Jamie Ferguson's Blog, page 19
December 21, 2015
More learning
Last night I turned in my second short story assignment for the anthology workshop I’m taking – yay!!! It was a lot easier than the first assignment (no surfing in this one!), but it still was an awful lot of work.
I came up with an idea right away, and I felt that it would technically fit the assignment but probably wouldn’t be what the editor for this particular anthology would be looking for. This workshop is structured so a different editor is buying stories for each of the six anthologie...
December 14, 2015
Unfamiliarity
Last night I finished one of the hardest stories I’ve written to date. It’s a really simple story, but it involves things I’m not familiar with, and this proved to be a real challenge. Normally I look at this type of situation as an opportunity to do research and learn new things, and it certainly was that, but because of the nature of the story – it involves surfing – it was really hard for me.
I can swim, but it’s never been one of my favorite things to do. I’d rather sit on a beach and wa...
November 29, 2015
Novels are big
I’ve written one before so you’d think this wouldn’t be a surprise, but wow. Writing a novel is way more work than a short story, or even a novella. It’s not just that it’s a longer work. You have to keep track of tons of details, like suppose you mention that your character is wearing a jacket in one scene, then the next time you’re in their point of view they’re wearing a T-shirt. Where did the jacket go? And in case you’re wondering, in my current novel one of the characters is wearing a j...
November 22, 2015
Sculpting a story
I love editing.
Don’t get me wrong – I love writing first drafts as well. They’re fun in an entirely different way. But editing – at least editing my own work
– allows me to make changes that can turn a good story into (hopefully!) a great story.
These can be tiny, subtle changes, like adding in sensory details or description, or explaining the physical sensations a character feels in a particular sensation. Or they can be hefty changes, like adding a new scene, or taking a three-page secti...
November 15, 2015
Charts and lists and plans
I now have a scene list for the novel, as well as an outline, and it’s been tremendously helpful. In the past I’ve worked with what was essentially a combination of a scene list and an outline, but for this book I wanted to track more details, so I have two separate documents.
My old approach tracked the following:
chapter each scene in the chapter which viewpoint each scene was from details of what happened in each scene chapter cliffhanger time/dayThat sounds fine and dandy, and it was d...
November 8, 2015
Let the laboring begin
The past week was full of extracurricular events – the best was going to opening night for the opera Aida. It was so much fun I’m planning on buying season tickets next year. Next year they’ll have a performance of La fanciulla del West, which was originally set during the Gold Rush in California (no, I didn’t know that, but Wikipedia did). Next year’s performance will be set in Colorado instead. How awesome is that?!? I often write historical fiction set in the old West, so for me at least i...
November 1, 2015
It’s a date
It’s not firm enough to announce yet, but I’ve set a date for the release of my next novel. Yay!!!
This sounds very exciting – and it is! But there’s a lot of work to do before publication. In addition to my part I’m hiring a cover designer and an editor, so until I get all three of our schedules coordinated I can’t be certain that my arbitrarily selected date is actually doable. But that’s okay – my deadline for completing the manuscript will stay the same, and that’s the most important part...
October 25, 2015
So far, so good
So far outlining seems like a mostly good thing. Last weekend I wrote a complete outline of the short story I’ve been working on (Bewitchery). At the time I thought two things: whew, what a lot of work!
and: wow, I addressed all the questions I’d have while writing the story. How awesome is that?
Pretty awesome, but as stories do, this one has changed a bit … I added two scenes today, introduced another point of view character (who was already in the story, but as a side character), and chan...
October 18, 2015
Planning to finish
I used to start writing stories when I knew the beginning (kind of hard to ‘start’ otherwise), and sometimes the middle or end – but never both. I wrote a lot of great story beginnings, but found I’d almost always have no idea what was supposed to happen next. I have a nice collection of stories I may never find endings for …
Once I recognized what was happening, I instituted a rule: never start writing a story unless I know how it ends. Okay, it’s really more of a guideline since I have no...
October 10, 2015
Versions of Alice – Guest Post by DeAnna Knippling
I met DeAnna at a writing workshop on the Oregon Coast a few years ago. We read each other’s short stories for one assignment, and hers was so well done I got all the way to the end before I remembered what I was supposed to be doing and had to start over.
DeAnna recently published Alice’s Adventures in Underland: The Queen of Stilled Hearts, a delightful retelling of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland in which Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) is a zombie. DeAnna’s love for the classic tale come...


