Sunday Update: Sickness, Stalling and Shorts, Oh My!
I fell off the face of the blogging planet for a couple of weeks, not even posting my ROW80 updates. We had a bad cold that took about ten days to work it's way through our household, including sick days for both my husband and me, and then the requisite catch up on life, work, etc... So the time just disappeared. It's bound to happen here and there, so I'm not going to spend time stressing about it.
What have I accomplished? Nothing further on Queen Witch. I still need to tear the mid-section of that novel apart, and make firm decisions on what I'm keeping and what I'm putting in the "scrap" document. I don't like to delete big sections, because I've regretted it in the past. There's often a use for scenes that didn't make the book: for instance, I might post some of the fun stuff on my blog. :) My problem right now is getting a big chunk of time to work on that section of the book. Things have been so crazy around here... I might have to get creative and come up with a trade for my overworked husband. I shall ponder that.
A few weeks ago I posted a short story I'd found in my writing files. I'd also found a second completed story. When I asked on this blog what folks thought of the idea of combining the two stories into a book, and whether they would pay for short stories in general, I got varied responses that really made me think. One comment struck me as a great idea: Julie Glover said she'd pay for a collection of shorts, stating maybe 3 would be a small collection. I liked that idea so much that I went ahead and made it a reality. :)
The third story actually compliments the others nicely, acting as sort of a bridge between them. The first story and title piece, The Harshlands and Eternal Summer, is about a world rapidly changing, and one boy's choices when he disagrees with the decisions of his elders. The story I just completed is called Mundane and Extraterrestrial Agonies, and it's about dealing -- or not dealing -- with grief. The final story (the one I posted here) is called The Giant in the Spruce, and it's an uplifting, very short story about balance and what's important in life. Together these three stories feel like a book...so thank you for the idea, Julie!
So that project is now sitting in a file at the moment, waiting for an edit. (And you ask, isn't everything you've ever written waiting for an edit?... Yes, sometimes it feels that way.) I'll release the book later this month. Fun!! Thanks everyone for your great advice. It's so nice to have a community to present such ideas to.
I hope everyone has a great, productive week!!
What have I accomplished? Nothing further on Queen Witch. I still need to tear the mid-section of that novel apart, and make firm decisions on what I'm keeping and what I'm putting in the "scrap" document. I don't like to delete big sections, because I've regretted it in the past. There's often a use for scenes that didn't make the book: for instance, I might post some of the fun stuff on my blog. :) My problem right now is getting a big chunk of time to work on that section of the book. Things have been so crazy around here... I might have to get creative and come up with a trade for my overworked husband. I shall ponder that.
A few weeks ago I posted a short story I'd found in my writing files. I'd also found a second completed story. When I asked on this blog what folks thought of the idea of combining the two stories into a book, and whether they would pay for short stories in general, I got varied responses that really made me think. One comment struck me as a great idea: Julie Glover said she'd pay for a collection of shorts, stating maybe 3 would be a small collection. I liked that idea so much that I went ahead and made it a reality. :)
The third story actually compliments the others nicely, acting as sort of a bridge between them. The first story and title piece, The Harshlands and Eternal Summer, is about a world rapidly changing, and one boy's choices when he disagrees with the decisions of his elders. The story I just completed is called Mundane and Extraterrestrial Agonies, and it's about dealing -- or not dealing -- with grief. The final story (the one I posted here) is called The Giant in the Spruce, and it's an uplifting, very short story about balance and what's important in life. Together these three stories feel like a book...so thank you for the idea, Julie!
So that project is now sitting in a file at the moment, waiting for an edit. (And you ask, isn't everything you've ever written waiting for an edit?... Yes, sometimes it feels that way.) I'll release the book later this month. Fun!! Thanks everyone for your great advice. It's so nice to have a community to present such ideas to.
I hope everyone has a great, productive week!!
Published on May 06, 2012 07:52
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