.  But, maybe it will take a few stories to gear up. 

Dec 31, By the way, the story has a different title now, which I won't reveal just yet.  For now, let's just call it LWL.


Happy New Year, everyone.

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Heeere's Johnny! With an Outline

Life in General...

My wife spent last night at the hospital with her mother. The doctor released her today with barely more than, "It wasn't a heart attack, but we don't know what it was." She seems to be doing well, as her shopping trip this afternoon indicated.

Most of the day, I tried to educate myself about website traffic, and I washed a few dishes. Google Analytics proved to be a really useful tool.  (For websites. I'm not sure what it does for dishes. Let's all Google it, shall we?)

Google Analytics is not completely accurate, but it more closely targets the number I am looking for than does Blogger stats. Blogger does not differentiate between real people and bots. G.A. does. How? Cookies. Bots lack them; people don't, usually. Some people disable cookies, so that's why the count is only close. 

Now, we add another layer. In the old days, websites measured traffic with "hits." The problem was sites garnered a hit for not only a page, but also whenever someone clicked a picture or banner or link. One page could have 20 hits when the user viewed it maybe only once.  Page views replaced hits.

Today, the reliability of PVs are starting to fall in with hits, because if a visitor revisits a page, the PV counter goes up. Maybe that person engaged, maybe they just really liked pressing the F5 key.

What are PVs good for, then? Reporting the most popular pages on a website. That way, the site owner can target those pages for placing links he or she wants people to follow.

What is more accurate than PVs? Sessions. Well, not more accurate, but they give a different type of data, more useful in judging overall traffic. Sessions measure the time from app open to app close. They show that a person visited your site and how long they stayed engaged. Obviously, that provides another dimension in understanding how well a website is doing.


The Writing and Current Projects...

No word count progress on the manuscripts, but I did brainstorm and outline. I consider myself a pantser but only to a certain point. I can vomit words onto a page all day, if I want. But it is usually a waste of time, just something mechanical. It reminds me of the conversation between Wendy and Jack Torrance in The Shining:


WENDY
Any ideas yet?

JACK
Lots of ideas. No good ones.


Sometimes a writer simply needs to see the path ahead, at least a vague impression. Outlining to excess (of which I am prone) traps a writer in a loop of never being ready to write. Points on a map, though, help immensely. When I write toward something, the writing is usually better, even if I am writing as fast as I can.







Word counts for Sunday, Oct 16, 2015...

0 = Fiction
507 = Blog




Monthly totals for October 2015...

4,509 = Fiction
5,632 = Blog




MANUSCRIPT TOTAL COUNTS...

11,485 = Af (Alaskan fantasy)
3,679 = Mhn (Missouri horror novel)





Saturday, October 17, 2015

Somebody Broke Thursday and Friday



Life in General...


One day you win the lottery; the next, colon cancer!
      - Harlan Ellison 


I don't want this to become the woe-is-me blog. I suffer from depression, anxiety, and lifelong ouchies, and so it would be easy to forget there are people out there far worse off than I am.

I also don't want to produce the here's-your-daily-dose-of-sugar blog. Life just ain't like that. (When I was in junior high school, I asked my eye doctor to tint the lenses of my glasses rose colored. I thought the irony was hilarious.)

What works best for me is what psychologists call "radical acceptance" and my wife calls "Suck it the hell up and get over it."

Anyway, this is a long, preamble way of saying:  I didn't blog for the last couple of days, because they sucked. They sucked in that mother-in-law-in-hospital, somebody-stole-your-bank-account sort of way. One of those days that you mean to pour a glass of cola and a few minutes later realize you have just neatly placed a couple of ice cubes on a saucer and don't remember doing it. You know? They happen to all of us. I just assumed you didn't want to hear that kind of blogging therapy.

New diet?

 Should writers let bad days stop them from writing? As a general rule, no. Give them the chance and bad days start outnumbering the good. Then again, taking an occasional day off to prevent burnout often sets up better days on the other side of the break.

Don't make it a habit--unless you enjoy stacks of unfinished stories--but every once in a while, put an Out of Order sign on your office door.


The Writing and Current Projects...

None. Same reason as above. I found some time to brainstorm the main character of the Af novel, using a technique that John D. Brown and Larry Correia talk about in their Life, the Universe, and Everything lecture (LTUE). For anyone who struggles with ideas, it is really a great series of videos.  Here's a link to Brown's website where he writes about the techniques in detail and provides links to his videos:



By the way, no charts for the manuscript totals, since they did not change from last time.








Word counts for Sunday, Oct 16, 2015...

0 = Fiction
417 = Blog




Monthly totals for October 2015...

4,509 = Fiction
5,125 = Blog




MANUSCRIPT TOTAL COUNTS...

11,485 = Af (Alaskan fantasy)

3,679 = Mhn (Missouri horror novel)