Goals for the Week – 01/12/15

Today marks a new week, and a new set of goals. We’ll break them down into three different categories: Writing, Editing, Reading

Writing

  • Brainstorm, outline, and write a new short story. Have a couple of ideas of what I can do. The only question is: do I want to work within the Wendigo and Soulweaver fantasy universes, or do I want to write a story set somewhere completely different?
  • Continue outlining the first Wendigo novel. I’ve fallen behind last week, so I’ll need to play a bit of catch-up in order to get it done by the January 31st deadline. Looks like a makeup weekend is in my future.

Editing

  • Edit “The Lone Blue Strand” for Fictionvale. I received the first round of edits for it, and the first round is usually the longest. It’s due at the end of the week, so this takes priority over any other editing jobs.
  • Edit my WOTF entry. It’s about time it gets finished, and so it shall this week!
  • Edit “Snowmelt” and submit it.

Reading

  • Finish Volume 30 of the Writers of the Future. Finished Volume 28 earlier today, finally. I have a bad habit of putting down the books I want to read in favor of doing more writing/outlining. I guess it’s good that I want to keep working, but it’s bad that
  • Finish Writing the Blockbuster Novel by Albert Zuckerman. Still haven’t gotten much past the first chapter for the aforementioned reasons. Will have to spend some time playing catchup, and that’s always bad to try.
  • Read Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson. It’s actually a re-read, but I never finished the final book. It came out during a turbulent phase, but I’ve wanted to finish it. So, back to the beginning we go.
  • Read Word-Loss Diet by Rayne Hall. I enjoyed her book about fight scenes, and verbosity is a problem of mine. Learning to trim words is important.

And there we have it. The goals for this week.

Writing in Public 2015: Day 11, Month 1

The fourth draft of “Snowmelt” is finished. This will likely be the final draft of the story, but I’m thinking of letting it sit for a few days before I do any more with it. Sometimes it pays to come back with a fresh set of eyes and read it all over again. Either that, or I’ll get so sick of looking at it that I’ll send it out. “Whatever! Just go!” We’ll see!

Managed to read a few more stories in Volume 30 of the Writers of the Future. It’s amazing how varied the stories are between volumes. I’m not sure which one I like better between 28 and 30, but I’ve enjoyed the tales so far. Some are the kind of stories I wouldn’t normally seek out, but are worth the read.

Blog Posts: 160
Planning and outlining: 0
Short Fiction: 0
Novel Fiction: 0
Salable words: 0

Total Fiction for Month: 8,550

Total Salable for Month: 1,000

Total Fiction for Challenge Year: 8,550

Total Salable for Challenge Year: 1,000

Writing in Public 2015: Day 10, Month 1

My goals for today were to finish the third draft of “Snowmelt” and begin the fourth draft. The fourth draft didn’t happen, but the third draft has been finished. The second draft was around 4,000 words, and the third draft is about 5,300. I didn’t think new words would be written during this phase, or at least not this many. But, it has, so that’s been added to the list.

I also read a couple of stories in Volume 30 of the Writers of the Future. Keeping up with my novel reading is going to be difficult this year, unless I manage my time more effectively. Writing takes priority, but I can’t just leave enough time during the day for writing. Reading must also happen.

So, there we have it. Some writing, some reading:

Blog Posts: 160
Planning and outlining: 0
Short Fiction: 1,300
Novel Fiction: 0
Salable words: 0

Total Fiction for Month: 8,550

Total Salable for Month: 1,000

Total Fiction for Challenge Year: 8,550

Total Salable for Challenge Year: 1,000

Writing in Public 2015: Day 9, Month 1

Once again, the focus for the day rested with the short story “Snowmelt.” Nothing else was completed on the reading or novel outlining front. I think this weekend is going to be quite a bit busier than I planned as I play catch-up, but that’s all right.

I started on the third draft of “Snowmelt” today, this time with a computer file copy of it rather than a handwritten copy. The first 4 scenes are done. 4 more need to be finished, and will be tomorrow morning.

Nothing new added to the numbers, since I can’t say that this is the final draft for sure. All of the “salable” words out of this story will be posted up on Sunday when it is finished and submitted.

Blog Posts: 631
Planning and outlining: 0
Short Fiction: 0
Novel Fiction: 0
Salable words: 0

Total Fiction for Month: 7,250

Total Salable for Month: 1,000

Total Fiction for Challenge Year: 7,250

Total Salable for Challenge Year: 1,000

 

WIPika Fridays: Novels and Shorts, Oh Me, Oh My

Today is the first full week of 2015, and it’s been a fairly productive one.

As of this afternoon two and a half drafts of a fantasy short story have been finished. The story is, at the moment, called “Snowmelt” (Or “Viking Irrigation”) and is consistently coming in at around 3,000 – 4,000 words or so. Not sure what the final count will be, but I doubt it will be much larger than 4,500 words. I may even be able to shave some out of it.

So, what is the story about? Well, it’s set in the Wendigo universe, and follows a 15 year old shieldmaiden who has just been field-promoted to Jarl (Lord) of her land after her father was killed prior to the story’s beginning. She has also survived an assassination attempt by her uncle and his illegitimate son. Men loyal to her killed her Uncle, but she had to personally take down her cousin. They grew up together, and his death traumatized her.

So, how do you salve this hurt in her soul? Well, if we want to be nice to the character we spend the whole story putting her in situations where she can cope, grieve, and recover. But, we’re not going to do that.

Instead, she’s thrown right into the fire. The first place she visits in the story is the farm that her cousin owned, to break the news to his widow.

The following is from the third draft, so it’s subject to change. Also, the names are placeholders at the moment:

Blood pooled on the blackwood tabletop. Ayla raised the wet knife. “Give me one reason why I shouldn’t kill you.”

Ylva sat stock-still, her hands pressed to her sides. She kept her voice level, matter-of-fact. “I am your next of kin, and your Jarl.”

Ayla snorted.

And you don’t want your children raised by the woman who bereft them of father and mother.” Ylva’s hand strayed to her side and touched the hilt of her misericorde, the mercy dagger. The weapon she had killed her own cousin with.

Ayla’s eyes narrowed and her fair face flushed. She slammed the knife down. Its keen edge bit into the cut of goat meat.

Ylva kept her features smooth, but her insides roiled with nauseating guilt. Ayla, how can you ever forgive me?

Ayla sawed at the meat. “How did Sindri die?”

In other news, progress is being made on the Wendigo novel front. It will not feature any of the characters in this particular short story, except indirectly. It will be focused on the happenings of the mainland continent to the east of where this story takes place. No actual draft writing was accomplished, nor will it be until February. But, the outline is progressing very smoothly. The goal is to finish it by January 31st, but I would love to get it done beforehand, if possible.

Writing in Public 2015: Day 8, Month 1

Today was productive on the writing front, but not so much on the reading front.

In fact, the only thing that was completed today was the second draft of “Snowmelt.” It’s approximately 4,000 words now, and 8 scenes long. As I was writing I managed to come up with notes that will help with the third draft. The third draft begins tomorrow. I am on target for getting this finished and submitted by Sunday. Hurray!

Had to shelve the novel for today, and possibly tomorrow as well. The weekend is going to be busy with finishing up this short story, and getting caught up on the novel.

Ok, so here are today’s numbers:

 

Here are today’s numbers:

Blog Posts: 145
Planning and outlining: 0
Short Fiction: 4,000
Novel Fiction: 0
Salable words: 0

Total Fiction for Month: 7,250

Total Salable for Month: 1,000

Total Fiction for Challenge Year: 7,250

Total Salable for Challenge Year: 1,000

Writing in Public 2015: Day 7, Month 1

Progress is coming on all but the reading front. Had bigger plans for today, but some emergency outdoor work coupled with recovering from an illness ruined my late afternoon and evening plans. But, all in all it was still a productive day:

  • Write “Snowmelt” and come up with a real name for it. The rough draft is finished, and I compiled all of my notes from that. A new outline is ready, this one with a better sense of pacing and overall cohesion. The second draft (Or what I call the “real first draft”) writing happens tomorrow. My goal is to blaze through all 5,500 planned words in one crazed session. I’ve done it before, so I know it’s possible. If I can do that, my next phase of editing can begin on Friday and wrap up on Saturday with a final read-through Sunday before it’s off to somewhere.
  • Edit my WOTF entry. Once again, time just didn’t pan out. I don’t want to get behind on my book outlining. Friday may just be one crazy edit session for both stories, “Snowmelt” and this one. We’ll see, because I definitely want to get this story edited before next week is finished. I printed off all 60 pages of the story and intend to go through it with a red pen. Haven’t done that in a long time, so I’m looking forward to it.
  • Continue outlining the Wendigo Novel 1. Currently still working on the scene summary outline. This “summary” is supposed to only be about 4 pages, but I’ve come up with closer to 6, and I’m only 25% through with the story. Going to be interesting to see where this goes. I’m still on target with time, though. I’m hoping to just power through this tomorrow afternoon and get the rest of it finished, no matter how long it ends up being. Then I’ll spend Friday paring it down into a shorter summary. It’s a skill I need to learn if I want to be able to write effective synopses for prospective agents/publishers, or effective blurbs for self-publishing.
  • Read Volume 30 of the Writers of the Future. Finished Volume 28 earlier today, finally. I have a bad habit of putting down the books I want to read in favor of doing more writing/outlining. I guess it’s good that I want to keep working, but it’s bad that
  • Read Writing the Blockbuster Novel by Albert Zuckerman. Still haven’t gotten much past the first chapter for the aforementioned reasons. Will have to spend some time playing catchup, and that’s always bad to try.

Remember: when writing a rough draft, expect it to suck. That way you can plow through and complete it. Writing it down the first time is the fun part. The real work begins with the rewriting and editing. But, before that can happen it has to be finished! Don’t try to make it perfect the first time, or it’ll never happen.

Here are today’s numbers:

Blog Posts: 1,750
Planning and outlining: 2,300
Short Fiction: 1,000
Novel Fiction: 0
Salable words: 0

Total Fiction for Month: 3,250

Total Salable for Month: 1,000

Total Fiction for Challenge Year: 3,250

Total Salable for Challenge Year: 1,000

Drafty Wednesdays: A Look at “Hero Defeats Ultimate Evil!”

The first Drafty Wednesday of 2015 is a short one, because we’ll be looking at a flash fiction piece I spent the last week working on: “Hero Defeats Ultimate Evil!”

Maoyu_coverThe story began as an idea taken from the concept behind the book series and anime Maoyu. Unfortunately I have not read the books, but I have seen the anime and can comment on it. The anime is basically a good versus evil tale, but with the twist that the Hero and the evil Demon King end up working together to break the never-ending cycle of war and create a better world for all. In it the main characters have no names, instead being referred to by their class: Hero, Demon King, Rogue, Merchant, etc. The idea, as I understand it, is to show them as the archetypes that they are.

I thought of doing something similar with a flash fiction piece, though probably not nearly as ambitious. I grew up playing RPGs on the SNES and later the Genesis, and the running theme through nearly all of them was the defeat of some kind of ultimate evil. And in most cases the evil was something that had either been sealed away in ages past and was now running rampant, or it was now running rampant and the solution was for the heroes (i.e. you and your controller) to seal the evil away “for all time” or whenever the sequel could be made.

This gave rise to the full title of today’s story: “Hero Defeats Ultimate Evil! Seals away for future generations to deal with.”

Seriously, why not just kill it and be done with it? Maybe I’m just not as pure and good as the good guys in these stories and RPGs must be, or maybe I’m just a coward. If a bad guy’s facing me down with the intent to kill me or mine, then I want him dead. That way he can’t come back and finish the job later.

Anyway, as you can tell from the title this isn’t going to be your typical POV kind of story. The title, I hope, reads like a newspaper article. That was the idea of it in the beginning, anyway. This would be the journalist’s view of what occurs in many RPGs: the defeat and sealing away of a great evil, and what it means for those involved.

The rough draft of it was, as you would imagine by seeing, fairly rough. I really had no idea how news articles like this would have been written, nor did I care. I had a spark for the idea and wanted to get it down on paper. And I did, in a half hour or so. It’s amazing how quickly an idea can be written out once it’s rattled around in my head for a long enough time. The original draft was around 704 words and broken out into 15 paragraphs. Here is the first few paragraphs of it:

Hero Defeats Ultimate Evil

Seals away for future generations to deal with.

Reporter seeks bards to put epic story to music.

After a cataclysmic battle lasting three days and two nights (“Even heroes need to sleep,” Paladin was overheard saying after sprinkling holy water on her pajamas) the Hero’s Party has done the impossible. The Ultimate Evil is vanquished, its body broken and sent to the depths of a newly formed lake at the base of Mount Doom. It is not quite dead, but it has been sealed away.

It will be many generations before the Ultimate Evil rises again,” Mage said. The gemstone on the end of her staff smoked from the amount of magical energy expended to carry out the world-saving deed. She wiped sweat from her dirty brow and pointed to the still-churning waters. “The lake will settle, but it will stir once more. Have no doubt of that.”

Reads pretty crappily, right? Well, for someone who doesn’t know the story at all, anyway. Who’s Paladin? And who is Mage? It becomes apparent that they’re members of a group called the Hero’s Party, but that’s not explained all that well in the beginning. It made sense to me, but I’m the writer. It hopefully makes sense to the guy behind the wheel.

After this I started reading up on wartime news articles, specifically the BBC’s stuff from World War II. I came up with a better idea of how a news article should be formed. Namely:

  1. Start with the punch line, the gist of the story. The title of the article already says it all, whether it’s “Hero Defeats Ultimate Evil” or “Normandy Invasion a Success.” Following that and maybe a subheadline, the first paragraph should say the most important thing that happened.
  2. The next two or three paragraphs expand on this punch line, going into a little bit more detail about what happened, what it means, or maybe what important figures or leaders have to say about it. A quote by a general, or something an eyewitness saw. Something that brings it all home.
  3. The meat of the story, or what I like to call, “Back to the beginning.” Here we go to the start of it all. The operation’s launch-point. We then work our way forward until we reach the aforementioned climax again and lay it out in more detail than the summary at the first of the article.
  4. The conclusion. Here the article pauses to reflect on the significance of the event, or to mention other things that were happening at the same moment elsewhere, or some such bit of reflective work.

Armed with this, I looked back over my work and came up with a much longer second draft. 1,274 words, and 32 paragraphs. Here’s the first bit of that:

Hero Defeats Ultimate Evil

Seals away for future generations to deal with.

After seven years of terror, the world is finally free from the clutches of the Ultimate Evil!

In a cataclysmic battle that sundered a mountain range, changed the course of two rivers, and left the magical city of Tarsis a smoldering crater, the elite members of the Hero’s Party (HP) have finally completed the impossible task placed upon them. The Ultimate Evil (UE) is vanquished, sealed away inside a newly formed lake filled with holy water.

UE struck the first blow in a horrific display of its tremendous power. A gigantic spell circle appeared in the skies over Tarsis, and moments later the earth opened up and swallowed whole sections of the city. The intent was to kill everyone in HP, but they had already left the soon-to-be destroyed city.

Better, but still not where I want to be at. We’re jumping into the meat of the story (“UE struck the first blow…”) too soon. Also, it’s a bit long for what is supposed to be a tongue-in-cheek story. I doubt I’ll keep the reader’s interest for much more than 1,000 words, so going nearly 300 over that is a bad move.

More revision followed. This time I analyzed several articles and tried to come up with ratios for the punchline summary, the meat of the article, and the conclusion. After going through several wartime articles I came up with a rough formula:

  • Punchline summary – 10-15% of the article. The fewest paragraphs I saw were three, and the most were five.
  • Meat of the story – 65-80% of the article. Obviously the bulk of it, as it is here we’re going into the most detail about things.
  • Conclusion – 10-20%. If the ramifications of the event are huge or some famous person makes a commentary about things, this will end up being longer. At other times it’s only going to be a few words or so. Still, the shortest I saw this section was around two paragraphs. The most was five, depending on how long the overall article was.

Now we’re talking. This is quite a bit of work for a simple short story, right? Sadly, this inefficiency spills over into my longer works, which explains why it’ll take me upwards of 10,000 words to write a 4,000 word story sometimes. Sad, but true!

Ok, here’s the final revision, the version I submitted to:

Hero Defeats Ultimate Evil!

Subheadline: Seals away for future generations to deal with.

After seven years of terror, the world is finally free from the clutches of the Ultimate Evil!

In a cataclysmic battle that sundered Mount Dour Doom, changed the course of two underground rivers, and left the magical city of Dilirin a smoldering crater, the elite men and women of the Hero’s Party (HP) have done the impossible:

The Ultimate Evil (UE) is vanquished, sealed away inside a newly formed lake blessed by Paladin and Priest.

Paladin struck her breastplate in salute. “The Gods are with us! Failure was never a possibility.”

Priest dropped to his knees and prayed for those who had been lost.

Earlier this week HP gathered in Dilirin to receive a magical talisman that would help in the fight against UE.

So, the title and first line of the story has not changed at all from the get-go. I only added “subheadline” so that a first reader/editor will be able to note that it’s not the real beginning of the story, but rather an extension of the title. Probably not necessary, but I’m quirky like that.

Here we have the punchline summary done in five short paragraphs, beginning with the declaration that the world is finally free from the clutches of the Ultimate Evil, a brief summary of the battle and the damage wrought, and quotes or actions from two members of the Hero’s Party (This time properly introduced). We then begin the meat of the story with “Earlier this week…” and the story proceeds from there to its ultimate full-circle conclusion.

It reads more like a wartime article than it ever has, and I feel like it’s now something I could do should I decide to write any more stories in this format. Will I? Not sure. Depends on how well this one does, as well as what else strikes my fancy. My writing tends more on the traditional sword and sorcery side, but I do like experimenting with new styles and different genres and subgenres. So, we shall see!

As for the final version of the story? I was able to trim it down to right at 1,000 words. How’s that for a rubberband effect? Went from 700 to 1,300 back down to 1,000. If I’d written another draft it might’ve ballooned again! Glad I got it fired off.

Writing in Public 2015: Day 6, Month 1

Progress is coming on all but the reading front. Had bigger plans for today, but some emergency outdoor work coupled with recovering from an illness ruined my late afternoon and evening plans. But, all in all it was still a productive day:

  • Write “Snowmelt” and come up with a real name for it. Managed to write scenes 2 through 6, and part of 7. Ten pages, or around 2,500 words. I’m more than halfway through the story, though the scenes will likely need to be re-ordered to get the pacing I really want. I still need to come up with a real name for it. The placeholder name is bugging me.
  • Edit my WOTF entry. Didn’t get a chance to look it over today. That was my afternoon plan, and it got messed up. I do not have time for it tomorrow, but I will see what I can do. It’s my hope to get this edited to the point that I’m really happy with it, then send it off to the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction for a first attempt. If I get any feedback from that, I’ll make note and get it more polished for the Writers of the Future.
  • Keep working on the Wendigo Novel 1 outlining process, first with Michael A Stackpole’s “21 Days To a Novel“. Couldn’t start on Day 18, which is to come up with scenes that affect all the character arcs, or as many as possible. Got started on this, but could not complete it.
  • Keep working on the Wendigo Novel 1 outlining process, this time with the plan in Karen Wiesner’s “First Draft in 30 Days“. Day 5 and 6 in the plan involve a summary outline of the story. A good bit of the summary is finished, but I’m not quite there yet. I think Day 5 and 6 will take a couple more days, at the rate I’m going.
  • Read Writing the Blockbuster Novel by Albert Zuckerman. I’ve gotten through the introductory chapter. Could not get into this today, sadly.
  • Read Volume 30 of the Writers of the Future. Volume 28 is mostly finished, so I expect to start this tomorrow.

Remember: when writing a rough draft, expect it to suck. That way you can plow through and complete it. Writing it down the first time is the fun part. The real work begins with the rewriting and editing. But, before that can happen it has to be finished! Don’t try to make it perfect the first time, or it’ll never happen.

Here are today’s numbers:

Blog Posts: 381
Planning and outlining: 1,000
Short Fiction: 2,500
Novel Fiction: 0
Salable words: 0

Total Fiction for Month: 3,250

Total Salable for Month: 0

Total Fiction for Challenge Year: 3,250

Total Salable for Challenge Year: 0

Writing in Public 2015: Day 5, Month 1

A new week, a new set of goals! Expect to see the following goals listed throughout the day. The first line for each bullet point will be the same, but the content of each paragraph will be different as I make progress with each goal:

  • Write “Snowmelt” and come up with a real name for it. It’s a short story set in the Wendigo universe and focused on the island of Vespast (Known as Westerland by the people of Ursel Province and the freemen of the Tundra Wastes). It’ll basically be a story about a Viking-like people and their new leader, a 15 year-old shieldmaiden who’s thrust into the position with the death of her father. I had hoped to get more done today, but found out that my outline for it has either been misplaced, deleted, or was never saved to begin with. I had to fall back on brainstorming notes and what was rattling around in my head. Didn’t get as much of the draft written today as I would have liked, but I did complete the first scene, or about three pages. More awaits tomorrow!
  • Edit my WOTF entry. Didn’t get a chance to look it over today. I plan to spend time on this tomorrow afternoon. My goal is to get it finished before
  • Keep working on the Wendigo Novel 1 outlining process, first with Michael A Stackpole’s “21 Days To a Novel“. I wrapped up Day 17’s work over the weekend, and had hoped to start Day 18 today. Wasn’t as efficient as I would like, but tomorrow is another day.
  • Keep working on the Wendigo Novel 1 outlining process, this time with the plan in Karen Wiesner’s “First Draft in 30 Days“. Day 5 and 6 in the plan involve a summary outline of the story. Basically, a several page synopsis that goes through the story scene-by-scene. I’m rather verbose when I’m writing up summaries, so this will end up being quite a bit longer than the plan calls for. But, that’s all right. As long as the ideas are down, they can be trimmed and expanded as needed later.
  • Read Writing the Blockbuster Novel by Albert Zuckerman. I’ve gotten through the introductory chapter. I plan to read more tomorrow. So far, so good! But, not into it enough to really give a running commentary.
  • Read Volume 30 of the Writers of the Future. I’m still finishing up Volume 28, but I expect to start this tomorrow. I’ve read a couple of the stories from it already, so I’m ahead of the game there. In Volume 28 today I finished reading a really good story called “The Poly Islands.” It was heavy on its environmental message, but in a very entertaining way. Very enjoyable.

While today wasn’t as productive as it could have been, it marks the first amount of new writing for 2015. Tomorrow, I expect to write quite a bit on “Snowmelt” and do a good bit of editing on the WOTF entry:

Here are today’s numbers:

Blog Posts: 522
Planning and outlining: 1,700
Short Fiction: 750
Novel Fiction: 0
Salable words: 0

Total Fiction for Month: 750

Total Salable for Month: 0

Total Fiction for Challenge Year: 750

Total Salable for Challenge Year: 0