Welcome!

Welcome!

This blog was originally dedicated to my journey from a writer to a traditionally published author. Since that time, my interests have changed and I self-published my debut novel, Heavenly Matchmaking: Meant To Be, as an e-book. Now this blog will serve as an outlet for my thoughts on my writing and self-publishing journeys, as I endeavor to have a life, work my day job, promote my novels, and write my next. (Though I expect my postings on My Journey Blog will diverge some from the topics of writing and publishing.)

Thursday, June 18, 2015

How do I think this "stuff" up? - Part 1

I expect every author gets asked one question more than any other: Where do your ideas come from?

I wanted to post about the creative process for that very reason, everyone wants to know about it.  The problem is, naturally, that to encapsulate the entire process into a single blog post seems an impossible task.  But since I never shirk from the impossible, I'm going to change the rules and make it happen.  As the title of this post implies, this won't be a single blog post, but a short series of posts, in which I attempt to explain my creative process.

Today's post is not so much about the overall process, as it is about a very important piece of the process that occurs over and over while shaping a character, a plot, a setting... any part of the story.  It's a technique and the rules around it's application come straight out the business world: Brainstorming

Yes, storytellers were probably using this method to craft their fireside entertainment since the beginning of spoken language, many millennia before it found its way to a conference room, but that's where many of us have heard this term.  The lucky ones were taught to use it in school.

What do I mean by brainstorming?  It means simply letting ideas flow without judgment.  Notice the words without judgment.  If after every idea popped into my head, the next thought was that's stupid, I'd never get anywhere.  Are some ideas stupid... well, sort of.  Maybe stupid isn't the right word.  Let's say that not all ideas are usable.  That's more like it.  But might the next idea that was actually a twist off of the original idea be usable?  The only way to know, is to let it flow!

Example: When I was crafting a particular character for the book I'm currently writing, I already knew a lot about him but not all of it made sense at the beginning.  I already knew that he'd left home for school and then stayed away to work and that it was, at least in part, to get away from his family.  But I didn't know why.  I also knew that he didn't own a car; he used public transportation.  Nothing wrong with any of it, but why?

Then, I had this unexplained idea about him in my head, he talks to trees.  Stupid idea, right?  Well, let's see.  As I thought about it, I realized that he doesn't talk to them all the time while walking down the street with people around, and he certainly isn't expecting an answer.  He just likes to get some of his stress out by talking to the trees in his backyard.

After I heard the monologue in my head, this guy to his tree, he suddenly started to round out a little and gain some depth.  His family background started to take shape.  The family is in the lumber business and that explains why he left home to work, he doesn't agree with what they do for a living.  He's an environmentalist, although that's not his profession.  Now I know why he doesn't own a car!  If I had shut down this idea of talking to trees, I don't know that he'd ever have made any sense.  I might have even scrapped him and tried to start over.

That one idea, unusable at the beginning, became a definition for this character and his past.  (I promise he doesn't spend the entire book talking to trees in his backyard.)

All because I didn't say no to the idea immediately.

If you're a writer and having problems with any pieces of your story, I can't recommend brainstorming enough.  Do it by yourself... on paper... into a recording device... with a trusted friend (who will play by the no judgment rule)... in a group... on a walk... listening to music... in silence...

So, where do I start my brainstorming?  I'll write about that in part 2.  

For now, give yourself the gift of judgment free brainstorming and tell me how it's working for you.

Friday, June 12, 2015

It's been a long day...

I have, well, the word addiction isn't appropriate.  Nor is obsession  So let's call it a fascination,  I have a fascination with musical movies, song and dance musicals.  Like Singin' In The Rain and Oklahoma and Silk Stockings and so on and on and on.

I love them so much that I'd be hard pressed to pick a favorite.  In fact, I probably couldn't make a list of favorites that spoke about my taste, because it would just be too long to analyze.  But certain moments from musicals spring to my mind all the time, and for those, I can compile a list that's short enough to have some symbolic meaning.

For example, I just adore the song It's Been A Long Day from How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying.  Although the main idea of the song is two people hemming and hawing about whether or not to go out on a date, the line that's repeated over and over by the characters to cover up the awkwardness is "Well, it's been a long day.  Well, it's been a long, been a long, been a long day."  I'm not Ally McBeal.  I don't have a cast of characters appearing around me to sing all the time.  But I do have a bit of a soundtrack in my head and that chorus comes up all the time.  And boy, has it been a long day...

Today's post started to be another about not making much progress.  I could blame it on the full-time job and a number of other things that pop up in life from time to time, but as I look at what I'm doing, it occurs to me that I've been passively avoiding querying by writing on my new project.  I'm probably far from objective, but I do think the book I'm working on now is coming together better than the one that is currently complete.  (This may be a faulty impression taken from the rejections, but then, it might not be...)  So, I'm going to take a step back from worrying about querying and any guilt associated with not doing it.  Instead, I'm accepting that what I want to do is finish this second book, where I so much more of my hope and pleasure currently lies.

The new plan is to finish the first draft of current book by the end of July.  I'll then be able to step back from it and focus all my efforts on queries.  Depending on the results from the queries, I may find myself re-writing the first book.  If that's the case, then I'll do it actively, rather than passively avoid it.  And then, perhaps in September, I'll revisit this second book and begin editing.

Whatever happens, at least I can say I wrote a book, published or not.  I may yet have a second.  And They Can't Take That Away From Me...