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Get glimpses of the writing life of Christa Brassington, including novel excerpts, writing advice, sobering rejections and (hopefully) joyful acceptance, alongside basic writerly observations. All here on Writer Wise.

Boiling Water, Christmas, and Fishing



How to illustrate a point? Oh, let me count the ways. But I promise that any metaphor, simile or imagery will be strongest when you closely tie it to your character.

Take for example what I originally had in my manuscript to punctuate a time of waiting—

He counted down the hours, which, only made it that much longer. Like trying to watch a pot of water come to a boil. Maddening.

In a critique group someone pointed out that you don’t “try” to watch a pot of water come to a boil, you actually watch it, but there are other problems besides. One, the image is a bit cliché. But also it wasn’t as strong as it could’ve been. To be specific, it had no ties to my character. The “he” in the story is an almost fifteen year old boy. Not many boys his age do a lot of cooking, and hardly any would look forward expectantly to a pot of water boiling. So this illustration falls short, but it’s got me headed in the right direction.

First off, I know what I’m trying to say. I just have to get it in tune with the story and my character. So I ask myself “What do boys his age look forward to?” How ‘bout Christmas? Not all boys, of course, celebrate Christmas, but it so happens that he does, so that would work.

My revision looks like this—

Dannen counted down the hours, which only made them take that much longer. Like waiting for Christmas to come when it’s only Thanksgiving. Maddening.

This has strength, because of its hyperbolic tone it sounds like a fifteen year old, so we’re close. Many kids will be able to relate to the illustration, but it might not be specific enough. It doesn’t have to be a broad example. Use what you’ve built for your character.

In my book, the main character loves fishing, which is already established for the reader by the time this troublesome text comes along, so I could use that. Something like,

Dannen counted down the hours, which only made them take that much longer. Like watching for your reel to spin when the lake hasn’t yet been stocked with fish. Maddening.

There are endless possibilities. Don’t worry about finding the perfect line for your first draft. Write. Write. Write. Fill your manuscript with clichés if those come easiest so that your story continues to move forward. And then when you go back, take the time to find out what those clichés are really trying to say, and then let the voice of your character say it better.


Let the Countdown Begin


(Thanks to Teresa McC. who gave me this idea! It is right up my lower-elementary-teacher alley.)

I present my countdown chain, starting with chapter one all the way through chapter forty-four. I've already finished revising the first six chapters, but I wanted to make a complete chain to start.

This chain serves two purposes: I am not allowed to remove a link unless I have confidently finished revising the chapter as specified on said link. Also, when I finish, I have to write the word count of that chapter on the link so that I can track how close I am to my projected word count.

YAY! So now let the unlinking begin.

Writer W-Eyes


Yes.

That's my eye.

It probably looks that way quite often when I'm having a hard time finding the revisions for the chapters that I've been working on.

I can read the old version and have a distinct recollection of changing certain passages... but can't think of how EXACTLY I changed them.

Alas, I do not despair. I know that eventually they will turn out as they should. But it still feels like lost time when I can't locate my work. Bother.

Since we're on the subject of eyes... here are three verbs for writers that start with the letter I.

1) INCUBATE--pretend you've got an egg under your tush and you have to put the time in every day for it to develop (your story and your writing definitely require this). Even momma hens have to get up now and then so they don't mess on the eggs, but still, don't make excuses. Plant your rear in the seat and maintain the conditions favorable for hatching, development, or reaction.

2) INDUCE-- A : to move by persuasion or influence. B : to call forth or bring about by influence or stimulation. Whatever it takes. Read books you love. Read books you hate. Read out loud. Listen to music that inspires. Watch a movie with a great plot that spurs you on. But before long get back to incubating!

3) IDEATE-- no really, it's a word. \'i-de-,ate\ verb. to form an idea or conception of, to form an idea. I suppose I could have used "imagine," but why? when you can learn a new word!

"Genius is one percent inspiration, ninety-nine percent perspiration."
-Thomas Edison

May all you write inspire.
May all you read inspire, too-- but limit it to one percent of your work.

Unless of course it is the Living Word, then by all means-- forget what I said about the one percent.

---

The I is watching.

Yeesh, I cringe just writing such a poorly constructed sentence.

Forgive.

Working to a Deadline



I love deadlines. Especially the whooshing sound as they go by. - Douglas Adams

It turns out I don't have much discipline without a goal in sight. So I've made an accountability calendar, and if I stick to it I should be done with revisions by December 21st (and that's with taking Sundays off). Phew! Happy Christmas to me.

I am posting this here as additional accountability. And to explain to my friends and family why I am not socializing as much as I'm used to. Gotta count the cost of finishing a good work, right.

Another problem and solution-- my first draft is about 150,000 words.

Goal: 85,000.

With forty-four-ish chapters, I'm allowed roughly 2000 words per chapter, give or take seventy words.
My latest revised chapters are rounding out at around 3000 words. Hmmm. I'm going to have to work on that.

Snip, snip, snip.

Also, I just happened upon this website: http://internspills.blogspot.com and the intern declares this to be NaNoReVisMo (National Novel Revision Month), not to be confused with NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month).

I think it's winning.