Tag Archives: ideas

Writer Life: New Beginnings

Another week rolls by and my friends are all beginning the Christmas countdown. This seems absurdly early to me, but if it means mulled wine happens in October, then who am I to argue?

So, after locking myself away in a hotel last weekend, I re-entered the real world to discover it was even madder than when I left. My writing goals for next year have now been upgraded to ‘earn enough to live on a small island away from those determined to incite chaos amongst the cesspit of humanity’. It’s good to have ambition…

cropped-2016-banner.jpg

Creative – new ideas and first drafts

The hotel retreat did what it was intended to do. Without the everyday distractions, I was able to knuckle down and get some creative thinking done. I came away with a full plot for a new romance novel. The only thing missing is the title. It felt exceptionally satisfying and it is always nice to have a few ideas (that are slightly more than half-baked, even if they are not fully written) in the back pocket.

I did start on a new first draft. It’s been going slowly, but that is the product of these unnecessarily cold, dark mornings. I feel the lure of hibernation and it will take me a little while to get back up to full speed.

Oh, and I signed up for NaNoWriMo. Officially my favourite writing event of the year, when I get to hone my competitive skills.

Editing – the slow, tortuous road to publication

This week I have been helping to edit something for someone else. Strange how much easier it is when you’re tearing down someone else’s baby, rather than your own…

Publishing – and all the other bits that go on behind the scenes

Things have been quiet this week. I have stepped back a little from social media because I was getting caught up in the horror of politics. Not just with the US election. Brexit is still this huge uncertainty and although I don’t like Marmite, I respect other people’s right to abuse their tastebuds in the privacy of their own home. Who knows, over the weekend I might allow myself back out into the world. It is terribly easy to justify that you’re actually working when you’re not doing anything of the sort though.

In actual book related things, I am beginning to think about cover designs for my next release. I’m trying to get better at running a tight ship when it comes to these things. I don’t want to put pressure on myself, but nor do I want to make things harder for anyone I’m working with. Baby steps.

Planning and dreaming – what’s coming up next week

I have a huge planning and strategy session in the calendar that will map out the first half of next year. This won’t be just writing projects, but they have to fit in somewhere and at the moment, they are my priority. The one thing I’ve learned is that if you don’t actually prioritise your priority, then someone else will give you theirs instead. So next week will be planning and dreaming and then boiling it down into the nitty gritty of action. There will be calendars and spreadsheets. I might have to put the brakes on before someone pulls out a Gantt chart.

Writing Best Bits

Coming up with brand new characters and discovering their story is always an amazing thing. If I had to pick one thing, I would say that it is my favourite part of the writing process. There is none of the pressure that comes with actually having to write the damn thing, but you still get to be creative. It is like the first part of a relationship, when you’re getting to know all the things about each other, but haven’t yet had your first argument about who has to do the dishes.

Weekly success score: 6/10 (It’s been good, but the actual word count could have been higher). NOW:

images

Slips back into the world innocuously…

Well, it’s been a crazy, relaxing month since I last posted. Forgive me platform-building gods, for once again I have sinned.

November really was a month of contradictions for me. I had just over two weeks where I did nothing other than read amazing books and lie by a pool in wonderful tropical heat. No business books, no personal development, just fiction of all genres. I told myself I didn’t have to do any writing at all, there was no pressure unless something started buzzing into my brain and needed to be let out.

Luckily, I came up with a tonne of creative ideas, which was just a bonus. Most of them writing related, but some not.

The other two weeks of the month were solid writing. I mean, SOLID. In a few days I completed NaNoWriMo at the beginning to get traction on a project I needed to get done. So I was pretty wiped out after that, because 10,000 words per day when you have forty hour day job commitment going is tough. The there was a (lovely) surprise request for a full edited manuscript. A structural and line edit on a 120,000 novel is a tough thing to pull off in ten days but I think I just about squeezed it across the line.

So crazy and relaxing just about sums it up.

So now I have until the New Year off from writing, to concentrate on letting my brain recover and planning for the coming year. I have a couple of business and personal goals I’d like to achieve, so I need to give them the attention they deserve.

Also, I need to begin Christmas shopping. I’ve still got ages though, right? RIGHT?

Life Happens

There has been a dearth of updates recently because, well, life happens.

I know life happens all the time and is generally a poor excuse for not doing any kind of updates or letting things slide. But I’ve had some big life happens moments, so I’m going to allow myself to use it as an excuse.

The biggest one of these is that I got engaged and set a date for the wedding that is significantly less than a year away. Trust me, that has led to lots of celebrations, alongside a healthy dose of mind-numbing fear (always good). It’s also led to a lot of reassessment of what matters, what doesn’t and what really needs to get done today.

I had already made a rough plan of my writing goals and deadlines for 2016. This little piece of good news has caused me to radically rethink that. I know that if I stuck to my original plans, nothing would be achieved to its best potential, and the night before my wedding I didn’t want to get stuck doing last minute edits or cover art reviews. It also means I have to put traditional publishing above indie, which is a bit of a shame. I’m determined to still publish the follow up to Blood Inheritance in 2016 though, as the bulk of the work has already been done.

So, be kind to yourself. Life is about many things and achievement is only one of them. Sometimes there are (good) bumps in the road and they’re just as important as meeting any deadlines.

Normal Service Resumes

Last week was just a whirlwind of stuff. Seriously, I felt like I ran flat out through the week with flailing muppet arms. There was no time for playing around on social media, no blogpost time scheduled and definitely no going to the gym.

I was up against a deadline that happened to coincide with an already heavily scheduled calendar. Happily, normal life resumes today as I handed over the story yesterday so now it sits in the laps of the gods*.

I’ve deliberately now given myself two weeks of downtime. I’ll be doing NaNoWriMo again this year and I know I won’t fit in a full length project between now and then. Instead of seeing this as frustrating, I am seeing it a blessing. It will give me a chance to get the business side of life up straight (yay – taxes) as well as work on those smaller pieces that somehow always get pushed onto the back burner.

It will soon be time to think about what to even write for NaNo. Hopefully the downtime will free that creative space back up in my brain and I can come up with something that will engage me to plough through a disciplined 50,000 words before I go on a mini-sabbatical at the end of November.

Now that part of things I am really looking forward to.

 

 

*may be a mild overstatement

A break is as good as a rest!

As I begin to wrap up my vacation time, I’ll be sad to leave the holiday feeling behind. Yet I know that it has been as essential as it has been fun.

My notebook has new ideas in it, as well as some amendments to existing projects. Sometimes, physical distance can allow you to see things with new eyes. For example, the Lazarus Hunter series has been fairly well plotted to the end for quite some time now. The first three books are completed and book four is down on the list as one of my next writing projects (I’d love to do it sooner, but I have other commitments which are stopping me). Yet a missing piece of conflict that I needed has been elusive up until now.

With nothing to think about, this piece finally snuck up on me and smacked me between the eyes.

So I will be returning from my break with a renewed sense of enthusiasm. I love writing, but my life is like balancing three full time jobs sometimes. My creativity can stutter if I don’t take a break every now and again. When I do, it is worth every penny, both in literal money and also time.

I’ve not got any C K Martin books planned for the release for the rest of this year. I’ve not tracked the sales of A Taste To Die For while I’ve been on vacation, because I’ve not wanted the time to be about number watching, no matter how addictive it can be.

So I can go into the last third of the year feeling more relaxed about what I still need to do. I know one thing that people have wanted in the Teddie McKay books is a little bit more lovin’ for Teddie. As neither books in the series are romances, it didn’t feel right at any point to put a good sex scene in, not without it feeling entirely gratuitous. So I’m playing around with an idea for a short story to let the woman get a bit of action. It would need to be fun for everyone (including me) to make it work.

So, despite saying there’d be no more publications this year, part of me is already thinking never say never…

 

Travel: Why it is essential to a writer

So, with the release of A Taste To Die For complete, I have indulged myself with a little bit of a vacation. In return for the months of hard work on this (and numerous other projects), I am giving myself sand, sun, sea and wine. Maybe even a cocktail or two.

Santorini

Not only because I quite like the idea of a treat and a reward, but also because I believe that travel is essential to every writer.

It doesn’t have to be exotic, or extravagant like this. It just needs to be somewhere new. This goes for if you are an aspiring author, a traditionally published author or an indie author. New places are vital for creativity.

It’s just the same as books. You would never read the same five books over and over again in isolation and expect to grow. Overseas travel is great for seeing the world with new eyes. There are different cultures, languages, customs and, of course, food, which can all be incorporated into your writing in some way.

Yet it’s also possible to achieve the same result without going too far from home. Unless you live in the middle of nowhere, there is every chance that a local town or city is within a couple of hours drive away. I’ve come to look for the unfamiliar in things; each town will have something about it that makes it unique. Travel is essential to finding that little gem and unlocking the creativity.

On top of that, it is the perfect opportunity for me to lavish some time on my significantly better half, who has heard nothing but book release talk for the past year. Of course, I’ll still have a notebook to hand, ready to capture any interesting nugget that comes into view from the other side of the cocktail umbrella….

Do your characters ever refuse to do what you tell them to do?

This is definitely a question for the writers rather than the readers out there.

Sometimes it really does seem like characters are living, breathing entities with a mind of their own.

I’m hands down a planner when it comes to writing, as I’ve frequently discussed. So, on the whole, I’m not waiting for inspiration to strike in order to know what my character is going to do next. I’ve already done that kind of plotting by the time I put the first sentence on the screen. Yet sometimes, despite my best intentions, at certain points in the novel, I find my characters wanting to do something other than what I have intended for them.

Cue a tug of war between me and them. Given that both exist solely in my head, if it wasn’t part of the writing process it would clearly be a psychiatric disorder of some sort.

Some people argue that if the character isn’t completely under your writerly control, then it is merely a symptom of poor planning. I think that can sometimes be the case, but not always. After all, part of the joy of writing is the excitement of finding out what happens next. Even with deep structure and plot points, you never know until you start writing how the words are going to line up on the paper. You don’t know what new influences you will be exposed to as part of the process. After all, for most people it takes at least six months to do a first draft. Sometimes it can take years. It would be foolish to expect not to have changes in perspective during that time.

For me, working on book two of one series and book four of another, the more I go along, the more likely these characters seem to want to play their own game. Perhaps it is because as they become more rounded they become more real. Perhaps it is because that the arc I originally envisaged for them is changing. Or maybe, when you create independent women who you love because they do whatever the hell they want, then sometimes they might just do that right back at you.

I didn’t want the Teddie McKay series to be more romance than cheeky, cheesey crime with some thriller tension thrown in there. Yet, as book two draws to a close, she seems determined to have a some fun. In my head, saying ‘aw come on, how about you let me live a little, huh?’

It might not be in the plan, but you know what? I think I might just let her…

Do you plan your writing, or do you just wing it?

One of my key strategies to write books whilst holding down a 40+ hour a week bill-paying job, travel, and juggling family commitments, is to make sure my writing is planned in advance to sitting down in front of the laptop first thing in the morning.

I know that I don’t come up with ideas at that time in the morning, especially when I’m on the road. Likewise, for a lot of people who are more creative in the evenings, much of the ability to focus on the detail has already been drained out of our brains by the time we get that alone time to begin our writing.

Yet the debate still rages about whether or not to plan your book in advance of writing it, or to allow it to be a truly creative endeavour, flowing from your brain as the muses come to you, without one iota of reference material to refer to.

I suspect, for those who are adamantly non-planners, there is still a degree of preparation that takes place. Even if it is the development of a character profile, or a key theme you want to put across. Perhaps you already know that one crucial plot point that you want to include that you know will provide a massive payoff in drama and tension. You may not have done a scene by scene account, but there is something you’ve already committed to making happen.

I’ve also heard it said that people gravitate more towards planning when they stop writing for fun, or as a hobby, and move to writing that has deadlines. I can believe that. Sitting around and waiting to be inspired just isn’t going to cut it when your publisher is demanding you return that advance. For self-publishing authors, once you’ve committed to doing it, the deadlines are self-imposed, but they are just as real.

I’m moving through this journey of being an Indie author, with side plans to take the novel part of my writing down the traditional publishing route also. When I find things I believe are useful and can help other people, I want to be able to share them here. But a lot of those things will involve planning and discovery. I’m intrigued to know if those are likely to be of interest to you, or if you’d be more interested in reading about more spontaneous approaches to creativity.

So are you a planner or a do you like to fly by the seat of your pants? Take my short survey (just 4 easy questions I promise) and let me know. Alternatively, feel free to drop me your thoughts in the comments!

Random Title Generator

I love a good random title generator. Actually, I love a bad random title generator. The ones which come up with the most cheesy and clichéd titles. You know the ones, they come with a narrator in your head that sounds a bit like you’re listening to someone from Downton Abbey.

The Professional Dreamer

The Memory of the Beginning

The Moon’s Willow

Apologies if those are anyone’s actual titles. But I’ve actually discovered something quite useful as part of this humour. For some reason, by scrolling through those randomly generated nonsense titles, it can actually trigger something at the back of your brain which is infinitely more creative.

You don’t have to be just seeking a title in order for this to work. I have found that when I have reached a tricky plot point, where I’ve painted myself into a corner and realised that despite my best laid plans, the whole thing has got stuck, that using this tool can actually help. The randomness of it is the key, I think, in that it forces your brain to start looking for patterns that you might not spot elsewhere.

I’ve tried this a few times now and find that it works pretty well. Even when it doesn’t fully get me to undo the problem, it still gives me a firm shove in the right direction. Leaving my subconscious to work on it for a few more days afterwards generally does the trick.

So next time you find yourself floundering, give it a go. And if nothing else, some of them are so bad it will give you a genuine belly laugh that will help you to forget the problem altogether for a while.