The Novel Project: Making a Decision
I've made three crucial decisions to write. One was leaving Kinko's to move to Malaysia to write full time (or until my money ran out). Another was deciding to go to Maui Writers Conference at a time when I was in between teaching positions and my wife was pregnant (had been planning this for over a year). And a third was to leave teaching at Unimas last year, without a net, to write full time.
To be successful they say, all you have to do is make a decision and then to back that up with consistent action that will take you in the direction of your goal. Publishing novels was one of my goals, one of the reasons I decided to move to this tropical island. But you can't write in a vacuum; you need to get out in the world to see what the real world is really like, and I thought by going to Maui (I know, hardly the real world) I would get a huge dose of some writing reality--the good news (it's possible) and the bad (there's a lot of talented competition). It was at Maui where I met Graham Brown, who at the time, was just like the rest of us, had a dream to write and publish his books. Unlike many of us, he kept attending other writing conferences where he eventually met an agent who believed in his talent and then last year his first two novels were published, Black Rain and Black Sun.
Prior to going to Maui, I worked with a pair of novelists in Penang, one of whom this year found an agent and her book went to auction. (Until the book comes out, for privacy reasons, she wants to maintain a low profile.) So I blogged about another writer, that a friend of mine had met, AmandaHockings, who the week before had broken out in a huge way. As I wrote about before, when you meet writers who break out, it expands your own belief system. Instead of buying into all of the naysayers (even the ones residing inside your head) that the publishing industry is impossible, especially now that it's in such a state of flux (upheaval by some accounts), so it's best to avoid altogether until things settle down. Obviously that's not true for the people I just mentioned and a whole lot of others.
Then a year ago, I made the decision to walk away from renewing my contract to teach creative writing because I felt, in more ways than one, that even though it was paying the bills, it was holding me back from ever achieving my dream to publish my novels. Or maybe I was just using that teaching position (and marking all those papers) as a handy excuse. Either way, I knew it was time to leave if I'm ever going to achieve my original dream. I decided to just go for it.
Two weeks ago, I got a flash of insight to change the title of a third novel (the third novel title I changed this year—one for each of my three novels), and everything seemed to click. The title change, as with the other two books, made me think of the novel in a whole new light and gave it a new focus. Suddenly for this 23rd draft, I thought, this could work, and the title also doubles as a cool metaphor. (Sorry, keeping it under wraps for now, unlike my other two novels, though the original title was The Lonely Affair of Jonathan Brady.) I hadn't worked on this novel in over a year, and I had been holding back from it in favor of the other two novels, each requiring massive rewriting for the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. But when the new title idea struck, I knew it was time to act on it that very day.
So once I made the decision to rewrite this third novel for the Faulkner-Wisdom Novel Contest, where it was an almost-finalist for their 2008 contest, I wasn't sure if I had enough time, other than line-editing it and making only those corrections. Then I got the news, the deadline, which was originally 1 April, got pushed back to 1 May, and then got pushed back to 15 May! Thus now I got plenty of time to complete it, so long as I remain focused and cut out all distractions, like the Internet TimeThief.
It all began with a decision. In this case, it's a culmination of decisions that I've been making draft after draft going back far too many years, but I like to think, that each decision I made with this novel has been a natural progression that will ultimately lead to the goal I set back in the US when I made that first decision to leave a safe, secure position for the life of an expatriate writer, now living in Borneo.
To be successful they say, all you have to do is make a decision and then to back that up with consistent action that will take you in the direction of your goal. Publishing novels was one of my goals, one of the reasons I decided to move to this tropical island. But you can't write in a vacuum; you need to get out in the world to see what the real world is really like, and I thought by going to Maui (I know, hardly the real world) I would get a huge dose of some writing reality--the good news (it's possible) and the bad (there's a lot of talented competition). It was at Maui where I met Graham Brown, who at the time, was just like the rest of us, had a dream to write and publish his books. Unlike many of us, he kept attending other writing conferences where he eventually met an agent who believed in his talent and then last year his first two novels were published, Black Rain and Black Sun.
Prior to going to Maui, I worked with a pair of novelists in Penang, one of whom this year found an agent and her book went to auction. (Until the book comes out, for privacy reasons, she wants to maintain a low profile.) So I blogged about another writer, that a friend of mine had met, AmandaHockings, who the week before had broken out in a huge way. As I wrote about before, when you meet writers who break out, it expands your own belief system. Instead of buying into all of the naysayers (even the ones residing inside your head) that the publishing industry is impossible, especially now that it's in such a state of flux (upheaval by some accounts), so it's best to avoid altogether until things settle down. Obviously that's not true for the people I just mentioned and a whole lot of others.
Then a year ago, I made the decision to walk away from renewing my contract to teach creative writing because I felt, in more ways than one, that even though it was paying the bills, it was holding me back from ever achieving my dream to publish my novels. Or maybe I was just using that teaching position (and marking all those papers) as a handy excuse. Either way, I knew it was time to leave if I'm ever going to achieve my original dream. I decided to just go for it.
Two weeks ago, I got a flash of insight to change the title of a third novel (the third novel title I changed this year—one for each of my three novels), and everything seemed to click. The title change, as with the other two books, made me think of the novel in a whole new light and gave it a new focus. Suddenly for this 23rd draft, I thought, this could work, and the title also doubles as a cool metaphor. (Sorry, keeping it under wraps for now, unlike my other two novels, though the original title was The Lonely Affair of Jonathan Brady.) I hadn't worked on this novel in over a year, and I had been holding back from it in favor of the other two novels, each requiring massive rewriting for the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. But when the new title idea struck, I knew it was time to act on it that very day.
So once I made the decision to rewrite this third novel for the Faulkner-Wisdom Novel Contest, where it was an almost-finalist for their 2008 contest, I wasn't sure if I had enough time, other than line-editing it and making only those corrections. Then I got the news, the deadline, which was originally 1 April, got pushed back to 1 May, and then got pushed back to 15 May! Thus now I got plenty of time to complete it, so long as I remain focused and cut out all distractions, like the Internet TimeThief.
It all began with a decision. In this case, it's a culmination of decisions that I've been making draft after draft going back far too many years, but I like to think, that each decision I made with this novel has been a natural progression that will ultimately lead to the goal I set back in the US when I made that first decision to leave a safe, secure position for the life of an expatriate writer, now living in Borneo.
Published on May 09, 2011 21:55
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