Showing posts with label October. Show all posts
Showing posts with label October. Show all posts

Thursday, October 07, 2010

An Actual Trip

Not that I've exactly been burning the blogosphere up with the past of my postings, but I'll be away from a computer for the next several days on an actual trip. But I've already got a blog post yearning to breathe free. Actually, it'll be an interview with an agent! I might post something else before I conduct the interview, but I believe it's fair to say that before October is history, you'll see more activity here on the Elephant's Bookshelf.

In the meantime, feel free to read and write at your leisure.

(And no, the person in the image at the side is not me, not my wife, not anyone I know. Just someone writing on a plane. During my travels, however, I'll be the guy with the young child on his lap.)

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Working Toward Nano?

With October just around the corner, I can't help but think about November, when National Novel Writing Month begins. I've done it the past two years (I've yet to reach 50,000 words total during my NaNo experiences), and this year with two small kids demanding the time they deserve from daddy I feel safe in saying I won't reach 50,000 words.

So I'm thinking it's still appropriate to work on the novel I started last year, regardless of the rules. I know I need to write more than 50,000 words before it's going to be "done," anyway, so I don't think I'm flouting the rules.

But writing doesn't necessarily require rules. Of course, grammatical rules should be adhered to, except when there's a point to side-stepping them. But point of view is something you can play with, as is the believability of the narrator. The novel can be structured in almost any manner these days. Personally, I prefer to have characters and story I can follow easily. I don't relate to characters in adult stories that are bananas or armoires. Still, when it comes to Nano, all bets are off.

What's my point? The point is writers write. Writers who are new fathers pine away wanting to write. But they write in their heads all the time. Ok, I write in my head all the time. I miss doing it on paper or a computer screen for myself. Over the next few weeks, I'll review what I wrote last year and try to get back into those people's minds. It won't be quite the same, but it's time for me get back into writing. My kids deserve it.