Showing posts with label Nano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nano. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Nano Time 2012

NaNoWriMo kicks off in just TWO DAYS!

This year, i'm really nervous.

  1. I'm doing a NaNo no no by re-writing a previous nano. 
  2. It's the same NaNo from last year which took several thousand words in which my characters revolted and i couldn't get them off the damn boat!
  3. I'm running not one but two write ins which i often don't get a whole lot of work done during.
So this could be the first year i can't win. Or i could blow it all out of the water and have the most epic story on the face of the planet.
.......
more likely the former.

This will be my fifth year doing NaNo. It's hard to believe that four years ago, my buddy somehow talked me into doing this.

I remember thinking to myself, "self! you couldn't even write your Elixir story that you've been working on for 13 years. Why would this be any better?"

And yet the story that came out of that year was awesome. Reading through it even now, i still enjoy the story.

Last year's story, the idea was good and solid. It hasn't even changed that much. Just the premise and the order of things and small tweaks to my characters to make them more believable. Less of the majestic heros and the drop dead gorgeous heroine. More of realistic 20 somethings that have quirks, odd habits, and drive each other crazy.

I believed so much in this story from the beginning even after the 30,000 words on the stupid boat that i started a re-write back in February. I woke up one morning and just had to write a scene that i had dreamed about. 4,000 words later, i had two chapters, a new way of going about my story.

Over the course of the last year, I've talked through several points of my story with Boyfriend Jon and many many other friends. Slowly finding the reason for my story. Finding new characters that belong in my world. New ways to seed foreshadowing, and themes. Very quickly, everything falls into place. I should be excited, and exuberant, and enthusiastic. But instead, i'm just nervous.

What if i get caught up in all the problems that held me back last year? Like the fact that i don't really know much about pre WW2 fasion, society, landmarks, culture, and just the history of WW2 in general. What happens if all these new ideas run me into corners? What happens if for the first time i fail NaNoWriMo?

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

NaNo 2011 - Day 23

If it hadn't been for the severe sleep deprivation, i might have finished last night.

Yup you read that right. my current word count is 48,011k, and if i didn't need these silly sleep things...i probably would have kept going and reached 50 last night.

As it was i was starting to feel physical complications from my late nights and early mornings. I had a muscle knot under my right shoulder blade that was so painful that i could feel it every time i breathed. And i had scary level dark bags under my eyes. Let me tell you, i do not look pretty after chronic lack of sleep.

I did the only thing i knew how to do. I laid on the floor of my apartment with an electric blanket draped over my back turned up on high. And then i had the wonderful Boyfriend Jon massage the bad knot hard. And then i left the blanket on for another hour, typing on my story while still laying on the floor. When i checked later, the knot had dissipated for the most part.

However it is a little bit sad that it took me until 47k to write even a single scene that i had planned out before Nano started. However, the hotel chase scene was fun.

Tonight i'll reach 50. and then immediately book a massage with someone with super strong hands that can grind all the other knots out of my back and neck.

Then we'll see about finishing Foolish Luck and fixing the first 2/3rds of the story so it's not so unbelievably boring.

Friday, November 18, 2011

NaNo 2011 - Day 18

I'm sorry that i'm not keeping up with my daily slog of thoughts during NaNo this year.
A lot is going on in my personal life, and my professional life and i just try to keep my head above water. I've barely had time to write while at work, even when i stay through my lunch hour. and then i come home and try to keep my hands off of Boyfriend Jon. No, get your minds out of the gutter, it's so that he can heat them up with his furnace of a torso.
Then there's been the endless task of making myself comfortable enough to concentrate on writing. All my normal tricks haven't been working. My back starts to ache on the couch, my butt when i'm sitting on the floor, i can't put my feet up on the dining table and i no longer have a desk due to my crazy tiny apartment. Even my characters are being uncooperative. I specifically chose characters that are NOT the strong silent type. But when i write them, they keep trying to be.
Everything this year just seems off. I can't explain how, just disappointingly off.

Normally, by the time i'm past the halfway point, i'm desperately searching for a climax to my story, which is always the hardest part for me. This year, I've been struggling with breaking out of the monotony of their normal lives. I can't for the life of me thing of how to weave mythology into the beginning, and really don't want to have this imaginary line that they cross somewhere on the Atlantic and suddenly, gods and legends become real.

For over 35,000 words and all the way up till now, I've spent my NaNo time writing the extensive back story that i thought i needed to write in order for the parts that i wanted to write all along to make any sense.

It took me 17k to get them out of america.
It took me another 17 to get them off the damn boat on their trans Atlantic crossing.
Then i stupidly put them on a train. And after three thousands words of that, i finally had enough.

This is not the story i wanted to write. It's boring, and my characters are about as deep as a birdbath. I cannot take another 15k words to get things to start happening.

Today is the 18th! Are you kidding me? I've wasted over half the month on the back story? Please someone smack me upside the head with a shoe, i'm such an idiot.  There's no hook for the readers. I feel so sorry for the few people that have been reading along. It's so bad. I know it's bad, and the only way that i can think of to fix it is to just jump ahead of all the boring stuff, and worry about how to connect it later.

I can't take this anymore. I'm terrified now that i'll get to November 30th and will barely have written any of the exciting and gripping tale that i went into NaNo trying to write. And since i really don't do much writing outside of NaNo, i don't want this story to fall by the wayside and never get picked back up again. It has so much potential if i could just stop writing about the fricken train.

My NaNo this year was not meant to be this boring back story. And as of right now, the back story ends.
Ok, random plot twist generator....um no, nijas do not work...lets try again....

Monday, November 14, 2011

NaNo 2011 - Day 14

I have really got to get more stern with myself over the subject of NaNo and the subject of sleep. Staying up until after midnight on a night when i need to be up at six is not a good idea. I know this very well from previous years when i have stumbled into work and done everything possible to not let my head droop onto my desk where i will surely fall into a deep snoring slumber.

Yet every year, i end up growing bags under my eyes and yawning through a meeting or two. Really, by now i should know better. And still, that didn't stop me from hitting the snooze button three times more than i should have...sleeping in an additional half hour this morning. Too late to grab a shower (thank god for dry shampoo) too late to put together a new outfit (thank god for cardigans) and too late to arrive on time (mostly because i almost forgot my badge).

But i'm here. Working away as my mind feels like it's filled with fuzz.

Three pieces of good news.

1) I decided to take a break at lunch and re-read what i have done so far in my story. It started out to just be a reminder, but I ended up listening to my voice as an author. I had been thinking that my story beginning was 14k words of pure crap. But in reality, it wasn't half bad. It's drawn out and there's very little to keep anyone reading, but the writing is good and my characters are talking a great deal more than normal. So thus far, it's just a slow start story. Which is better than i had expected from myself. I know we're all our worst critics. But it feels about 10x as molasses like when it takes you a day to get through each chapter.

2) I found my Kindle! it was hiding in the couch cushion. this is a good thing because over the weekend, i wasn't very inclined to write as i should have been and i was able to pick up the Hunger Games that i had just barely started before NaNo. Normally, i intensely dislike first person narrative books. But this one has genuinely captivated me. I like the setting and the character is believable. I'm always a sucker for a female who's a survivor. Although the story line is extremely similar to Battle Royale (Koushun Takami) which was written about 5 years earlier...it's still good in its own way. But then again, i adore the Avatar movie even though is basically Dances With Wolves.

3) On Sunday the 13th, i celebrated my 2 year anniversary with Boyfriend Jon. True to our normal form, we hung out with a friend, played some board games, went out for a good meal, wandered around the scary Walmart, then went home and went right back to writing. We lead such extravagant lives.
As for reaching the two year mark, all i can say is that it doesn't feel like it. Most of the time i still feel like we're in the giddy, silly, blissful stage usually seen around the three to six month stage of a relationship. I love this man and don't know what i'd do without him.

Monday, November 7, 2011

NaNo 2011 - Day 7

So last night, i finally got my timeline and route in order and went to bed thinking about how to write it. I woke up and was all energized to go.

I was in such a good mood that even an extra dump of work on my desk couldn't phase me. Cause as soon as I got home i was going to kick some NaNo butt! Hiiiyaaa!

And then my sister called.

Oh yeah, i'm the horrible daughter that forgot her mom's birthday...is tonight. In the words of Homer Simpson: D'OH!

Not to mention i found that apparently i'm taking her to the Verizon store tonight to help her pick out her new smart phone. Which since my mom is not extremely technologically savvy...means extensive answering of questions. Which will probably take a lot of time. Time i had hoped to get back into the swing (finally) of my story!

Yeah...life happens.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

NaNo 2011 - Day 6

Whoops. Usually i'm a bit better about keeping up with my thoughts and feelings over the course of a November. The truth is, this year, i'm (was) neck and neck with one of my friends so just about ever spare second was spent writing on my story.

Today being the sixth, i should be at about 10,000 words. Due to the fact that the friend I've been neck and neck with is going for one hundred thousand words as opposed the regular fifty thousand, she's helped push me to push out over 16 thousand words.

The official count right now is 16,425 while i take a break and get some work done in completing the company calendar.

14k of that was completed by Friday. After that, a small conversation with Boyfriend Jon led me to question my entire timeline of my story. Turns out, not paying attention in pretty much any of my history classes was a problem after all. My memory of events and corresponding years was faulty and caused an enormous hole in my story that could not logically be breached in any way that still made sense.

It had a huge effect on me. I was instantly frustrated and i frantically searched about online for some other way of fixing this huge hole. I snapped at poor Boyfriend Jon, and a headache took a strong hold at the base of my neck. There was no logical way i could get two young men into Europe, but not to join the war, without completely deviating from history. Finally I got an idea.

I have an Uncle, who is renowned in our family for talking about WW2 at great length and even occasionally exhaustion. Now normally, when he goes off on his rants, i leave the room or stare at him until i start to nod off. WW2 history doesn't interest me in the least. The only reason i'm writing about it is to give the story an urgency and an easy bad guy. Not to mention Indiana Jones is one of the inspiration and who is Indiana Jones always's fighting? oh yeah. The Nazis.

But now, at day 6 i was being forced to consider the possibility that i would need to completely alter the timeline, perhaps even choosing a completely different era. That might have been less daunting at day 6 if i was actually following the 1667 words a day. But 14,000 words is a LOT to have to compeltely re-write.

So, back to my Uncle. When i called he wasn't home so i enlisted my cousin to do what the women in our family refer to as the sweet insistence. Which in this case involved her standing over him with the phone in her hand telling him how much his niece (me) needed his help and without him my entire project might fail. Of which i said no such thing, but i got a phone call back from him in a surprisingly short amount of time.

As i laid out my problem for him, he kept interrupting me telling me about where else in Europe the Germans were fighting during 1939. Border disputes with the French were the least of the battles as the Germans moved over eastern europe. Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Russia taking advantage to try and get their share of the land. May i just say...power hungry idiots!?

But when i explained the path that i needed my characters to follow, he gave me two lumps of SOLID GOLD. One being that i could land my characters in Spain which was a neutral port. Neutral port to neutral port meant that they were less likely ("accidents" happened all the time) to be sunk by U-boats.

And if i made my characters arrive in France before June 3rd and if they left to go into Italy before June 10th (when Italy declared war on France), they would be able to go straight through  without too much of a problem. It would be even better if i gave them some way of diplomatic immunity.

So there you go. You've now been caught up with my frenzied recalculation that has taken up most of my weekend. As a matter of fact, i don't think I've written 2 thousand words all weekend. I just was so not feeling it. Which is why i said that i WAS neck and neck with my friend. I think the last i hear she was coming up on 22k. Which i'm so excited for her but my competitive nature is like OMFG! STOP TYPING SO I CAN CATCH UP.

Boyfriend Jon is also eliciting a similar response as he's approaching 20k right now, or so he tells me.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Adventures in being a Write-In Host

This is the 3rd year I've been a write in host and my 4th year doing NaNoWriMo. Every year, i learn new things. Every year there are new challenges to overcome, new tactics to acquire. Every year, i have to learn how to overcome my weaknesses, or how to shore them up with other people's strengths. It has opened my eyes to a lot of things regardless of whether i want to acknowledge them or not. The following is a list of the advice that i have developed over time to have a great Write In and things i wish i had known before I ever agreed to be a Write In Host. So, after you've posted something on the forum...

  1. Be the Leader: Be flexible enough that you can roll with any problems that arise, but not so flimsy that people walk all over you. By coming to your write in, they're expecting you to lead it. So be ready to lead (and have fun with it). Think kindergarden teacher style.
  2. Don't take yourself too seriously. Make fun of yourself, other people in the room, the whole nano experience. But don't take things too far. If you accidentally insult someone, sincerely apologize.
  3. Have a ton of energy and be encouraging: I spontaneously break into dance and i'm always bouncing around to check on people. Just don't let the Write in get sleepy and don't let people fade from notice. If someone's stuck, take some time to see if you can give them ideas. 
  4. Smile as much as you can. New comers are often timid and uncertain. Shaking hands with them and greeting them individually can often break the ice. Look for people hovering around the edges, often times behind you. If you have younger kids in your group, introduce yourself to their parents if they're there. 
  5. Have a set of introductory questions: My favorites are:
    1. Your name
    2. What you do to pay the bills (and or pass the non NaNo-ing time)
    3. Your NaNo experiance or lack there of or how they heard about NaNo
    4. Your highschool mascott - for something random to get people talking. 
  6. Have people helping you: I have always had two helpers. One who's good with technical questions and one that's good with plot questions. That way i can focus on being the cheer leader and being the diplomat for conflicts which will arise, trust me. 
  7. HAVE A PLAN: People will show up late, so don't expect to get started on time. Know ahead of time if everyone just wants to put their head down and write (i'm personally not a fan of this method, but whatever works for you). If you're doing Word Wars - know how long each word war will be, and plan for breaks. Know what your prizes will be and how to determine who will win. A lot can get written in short little sprints. 
  8. Be polite but firm when there's turbulence: Cram a lot of bodies into a small area, there's bound to be some friction. Get the story from both sides, then find a compromise. Handle any uncomfortable subjects privately with the individual. There is no need to embarrass anyone. 
  9. Know your Location: Work with the manager directly for scheduling and resource requirements. Don't just surprise them by showing up and expecting to be accommodated. Also, with a lot of people, a lot of laptops and a lot of power needed, know where your outlets are and bring power strips and extension chords as appropriate. You might want to check with the manager about AC too, cause those laptops put out a ton of heat. Also: 
    1. Clean up after yourself. A sure fire way to not be invited back is leaving the place a mess. If you move tables, move them back, clear off any trash etc. 
    2. Have a sign or a way for other NaNo people to identify you: The ducks aren't always enough, so make your location clear
  10. Be respectful of everyone's individual writing style: This is one that I'm huge on. You can't think "it's my way or the highway" when it comes to writing.  There's no perfect universal formula for writing a good story. Everyone needs to find their method and if it's not your way, it's ok! Also, don't let others make newcomers think one way is superior, cause it might not be the best way for them. Actually, just being respectful in general will get you a long way. 

Other things to think about:

  • A group roster (for networking purposes)
  • Ducks (or your area's mascot/identifier)
  • Identifying Newbies and Veterans
  • Plotters vs Pantsers (please don't make it a rivalry)
  • Any fund raising you want to do

The best part about the last several years is the experiences. I wouldn't trade the last 4 NaNo's for anything. Even when i was stressed out and thinking about quitting, these write ins kept me going. Just as I love passing on NaNo to people who've never heard about it, now i have advice to give to those who are looking to start out on their own Write Ins. I started with no rules, and only a glimmer of an idea of what to do for a write in. Now we've grown from a small handful of people to almost 30. It's fun, there's lots of laughter and i can't wait for the year to begin. 

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Anxiously Awaiting

NaNo is coming! NaNo is coming!

The countdown has reached 6.5 days. Less than a week to go. Butterflies are beginning to wake up in my stomach, my dreams start to inspire tiny little tidbits of my future story, research is now boring and i really just want to get started!

I mean really, i can only read so much about real history before i want to start messing around with what might have caused certain events. I don't even mind putting my 70wpm typing skills to use transcribing videos for my mom's deaf student, because it's awesome practice for nano.

My excitement makes my foot tap when i look at any calendar, my voice shows obvious enthusiasm when talking about it with other people, even if they're non NaNo-ers. Its on my mind almost non stop.

Why can't it just be here already?!

On the plus side, this year's novel is based off of a plot bunny that spawned itself all the way back in 2008. I even wrote about 5,000 words of it on non NaNo time. The basis is solid, and the characters are strong, but those 5k words will be great to inspire the new beginning. In a sense, my first three days are almost already written. I just have to re-type them in a different pattern and tuck in a few changes here and there.

My fingers are ichy. Come on November!

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

NaNo 20 questions featuring Boyfriend Jon

Sorry in advance for the very long post those of you who don't follow NaNoWriMo. 

I went to a plot workshop over the weekend with Boyfriend Jon. One of the biggest things we took away was the concept of writing down the conditions under which we each write best. Our most productive writing environment. It quickly became evident that we had two very different writing styles. But it was also good, because now we know how to help each other. Some of his answers were completely surprising to me. He's going to post this over at his blog too. 



1. In what location do you write best?
Anne: I can write pretty much anywhere. I can be productive writing at home, but it's harder because that seems to be the only time of year that I actually want to fold laundry. Anything to procrastinate. So often times, I leave and crash at Boyfriend Jon's place or at a quite location. Coffee shops and bookstores usually have too much stimulus since I'm one of those people that talks to everyone. Other than that, specifics don't matter. Floor, couch, desk....I’m flexible.
Jon: I've tried writing in a variety of places, but I've done my best at home on my couch, or lying face down in bed. I've tried coffee shops, but I'm usually too distracted or worried about being kicked out. My first year of NaNo I wrote the majority of my novel on the bus to and from work; not easy in the snow!


2. When is the best time for you to write?
Anne: I write very well when I can sit and be uninterrupted for a while. But I guess my best breakthroughs come either when I first get up in the morning or in the later evening; 7-12pm or so. Don't tell my boss but sometimes my lunch hour of writing goes a little longer than it should. 
Jon: My best hours are usually after 10pm. There's nothing more satisfying than burning some midnight oil, especially when the words are just flowing. There's also less distractions: either I keep writing or I go to sleep. When I write during the day, I'm much more likely to take long breaks, or work on some other projects.


3. How do you structure your writing time? Do you prefer short sprints or long marathons?
Anne: I can do both, it mostly depends on what I’m writing about. If I’m trudging through some tedious dialogue, I have to take it in sprints or I get sick of it. But when writing action, I can't just stop mid jump kick!
Jon: I need the long haul. I usually spend the beginning of every writing session reviewing what I wrote the last time, and when I'm done writing I review what I just wrote. Sometimes I even leave notes for myself for when I sit back down. That overhead doesn't lend itself to short sprints: when I do write in short bursts, say on the bus, I usually lose a lot of time trying to get myself into character.


4. Any other environmental factors? Light? Temperature? Noise level?
Anne: My eyes start to hurt if the only lighting is my laptop screen. Also, I rarely turn on my heater, so I prefer to have it cold enough to need my slippers and maybe a light blanket or else I'll start getting sleepy. One other item that always seems to surprise people is that I have to have some background noise. I'm not talking music or white noise; but I flip on some uninteresting TV show and leave it on in the background. And somehow, I’m able to ignore it and write. 
Jon: I prefer writing in the dark, maybe a single lamp, but that's mostly so I can see any written notes. If it's too cold I get jumpy and distracted, but then again, too warm and I'm just as likely to take a nap, especially if I'm working in bed. Slightly cool air with a blanket works for me. As for noise: the closer to silence the better.


5. Do you like to listen to music while you write? If so, what kind?
Anne: Ironically, I have a lot of trouble listening to music while I write. Lyrics end up getting written into my story and often times I get some mellow calm music when I have a really intense scene to write. Then I spend ten minutes trying to find the right music for the scene and by the time I get back to being able to write, I’ve forgotten what I was going to write. Occasionally I’ll get lucky with instrumental music like Spanish guitars or soundtrack music, but overall...I just put the TV on and ignore it. Someone once suggested that I get a white noise machine and try that....but those suckers are expensive. 
Jon: I can't listen to anything with lyrics while I'm actually writing. But I'm a big fan of instrumental music, especially electronica and movie soundtracks. I've a selection of soundtracks I return to regularly while writing: Gladiator, The Lord of the Rings, or more recently the Tron sequel. I used to think listening to movie soundtracks would distract me; far from it. I usually listen to the music just barely above a whisper, they way background music should be. But I'll admit, sometimes, right before writing session I'll listen to a playlist of loud, up-tempo, and high-energy rock music to get me in "writing shape".


6. Do you like to write with others around you, or do you prefer to fly solo?
Anne: I'm definitely a social person. I like to have other people nearby that are doing either the same thing or something quiet so I can concentrate. It's something about the camaraderie that I like. But I can write just fine on my own. 
Jon: I honestly prefer to write alone. I need time to hem and haw over my words, talk myself through scenes, or otherwise not have to worry about anyone else around me. I don't get much writing done at social writing functions: I'm usually way too interested in hearing about other's stories, or bouncing ideas off the other writers.


7. Do you keep any drinks or snacks handy?
Anne: I'm a pumpkin seed fanatic. I generally fill a gallon bag after Halloween with baked pumpkin seeds...and they're gone in a couple of weeks. That and my handy camelback water bottle and a fresh supply of ice cold water. I avoid caffeine in general, but I drink a cup first thing in the morning during NaNo so that I’m not falling asleep at my desk from burning both ends of the candle. 
Jon: Nothing in particular. I just try to avoid anything that will get my hands sticky. I keep a water bottle close by, and take breaks to go eat elsewhere.


8. What's your preferred writing medium? Are you on the computer, or rocking the old school pen and paper?
Anne: I type about 70 words per minute. My mom was a stickler for home row being a computer teacher so the computer is natural for me. I haven't had my laptop very long and you can already see the rub marks on the spacebar from my right thumb. 
Jon: Computer. I grew up writing on the computer, it's just too powerful a tool for editing. I'll write a lot of notes on paper, but usually those get transcribed if I'm really serious about them. The bulk of my writing gets done on a little netbook with a whopping 14 hour battery: I can use it all day without worrying about finding juice.


9. So you use the computer, which program?
Anne: Microsoft Word is good enough for me. I already know all of the formatting hot keys, and when I maximize the screen, it eliminates distractions. So I never needed a special program. The only thing i wish Word had was a bigger buffer at the bottom so i don't run into the bottom of the screen. I feel like my words start getting crowded when they get too close to the bottom. They need room to breathe. 
Jon: I've tried a bunch of writing programs, even written some of my own. When it comes to straight-up, get-it-down-on-paper writing, I use a free program called FocusWriter. It let's me have a full screen with a large font, just a paragraph or two on the page at a time so I don't get the urge to edit. It also lets you set and track writing goals, so you can see when you've hit your quotas for the day.


10. Do you allow yourself access to the Internet? Do you find it to be a distraction?
Anne: I have so much trouble turning my internet on and off...that I just leave it on and close down all windows except the one I’m writing in. Also, I back up my document to Google Docs so I need to be able to paste it over at a moment's notice in case I need advice from my sounding board. 
Jon: When I'm on the netbook, I usually turn off the WiFi while I'm writing. But, occasionally I'll need to look something up, something I can't just put in a placeholder for, and then I try to keep myself limited to research. I do however, like to keep tabs open to various name generator sites, just in case I need a quick name.


11. Do you have any other must haves? Good-luck writing charms?
Anne: I have one of those tray tables from As Seen On TV. It's very helpful for my posture to lean back in the sofa and not have to reach far for my laptop keyboard. Also I have to have something to put my hair up, even if it's a pencil. If it's down, I’ll play with it and effectively not type. 
Jon: My feet get cold. I have a pair of old man house slippers that I've adopted as my official writing shoes. They give me about a 20% boost to my word counts.


12. How long have you been doing NaNo? Why did you start?
Anne: This will be my 4th year in the NaNoWriMo team. My 3rd as a Write In Host. I started because my best friend told me it would be great and that it would be great for me. Of course that was the year he abandoned NaNo (silly things like 400 level physics classes...psh!). However, he was right. The community, the friendly competition, the built in cheering squad, it all worked for me. And that was the first time I had EVER actually finished a novel. After that, I was hooked. 
Jon: Four years: I started the same year as Anne. I've been writing creatively with my friends for years, and that October I had an idea for a story much longer than anything else I'd ever dreamt up. I don't remember how I found out about NaNo, but I remember really pushing myself that year.


13. Do you like to use writing prompts?
Anne: I love writing prompts, but only when I get them before or after NaNo. They have a tendency to spawn plot bunnies like nobody's business. Three of my stories came out of plot bunnies that just grew and grew until they became fully fledged ideas. I even managed to weave plot bunnies in a few more to those stories. They're great devices to get the creative juices flowing, but I have to be careful that I don't drown in them. 
Jon: Yes and no. I've never found them to help me get further along in my own works, or even get me in the mood to write. But I do enjoy the exercise, if anything I love taking a breath from whatever I'm knee-deep in and just write something else for a change.


14. Every writer hits a creative wall now and again. What are your top three techniques for getting unstuck?
Anne: 1) I have to talk it out. Since other NaNo-ers are fully engulfed in their stories, I have a couple of non-NaNo-er friends who are willing to keep up with my story and offer advice to help get me unstuck. Sometimes the tiniest phrase in the conversation jars my roadblock loose. 2) If my sounding boards are unavailable, I walk away from my computer and do some mundane task. Last year, I had a eureka! moment while scrubbing my tub. And 3) if all else fails, I skip ahead. 
Jon: First, I sit back and recall what all of the characters are doing at that particular moment in the story, or what they were doing the last time the reader saw them. That usually gives me a few new openings. Secondly, I get up and act out the scene. Standing up, moving around, and saying the dialogue out loud helps me better grasp what the scene is trying to accomplish. Finally, if I’m still stuck, I’ll just start writing completely out of character, sometimes even out of genre. It doesn’t take long before I say to myself: “Of course the character wouldn’t do X, they’d do Y instead.”


15. Do you like to plot out your story in advance, or do you write more by the seat of your pants?
Anne: I'm about 90% Pantsing and 10% plotting. I know my characters very well, and set up the setting, and I have a handful of bullet points that I want to cover before I reach the end. I think my biggest problem is that I don't think out the climax at all. I have gotten to Thanksgiving Day and not had a clue how my story was going to end. That makes for one exciting Turkey day. 
Jon: I've been writing creatively for about five years now, mostly short stories, and I've experimented with a variety of ways at approaching writing itself. When I pants a story, I end up with five pages about a goat chewing cud. So I've come up with a level of planning that I'm comfortable with. I write out an outline with all of the scenes I want, just a one-liner like “introduce Hester”, or “reveal about the cat”. Afterward, if I don't have enough scenes to make a story, I flesh out in between scenes to pace everything appropriately. Then, each writing session I look ahead a few scenes in the outline and make sure they still make sense with what I’ve been already writing. I usually end up changing 10-40% of the outline as I go along, as add, delete, or move scenes.


16. What aspect of writing do you think you are best at? Worst? 
Anne: My strength is writing intense, thrilling scenes. Also I think i do a good job of not having characters that are invincible emotionally and physically. My weakness is definitely dialogue. Many of my characters end up being the brooding quiet type. Sometimes i can work it to my advanage, but most often not. 
Jon: Pacing, and keeping the story interesting. I want to like my own writing, and if I can’t get excited about a piece, then I need to fix it. Because I plot and plan so much, I also like to think that I give readers plenty of things to look out for, or rewards for even moderately reasonable attention. It bothers me when I read stories that have so little long-term arcs, or so much unnecessary fluff, that the story could have been pared in half, without damage to the plot or the characters’ development. But all that planning and plotting has a downside: it’s sometimes hard for me to keep track of exactly what I have and haven’t said, and judging how much the reader can reasonably be expected to remember. I have it all in my head, often many versions, and combined with minimal descriptions, sometimes I don’t say enough and the reader gets lost. A scene that makes perfect sense to me is confusing to the reader, because of information I’ve forgotten to emphasize or even put down in the first place.


17. What inspires you to write? What inspires what you write?
Anne: I write because I have an overactive imagination. It's a way to get all the random images I see in my mind's eye out so I have time to make sense of them. Also I come from a long line of Italian story tellers. The need to entertain has always been strong. In addition to an overactive imagination, I have an overdeveloped sense of justice. And I know in this world, too often the bad guy goes free. So it gives me immense satisfaction to have my villains get their comeuppance. 
Jon: Sometimes I having noting but a bit of dialog, or single image in mind, that I want to see, that I want to justify existing. Then the exercise is to figure out a story that will make that dialogue or image happen and make sense. I don’t care about getting published, or making money. I think everyone should so something creative, not professionaly, but just well enough to share with friends. As for what inspires my writing: real life, books, movies, video games, even some of my stranger dreams. I rate my media not just on it’s own merits, but if after experiencing it all I can think about is doing something creative. I’ll watch a terrible movie and call it great if afterward I feel like writing.


18. How does competition affect your writing? 
Anne: I'm the youngest of four children and I grew up in a neighborhood full of boys. To say I’m competitive is an understatement of a major degree. I don't hate other people when they win, but I’m still gonna do my darndest to come out on top. I think my original friendly competition (along with a healthy dose of flirting) with Boyfriend Jon is what got me through my first year. Without that added incentive, NaNos 2-4 might never have been. 
Jon: I’ll admit, the first two years of NaNo I enjoyed competing with Anne, and keeping up a playful game of chase on the website. Last year I wanted to hit 100k for me and for my story, it wasn’t a matter of competing with anyone but my own goals. I just want to write the stories, I’m doing it for me. I’m not competing with anyone.


19. What incentives do you have for completing NaNoWriMo this year?
Anne: The same ones I did the other years. A pedicure and a foot massage - one of the few girly indulgences that melts me completely. Also, Boyfriend Jon and I might have a little bet going on, but I’ll leave that to the imagination. 
Jon: I’ve been editing last year’s novel for six months now. This year, NaNo is almost a fun break from that, a chance to explore some of the other ideas I’ve left on the back burner for a while.

20. Are you planning on trying anything new this year?
Anne: This year, in addition to finishing my story again, I’m aiming for 60k words. I definitely think it's doable and I think it will give me enough room to flesh out my story adequately. Also as a Write In Host, I’m starting a Black Friday Write in to counteract the lost time on Thanksgiving Day. Hopefully that will be a big enough hit that we can make it an annual event. 
Jon: I’m going to write two independent short stories instead of a single novel this year. I’ve got one idea I really want to put down, and it’s rare I can think of something that can be so self-contained. But also I want to continue my series with the next short story so I have something to look at while I give my novel a breather. Practically speaking, I’m also trying to have a more scheduled writing time, something I can turn into a habit to keep after the month ends.


As a side note, this "interview" was conducted on a website called http://willyou.typewith.me/It allows multiple collaborators to write on the same document at the same time. We kept having trouble with it shutting down but i think that was a problem with my internet connection and not the site itself. There's no way to save the document, so copy and paste to a word processor often.  

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

NaNo terms explained: Plotter vs Panster

In Nano, there are two extremes in methods of writing your story. This will be my third year of hosting a Write-In. And the majority of writers that i have witnessed, lean one way or the other. Very few have ever fallen in the middle. I have seen great stories produced by both sides of the spectrum, so i can honestly say that i don't believe one way is better than the other. It's all up to the writer. 

Plotters- These are the folks that need to carefully lay out their plotline before a single word of the story ever gets written down. It's their map, blueprint, whatever you want to call it. The story is not ridged and boring when done this way since even the outline comes out of their imagination (or memory if the genre calls for it). If you think of it like a building...they know when they lay the first brick what the structure will look like when they're done. 

Pantsers- These people find plotting everything out before hand too restrictive. They write by the seat of their pants the whole way. Most often, they know a few details about their story (like the main characters) and a general idea of some bullet points that they'd like to have happen along the way, but the rest is a mystery at the beginning. Often times, somewhere, the story will take a turn that the just did not see coming and they'll follow it to completion. I've heard this type of writing called "Organic" before. It might seem like this method would just lead to rambling on for 10k words, but it also makes for some really interesting tangents. 

Think about it this way: if you're in a park or a garden, and you're not required to walk on the path, can you still reach the same destination? Of course this bars any unforeseen lava pits or rabid bunnies that will pelt you with nuts if you leave the path. 



My point is: Don't let anyone tell you that one way is better than the other.  You need to try which ever one seems more natural for you. Maybe you fall somewhere in the middle  or closer to one way or the other. But don't force yourself to follow a set path if it doesn't work. You're not like everyone else, so why would your writing be?

Me? I'm definitively a Pantser. The one time i tried to plan out a whole new world and a story that would fit into this one idea i had...i was miserable the whole time. I have never come so close to quitting. I kept realizing that my characters would never behave the way i needed them to, and the story just wouldn't work, no matter how much i tweaked the alien planet they were on. It was frustrating beyond belief. In retrospect, if i had followed where the story would have gone instead of where i wanted it to go, i think i could have salvaged the story. 

However the first time i did NaNo, i was so limited on time that i wasn't able to plot. My main goal was to reach the 50k line before the deadline passed. I had 2 characters, and a two sentence description of the overall story arc. So my story just grew. I'm not saying it was easy. At Thanksgiving dinner, i seized my cousin by the shoulders and frantically told her i had NO climax what-so-ever. But thanks to help from several people, i passed the goal early and even, for the first time in my life, FINISHED the story. It was a thrill like i had never experienced before. It kept making me want to go back for more. 

This will be my 4th NaNoWriMo and i cannot wait for it to start. 

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Nano Novel #4?

Yes, i realize that its only July. But my mind is already thinking about the next NaNoWriMo. (I write the first draft of a novel in the month of November. Check out the NaNoWriMo tab above for more details)

Perhaps its the very November-esque weather, or the constant rain, or finding an old collection of stories i read a great deal as a kid. Who knows. But i keep having to squash the countdown to November that my brain is trying to start. 

I started a plot bunny way back in 2009. I think it was shortly after i had finally gotten around to watching the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. I had the idea for an adventure novel. But the idea quickly fizzled after about 5,000 words. 

Why? Well, i hate history. Especially the fact checking part. I couldn't come up with a adventure similar to Indiana Jones without doing some research. So the story went onto the back burner and quickly from there into the archives. 

But the intro was strong, the characters were vivid, and i had grand plans for the way their paths would be woven together. 

Jimmy and Jason Lewis. Twins whose temperance couldn't be more different. Jimmy is a charmer, suave and has an insane amount of luck. He's the kind of guy who could be broke and find a 20$ bill in the gutter just by bending down to tie his shoe. Jason on the other hand is a brooder, worrier, and pessimistic. He's constantly thrust into his brother's shadow but feels like he has a duty to protect his foolhardy brother. Ironically, Jimmy's luck has a habit of saving them both. 

Rebecca Carlson. The daughter of a widowed professor who has been brought up to be quick witted, logical, and headstrong instead of the socially acceptable demure lady. Her Aunt Alice takes it upon herself to smooth out the rougher edges which is like dulling a knife with a Brillo pad. 

I had dreams of an adventure through Europe, dodging the Nazis and being mistaken for spies. But i didn't know enough about WW2 and always have trouble staying awake through my uncles long winded lectures. 

But it wasn't until I ran across an old book i read often as a kid that i suddenly had amazing inspiration. I have always loved Mythology. Mostly because there is no way to fact check these legends and stories. It was exciting too- heros, goddesses, wisdom that would last the ages, and the ending were not always happy. I shocked the heck out of my teachers when i read the Odyssey at age 9. And i still find it fascinating. 

Suddenly i had my answer. What if my characters found some of the old immortals which had managed to hide themselves away from the world as it grew each century to present time. 

After all the struggling last year with the story line that just refused to be easy, i almost decided to quit NaNo all together. 

Now...i can't get my brain to stop. If i can't get a decent summer, can it at least hurry up to November?

Thursday, December 9, 2010

To Scrooge or not to Scrooge

I've told stories about Christmas time that show just how un-Christmas-spirit-like people in general can get. Remembering stuff like the woman who pulled up on a curb to make her own parking spot, and the ungrateful terror of a child who made a fuss over a broken DS, along with the most recent woman who nearly T-boned me because she was determined to have a parking spot i had no interest in...made me rather ill tempered and turned me into a scrooge for many years. This year I'm trying to stay in a good frame of mind.

I pretty much have all my Christmas gifts planned out for family and Boyfriend Jon. Friends this year are getting cookies and other edible things because i need to be cheap. The girls i babysit, i have a rather amusing plan for them which i need to get their parents involved.

This year, I decided to do most of my shopping online to avoid the insane crush of anxious bodies in the stores. Venturing out seems to be too hazardous. Pretty much the only gift I'll have to go to the store for will be my dad. He hasn't been jokingly named "The princess and the pea" for nothing. So i'll actually need to feel that one before I buy it.

For a change this year, I'm not feeling a lot of Holiday stress. Just the normal "Ack! stuff to do!" kind of stress. Perhaps i'm still coming down off of the NaNo caffeine high, but I'm just not so worried about the holidays. Nope, my freaking out seems to be limited to the prospect that Boyfriend Jon's family will be meeting my family for the first time. Now not that that is something to be about. No rational reason for it, just normal instinct of: "(insert Darth Vader theme song here)"

Good, reassuring news, though: The opportunity at work I jumped on, proved very fruitful. Despite being cautioned by multiple people I just had an instinct that it would be a good idea to be anything BUT passive on.

Our lovely graphics designer at work unfortunately was temporarily laid off this summer and, for some corporate reason that makes no sense, my company couldn't hire her back on in time to do the annual calendar. When i found out that there most likely wasn't going to be a calendar, i got my gumption up and let the people in charge of the project know that I was sure i could do it. They took me up on my word we got to work. In a matter of a week and a half we finished and sent it off to the printers. The end result was amazing if i do say so myself.

This chance I took payed off very well in two ways. 1) I got the attention of the head honcho at my company for stepping up to the plate at the last minute as a pinch hitter and swinging a grand slam and 2) the people at my company now know what i'm capable of doing in graphics, which i actually enjoy. I've already been asked if i could help out with some other graphic based projects. YAY! Could this open more doors for me? I'm hopeful, but not depending on it.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Nano 2010 Day 30

While i may have technically finished NaNo 2010, I probably won't be stopping just yet. Indeed i have a full day to continue writing. Which means that I might tap out a few hundred more words or find any excuse in the world to not write.

I mean, my apartment is a disaster. I have piles of clean laundry waiting to be folded. I need to run about a dozen errands. My refrigerator could use a clean out. I have remnants of a Mario brick that i made for my friend Kenny that need to be cleaned up.

I'm getting the feeling that the first half of December will once again be the clean up Anne's apartment marathon.

I'm rather apathetic about the status of my story. It's not finished, of that i'm sure. And while this series sounds exceedingly interesting in my head, getting it out onto paper was a chore. Too many things fell into the realm of "no way would my character do that" and no man's land of "how would they do this without it being totally contrived?"

I know where i want the series to go, and i've noticed it falls along the lines of one of my favorite author's series:
Which in the process of finding these images....found out there's another book *gasp*. Good series about how humans can adapt and find ingenuity even in the most strange ways.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Nano 2010 Day 29 - WINNER

At about 8:30 pm Monday, November 29th. I crossed the 50,000 word mark. See my pretty badge to the left?

My story is far from over. I'm estimating that i have somewhere between 10k and 20k more words before the story is actually finished. The reason for that wide range...is that I'm not entirely sure what my resolution is. It could make the story more convoluted, or it could be simple and straight forward.

Truth is; I don't really know how to end my story. (whimpering noise)

We'll see how it goes as i think it through. Still have one more day to make a decision before i officially hit the end of NaNoWriMo.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Nano 2010 Day 27

Word Count: 46,670
Today's Quota: 45,009

Three days left.

While i'm very confident that i'll be able to weasle my way through the remaining 3k+ over the next three days.

What i'm not confident about is being able to finish this story satisfactorily on time.

The first year i did Nano, back in 2008, I remember seizing my cousin's hand when she arrived for thanksgiving and exclaiming, "Oh my god, I have absolutely NO climax."

Well this year, on Black Friday, i saw my cousin again and this year i said "I have a climax but NO resolution."

The fact of the matter is that i can in no way create an empirical question that will cause the characters i have spent the last 46k words building....to give up her little brother for a very handsome man. It just ain't gonna happen no matter how much i want it to happen and not sound completely and utterly contrived. And i cannot think of a way to resolve the divide between the two sides.

So it appears that by Friday, i will have a very good story put together with no ending....again. At least i haven't spent most of November wanting to throttle my pathetic main character. We'll see how i feel about finishing the story in December.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Nano 2010 Day 26

We're down to the pickle area of the home run of NaNo 2010. Just four days left.

Word count: 44,001
Today's Quota: 43,342

Today i would like to spotlight the amazing amount of success that Boyfriend Jon has achieved. I'm so proud of him that today at the write in, Jon was able to not only surpass the 100k word mark, but also to complete his story. While i am extremely jealous of this, he is fully deserving of a moment of fame on my blog. I am so proud of him.

At the moment i am neck and neck with a married couple who are also competing in Nano. But we are all on track to pass the 50k mark on time. We also had another new comer to Nano win recently and still have people well on their way.

To any fellow Nano-ers who are reading this, regardless of wether you are going to reach 50k or not...i am so proud of you. This is a crazy thing to attempt and even if you've only written a couple hundred words, that is more than you would have written. This is not easy and many people won't even take the plunge to attempt such a daring adventure. Major koodos to you for trying.

50k or bust.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Nano 2010 Day 24

Here's what you missed the last few days.
  • I'm about a day and a half behind quota.
  • It snowed in the Seattle area and with the temperature dropping down into the TEENS....froze and the whole area became pretty much a disastrous mess.
  • My Jury Duty was canceled due to the weather after I had already set out to try to get there
  • I was labeled "Ice Butt" by Boyfriend Jon because I stupidly hadn't layered clothes on the bottom half of me turning my derrière into a ice cube.
My muse outright refused to cooperate last night. I managed to get about 600 words written before i was hung up on details for writing a male character. So i have quite a bit more to write tonight in order to get caught up and then more to get ahead for tomorrow. I'm thinking i'm going to write a quick outline of what i want to happen and then switch back over to my other MC so i can keep the story moving.

Given how much i slipped and slid and very nearly pinwheeled down onto said ice butt while walking, i couldn't believe how many people in the Seattle area tried to drive in cars that seemed, to me, to be obviously a bad choice from the get go. Many sub compact and sedan cars that couldn't possibly have 4 wheel drive were out trying to keep up with chained trucks and SUV. I was reminded yet again that common sense was not so common. Most interesting was the SUV who ran a red light and came within a foot of T-boning a turning car.

I was thankfully excused from Jury Duty on Tuesday since the courthouses closed down due to weather and didn't have to make it up the next day. I decided to walk to Boyfriend Jon's place instead of the several additional miles to get to work.

Thanksgiving this year will be a break with tradition. I am not going to be spending it with my immediate family and traveling out to the peninsula in this weather. That just ain't happening. Instead i have invited Boyfriend Jon and Kenny to do a simple regular sized meal with brownies as desert and work off the meal by playing Call of Duty Black Ops. I'm excited because A) a lot less stress, a lot less food, a lot less leftovers and B) i haven't played that Call of Duty yet and have really enjoyed the previous versions.

I'll review it when i have time.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Nano 2010 Day 20

Quick post today:

Word count: 33,364
Today's quota: 33,340

Just barely ahead for today because i spent most of the day meeting The Cake Boss, Buddy Valastro.

After that went and helped out my sister for a while.

Now its 10pm...and I'm going to try and get some writing done.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Nano 2010 Day 19

Word Count: 31,872
Today's quota: 31,673

Yup, still holding onto my buffer, though barely. I'm having trouble concentrating on writing any more. It's becoming very evident that time seems to speed up starting the week before thanksgiving. And all of December is practically a blur.

There's so much that i want to get done and it seem like there's no time to do it in. The end of November is aproaching fast even though i have some kind of a buffer. My sister is starting a remodel that she wants an extra pair of capable hands working on (me) and i still want to get around to making up the new end tables for my apartment which will match my previous furniture that i made earlier this year.

So much to do, so little time.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Nano 2010 day 18

Word Count: 31,675
Today's quota: 30,006

Today was the last day of the Thursday Write Ins at Panera. Next week and the following week are both currently scheduled for Friday.

We had a lot of fun conversation wise today. Someone we got on the topic of Mange cake, and a variety of other there equally weird conversation topics. As such, my brain is a little fried at the moment.

I've found a weakness to my democratic approach to the length of time on the word wars. Unless it's structured, so many people's opinions get thrown in which doesn't make for productivity. And as in the case of today: We end up doing a word war that's literally 27 seconds.

I'm thinking that next time i will need to take charge of the reins again and beef up the structure.

For a change this week i participated in the actual writing of the word wars instead of just monitoring the time and surfing the net. And once again, i remembered why i typically don't write. I'm so distracted trying to keep track of the timer that any attempt to write something with any resemblance to where i wanted to go in my story, just plain ole doesn't work. For some reason i decided that a very sweet and caring friend of the MC was going to force a kiss on her out of the blue.

While we were at break between the word wars, i read what i wrote and very nearly pressed the delete button because it was so bad. I'm not even sure there's a sentence that i can use from there. Perhaps next time, i'll just write at my own pace and add to my story instead of sprinting like everyone else.

Trust me, no one really wants to read my stream of consciousness. They'll get dizzy.

I have managed to hold onto my day's buffer and I'm looking forward to some time tomorrow to pull even further ahead.

In other news: the project at work that was SUCH an opportunity, proved to be quite a headache and I'm kind of glad that it's over and the new calendar has been shipped off to the printers. Done, over with, woo. And in the process of finishing up, i did get one very nifty thing out of it: A personal thank you from the executive director of our site which did not come through his admin. For all that it's not tangibly worth anything... it meant a lot to me.