Showing posts with label work in progress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label work in progress. Show all posts

Monday, 9 February 2015

THE WRITING LIFE - A FEW STEPS FORWARD

As I write this, the sky outside my window is an unbroken blue and the sun is bouncing off rooftops and windowpanes. Snowdrops are out, and even daffodils are stretching their heads upwards. Everything is growing, everything is full of life. This is the perfect time to be 'creating', and I'm trying to harness all that wonderful creative energy so that I can pour it into my novel.


In last week's post, I talked about the feedback I'd received and the massive amounts of work I now realise I have to do on novel number three. I said that undertaking a major re-draft is a bit like climbing a mountain. Last week, I was standing at the foot of that mountain looking up into the foggy distance and wondering where I would be now, a week later.

Well, the summit is still shrouded in mist, but I have taken a few steps up the mountainside. I've been working pretty hard this week, although it feels a bit frustrating, because I still haven't done any actual rewriting. There's been a great deal of thinking and planning, making new timelines, writing scene summaries and moving index cards around.

Finding a timeline that will work has been incredibly difficult. I thought I had it sorted until I realised that it made one of the characters much too young for what happens at the time. The timeline is a microcosm of the whole novel in that if you change one thing, everything else shifts as well. Anyway, I think I have a workable timeline now. I've written a list of the key scenes chronologically, including dates of birth and deaths, and now I just (ha! "just"!) have to work out the order in which these things are revealed to the reader. This is fairly complicated, because there are two viewpoints and the story happens both in real time, and over a number of years before the novel opens. One day, I'm going to make life easy (well, easier) for myself and write a novel that is set in real time and where the story happens as we go along!



The amount of work I have to do is daunting but I'm also feeling excited about it again now, because even though I can't quite see the top of my writing mounting, I've started the trek, and that feels good.

If you're at a similar stage with your work, it might help if I share this comforting advice from my lovely agent when we were discussing this recently. She told me to look after myself and be kind to myself, because this stage is the literary equivalent of the metaphorical 'eating for two' in pregnancy – not literally 'eating', of course, but nourishing and nurturing yourself in order to feed the baby (novel) you're growing, and building up your strength in readiness for the massive output to come,

So I've been trying to do that. Yes, I've been working every day, but I'm also allowing myself time to read, time to think and the odd non-working trip to a coffee shop – maybe even featuring cake!

I'm going to leave it there for this week. I'll post again in two weeks' time when I come back from my retreat in the Forest of Dean. details here I'll have four clear days where I don't have to think about shopping, cooking, walking the dog or any other domestic responsibilities. I'm hoping I'll have significant progress to report on 23rd of February.

Oh, and before I go, I should mention that I'm running a couple of one-day writing workshops in Sheffield soon, on 28th of February and 28th March. These days are always fun, always productive, and, people tell me, incredibly inspiring. If you know anyone who might be interested, the full details are here.

Happy 'almost Spring' everyone, and happy writing!

If you'd like to keep an eye on what I'm up to, please visit my website, 'like' my Facebook page or follow me on Twitter @sewelliot






Monday, 22 September 2014

MY WRITING LIFE


As many of you will know, this blog series started as a series of 10 posts following my progress on what I’m now calling the ‘zero draft’ of my third novel. The 10 weeks were up two weeks ago and I published an extra summing up post a few days later. I’ve had such great feedback on the series that I’ve decided to continue posting, although with shorter and less frequent posts right up until this novel is published – hopefully some time in the summer of 2015. While I’m still working on the draft I’ll post fortnightly. So, what’s been happening in the last two weeks? (Apart from eating cake and drinking coffee, that is...)



In the last post I asked whether other writers make a habit of doing ‘morning pages’ or any other warm-up before settling down to their work-in-progress. I was struck by one of the comments by a writer who says she writes for 10 minutes or so every morning as a sort of 'good morning' to herself, a way of connecting with the day. I liked this idea, and have taken it up, using it as a way of recording roughly what happened the day before and thinking about what I have to do on the coming day. I’ve found this helpful so far, especially as I’m using it almost as a writing journal where I record ideas I have for scenes I’m working on, or for new scenes that I need to write.

Looking back through that journal, I find that in the last 14 days:
  • There have only been three days where I’ve not worked on the novel at all. Two were because I was babysitting; no excuse for the other day.
  • My  current word count is only about 4000 words higher than it was in my ‘summing up’ post, because much of what I've done over the last two weeks has been rewriting.
  • I have written three completely new scenes, rewritten two existing scenes extensively and edited/tweaked two other scenes.
  • I have crossed three things off of my novel 'to do'list.
  • I have added six things to my novel 'to do' list.
  • I had one lunch with a writer friend, one feedback session with three other writers, and two coffee shop writing sessions (alone - not as productive because I gave up sooner)
  • The day after my lunch with a friend, I typed up the 800 words I'd written by hand while on the train to meet her. It transpired that what I'd written was total rubbish. So annoyed that I then wasted an hour watching silly videos on Facebook. 
  • I had one brilliant idea and about 25 crap ones.
  • I did a reading and talked about my writing journey alongside four other writers at the Wakefield Literary Festival. We went out for a meal afterwards. I drank too much wine...

New Amazon reviews:
The Things We Never Said: three 5-star, two 4-star and two 3-star
The Secrets We Left Behind: one 5-star, two 4-star


Nice things that have happened since last time:
I was interviewed by Amanda Saint of Retreat West
I learned that the virtual book club @HelpMyBookClub are doing The Secrets We Left Behind as their September book and save asked me to do a Q&A on Twitter in early October.
I learned that The Secrets We Left Behind, had appeared on this Daily Express list of Best women's fiction 
Autumn is happening! I couldn't help myself – I brought these home....

To find out more about me and my work, please visit My website, like my Facebook page or Follow me on Twitter @sewelliot