These yellow columbine are growing with crazed bushiness right now. I'm thinking I need to plant some rose bushes behind them, in the corner just there.
Pink ones.
Maybe a climber with a trellis. I still haven't put up any of the trellises I brought from the old house. Now I must be more ready to deal because I'm thinking about them and about climbing roses.
You know I'm big on the one-step-at-a-time thing. I can't deal with everything at once, but I can get things set up one by one.
The journey of 10,000 miles and all that.
This weekend I went to the LERA meeting (Land of Enchantment Romance Authors) and Gabi Stevens confessed immediately "I always read your blog, but I never comment. I feel really bad about it."
Which made me laugh. (Hi Gabi!)
And, of course, I told her there's absolutely no onus to comment. It's always fun to get comments, but I must admit, one of my blog-reading peeves are posts that are clearly set up only to elicit comments. You know the ones, little more than a remark and a question. To me, that's less like writing and more like soliciting.
Gabi, whose first book, The Wish List, came out from Tor in May, with two more to follow (I know - sweet deal), said well, yes, but she's trying to get better at the social media thing and she knows commenting is part of that and that's her next step.
Fair enough.
(I offered to help her figure it out, so let's see if she comments with a link to her site. If not, we need to nag her.)
I returned from the meeting feeling fired up to finish Sterling, which is all one can really ask for from a writers meeting. Matt McDuffie, who teaches screenwriting at University of New Mexico, and apparently has little internet presence, gave an energizing presentation on story structure. Nothing I didn't know before, but still stimulating. Listening to him talk, I could trace my story with it and feel where the next steps are going. I know I'm coming up on the crisis, the Act II climax, though it's taking a bit longer to get there than I thought. The way it's looking now, what I thought would be a 90K book looks like it'll come out around 113K, which is fine. I'm on track for that.
Which is good, because KAK came back from her meeting (lots of RWA groups meet on the second Saturday of the month - kind of an odd synchronicity), where Bob Mayer, who does the whole warrior-writer thing and has and exhaustive internet presence, got her fired up about accountability and goals.
And it turns out he's a fan of spreadsheets, too. So there.
So between KAK wanting to synchronize our goals and my screenwriting induced re-evaluation of my story arc, I discovered I had to up my daily wordcount goal if I'm going to make it by mid-July.
So no more 1K/day. I'm upping to 1850/day. I made it yesterday, pretty easily. We'll see if I can sustain it during the work week, too. The story is moving faster now, so that helps. Less time staring at the screen wondering what happens next. If I'm writing well, I can write about 1K/hour, so this should be doable.
One day at a time.
The Blog Has Moved!
12 years ago
I'd sincerely appreciate it if you could put in an extra 1K/hr on my book too. Just one hour a day should be fine. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteOkay, Elizabeth, you made me belly-laugh out loud to that one!
ReplyDelete1850 a day, eh? Slacker
ReplyDelete~cough~
~flee~