M.B. Weston's Blog, page 8

March 3, 2015

M. B. Weston’s Writing Diary: 03/02/15

I spent yesterday morning on two planes I should have been on the night before. Weather delayed my Chattanooga flight to the point where I would have missed the last flight to Ft Myers from Charlotte, NC. I actually got home early enough that I was only late for work by an hour.


I spent those too flights trying to put together the missing pieces of my story.


I’m still missing pieces.


My big problem: my conplex brain created a real estate/murder scam by the vlians that I have to unfold in about six 2000 word chapters of pulp.


Stop laughing!


:::psyching myself up::: I can do this. 


I have to by tonight anyway. The deadline looms…


How about you? Have you ever encountered something like this before?


Toodles!

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Published on March 03, 2015 05:21

March 2, 2015

M. B. Weston’s Writing Diary: 03/01/15

Ah yes. The first edit after the rough draft… It kind of feels like having your chest dragged against a cheese grater. When you write it, you think that it’s just the best thing ever. Then you read it and seriously consider changing professions. 


 I used my plane flight to ConNooga to start editing the rough draft of my Michael Lodestone pulp novella. (On that note, I apologize for the lack of posts. Since I was posting my ConNooga panel schedule, each day, I didn’t want to double up writing diary posts with for the sake of those who follow this blog through email. I did write every day, but Saturday and last night didn’t get much of time.) 


 Now that I have read through my rough (egads it’s rough) draft, I see the weaknesses and things that I need work on. 


 Basically, I need to throw a hand grenade at the entire middle half of the story and rebuild… 


 Yep. I’ve got to rewrite all my rising action. And I have a month and a half to finish the final draft–which includes getting beta readers. 


 This might sound daunting. It might sound depressing.


But this is writing.


This is what we do


If you are in a similar situation and have found yourself staring at your body of work, knowing half of what you’ve done will need some serious surgery, please take heart. It happens to everyone. It’s not the quality of your first draft that makes you a good writer. It’s the quality of your final draft. 


 (This is why I make sure my rough drafts stay rough. I’m not going to waste time editing a scene until I know it’s going to make the cut.) 


I spent my flight up to ConNooga reworking the middle half of the story, trying to figure out the best way to have the story unfold. On today’s flight back to Naples, I’m going to finish that, and maybe start actually beginning the edit… (It’s probably best not to ask why I’m on a flight this morning instead of last night, wearing the same clothes I wore yesterday. And yes, I’m going straight to work from the airport.) I’ve gone through this before, and I will go through it again. Now I just have to dig in and start the rewrites.


How about you? Have you ever needed to rework major parts of your story?


Toodles!

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Published on March 02, 2015 06:17

March 1, 2015

Today’s ConNooga Panel Schedule: 03/01/15

Here is today’s ConNooga panel schedule. If I’m not on panels, I will be at the Dark Oak Press and Media table, so please drop by and say hi!


Sunday



10:00am – Writing Openings: Character, Setting, and Conflict
01:00pm – The Gory Details of Writing Horror
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Published on March 01, 2015 06:00

February 28, 2015

Today’s ConNooga Schedule: 02/28/15

Here is today’s ConNooga panel schedule. If I’m not on panels, I will be at the Dark Oak Press and Media table, so please drop by and say hi!


Saturday

12:00pm – Writing for a Series
4:00pm – Reading
7:30pm – Ghost Stories
8:00pm – The Great Plot Off
9:00pm – Scream Queen Contest Judge

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Published on February 28, 2015 06:00

February 27, 2015

Today’s ConNooga Panel Schedule: 02/27/15

Here is today’s ConNooga Panel Schedule. If I’m not on panels, I will be at the Dark Oak Press and Media table, so please drop by and say hi!


Friday



1:00pm – Examining the Spiritual in Gaming
4:00pm – Explore the Horror in the Writings of MB Weston
5:00pm – Character Development for Writers
7:00pm – Horror clips
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Published on February 27, 2015 05:00

February 26, 2015

M. B. Weston’s Writing Diary: 02/26/15

Tomorrow, I am flying to Chattanooga for ConNooga, where I will be featured on the literary track and on the horror track, which is exciting because my first horror story just got published. I am posting my panel schedule here every day, but here is a the complete list of my panels this weekend


I will be performing a live version of my short story, “The Witch Hunter” at 4:00. And you will want to stop by the Big Bad II release party to meet some of the other talented authors in the anthology.


Needless to say, today was about packing and prep. I sat down and tweaked the end of the novel a bit, honestly only in order to fulfil my “write every day” New Years resolution. I also printed out the first draft of this pulp novel so I can start working on editing on the plane. I wish I had a few more days to work more out on the end and actually finish the rough draft, but editing is the best kind of work for plane rides. 


Anyway, writing happened. I have to get up at 4:00am so I can get to the airport on time for my 6:30 flight. If you see me staring out into space this weekend, assume I need coffee…


Toodles!

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Published on February 26, 2015 21:35

M. B. Weston’s Writing Diary: My Muse’s Name is Loki 02/25/15

As mentioned in my last post, the muse has finally started talking to me. While I was showering last night, the entire end of the story just flowed through my head like scenes from a movie on fast forward.


I’m just standing there going, I’ve gotta write this down. And I couldn’t. Because I was in the shower.


Yes, I know. I have a waterproof notepad already in the shower for times like this. But the notepad wouldn’t have been big enough. My hot water tank isn’t big enough.


So after scrambling out of the shower, I spent the rest of the evening half-wet, madly typing rest of my story in somewhat outline form into the computer…


So the muse stayed silent for two months, then waited until the least convenient time to sing me the story of five chapters.


I swear my muse’s name is Loki.


Toodles!

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Published on February 26, 2015 05:36

February 25, 2015

M. B. Weston’s Writing Diary: 02/24/15

Looks like Michael Lodestone is getting a name change. The name has been bugging me a wee bit, and I remembered a few weeks ago that the super-villain group in the steampunk series I’ve slowly been adding to is called Ironstone….


So Lodestone has to go. I’m thinking of calling him Michael Hunter or Michael Huntsman, since he technically was the huntsman in the Snow White story… (I’m also practicing telling my “Witch Hunter” story from memory for my panel at ConNooga this Friday, and the witch refers to him as the huntsman once she realizes who he is…)


Suggestions on names?


Toodles!

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Published on February 25, 2015 05:59

February 24, 2015

New Release: My First Horror Short Story in The Big Bad II!

Big Bad 2


As of today, I am a published horror author! My short story, “The Witch Hunter,” has just been released in The Big Bad II, edited by John Hartness and Emily Leverett. It’s an anthology written from the the point of view of the villain, and my story was part of the inspiration for the cover!


Here’s the “official” description: Everybody loves the bad guys, and this second edition of The Big Bad brings you more to love! A collection of best-selling fantasy and horror writers brings you twenty-four all-new tales of vampires, demons, ghosts, zombies, and the most terrifying monsters of all – humans. Crack open the pages, if you dare, and explore two dozen tales of humor and horror by some of the brightest names in the business!


As of earlier today, it was number 6 on amazon for horror anthologies!


If you have been keeping up with my writing diary posts, you know that I am knee-deep in writing an urban fantasy, pulp novella about a witch hunter named Michael Lodestone. Here’s a little secret: Mr. Lodestone is the witch hunter in this story, which takes place right after the novella I’m writing. It will give you a little sneak peek at where I’m going… kind of…


Here are the links:



Amazon.com
Kindle
B&N
Nook

If you are coming to ConNooga, be sure to stop by:



my 4:00pm panel called Explore the Horror in the Writings of MB Weston
the Big Bad II release party on Friday Night!

Toodles!

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Published on February 24, 2015 15:31

M. B. Weston’s Writing Diary: on Muses, Weapons & Continuity – 02/23/15

Amazing things have happened in last night’s writing session.


First, the muse has finally decided to actually feed me ideas while I’m seated at my computer instead of throwing me random bits here in there when I can’t jot any notes down.


Second, Michael is finally showing his personality! This guy has been wrapped so tight I couldn’t get him to crack a smile. He’s snarky, and I can finally hear his thoughts instead of just seeing his facial expressions.


Also, I learned a few things about writing weapons in action and adventure. (Well, it’s stuff I already knew, but I needed a reminder.):


Don’t forget about your villain’s weapons. Yeah. It turns out my villain has excellent signal jamming capabilities, which I had already demonstrated in the novella’s opening sequence. In a much later scene that I was working on last night, I had Michael don a nifty GPS tracker, which was supposed to help his friend, JT, find him later. And of course, my next thought was: Crap. They’re going to jam his signal. This means he’s going to have to rescue his partner, Claire, and get out of jamming range before JT can even come get them.


If I hadn’t remembered the naming power I had given my villain, someone else would have pointed it out and the book would lose credibility. The good thing: it means a whole chapter of adventures on the bayou, so it should be fun.


Make sure your hero can afford his weapons. If Billy Bob lives in a trailer and has a tank hidden in his underground garage, someone’s going to ask you where he got the money to buy a tank. (And if he lives in Florida or Louisiana, they are going to ask you how he fit the tank inside the well you keep calling a garage.) Michael Lodestone has been around for over 500 years. He’s covered, but I had to remind myself to point it out to the audience earlier in the book than at the point where he starts using state-of-the-art equipment.


Make sure your hero has the ability to use the weapons you give him. I’m not saying you need to do an entire chapter on Officer Flossie’s training. Readers assume cops know how to use weapons. But if your average joe picks up a sword for the first time and bests Inigo Montoya in a duel, you’re going to get some negative feedback. Michael spent at least 100 years in Asia learning ninjutsu. I realized I needed to make sure to mention this in conversation earlier in the story, and I will have him pull up a memory from that time before he starts using some of his awesome weapons.


How about you? Is your muse talking or are you struggling with a story the way I was for the first half? And have you found any continuity issues you’ve needed to correct?


Toodles!

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Published on February 24, 2015 04:39