Fortunately, it's my writing that's on the move again and not me. I had determined a month ago that it was time for me to quit procrastinating, stop making excuses, and in general, just stop whining and get to work. I looked over all the false starts I had in my writing folders (far too many) and asked which ones were actually viable - could actually turn into something if I got off my lazy duff. It seemed there were several.
So, I gave myself a deadline of at the very least one book finished by the end of the year; preferably two. I also decided to complete something with a view to submitting it to Silhouette since their word counts are smaller than most publishers. Figured that would give me something to work toward - 60,000 words is a reasonable goal - something that should easily be accomplished. After all, I already several things (sure things!) started that were already up to 25K. Piece of cake, right?
Those of you who are snickering can stop now. Those "sure things" quickly became doubtful; but one started to look hopeful. Until I had no idea where it was going or how it would end. Then I found Holly Lisle's site, and in particular, this beautiful formula. I put it into practice, and wham! back in business. Holly now has a new fan. Also, I can't wait to order and read her Devil's Point series (Sympathy for the Devil - scroll down toward the end of the link to find it ) -it looks like a lot of fun.
So, after scrapping most of my WIP, I started over with major changes (it's no longer paranormal, for instance) but it's going much more smoothly now. I'm excited. I never thought getting rid of the vampire element would make it a better story, but it actually has. It was hard to kill that darling, but it was the right thing to do. And I might actually finish it on time now. :)
Have you ever had to completely gut a book and start it in a new direction? How did that go for you? I was surprised that this worked - I was very reluctant to give up the darker elements (especially since that also changed the line I was goign to submit to), but something kept telling me it was the right thing to do. And when I applied Holly's formula to the new path, it all started to click.
Now, in the meantime, if you want to check out some of my brother's writing and sense of humor, you can go here. He's watching the dog's blog while his wife is away. I don't know what she was thinking leaving them alone like that....
Awesome! My last Regency was meant to be a vampire, but no vampire showed up at all in the final cut, either. LOL! When I sat down to write, there just wasn't enough room for all that stuff. :-( I was kind of bummed, but what can you do?
ReplyDeleteI'm moving, big time. We have too much stuff. It's amazing; I've taken five carloads to the Goodwill, this after a garage sale and a bunch of stuff left on the front lawn, LOL!
Good to see you surface! Even better to find out that you're well and writing!
ReplyDeleteI agree with Travis! It all sounds great. You're on your way!
ReplyDeleteHow funny, Natasha, that we both had to kill our vampires! :) Good luck with the move - I know how hard it is.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the kind words, Travis and Edie. I managed to get in another 1100 words this morning on the train, and found the scene I needed. And now that I've scrapped the vampire, the story is now geared toward Silhouette's Special Edition line (rather than Nocturne as it originally was), which means I only need 55K to finish it. That's not so bad.
Of course, hopefully it won't end up much longer than that! :)
Nice to see you around! I'm glad you've jumped back in, even if it did take some charactercide to do it.
ReplyDeleteI haven't had to totally tear apart a book, but the day's not done, yet! ; )
Hey, Avery - good to see you too!
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