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Vacation lists

Today, Saturday, was the first day of my autumn vacation.  I take a week before the holiday season really starts and then one in January when it’s finally dying down.  It’s about the only way I can stay sane.  Well, given my last post, I’m not entirely sane, but that’s okay!  I’m on vacation now!

A little tip: When you’re too poor to go somewhere sunny and beachy on vacation, stay home and pretend you’re rich and don’t have to work.  What do you do with your day?  (I, apparently, drink too many caffeinated sodas and stay up until 5:30 in the morning the first night.)  I would like to be the sort that rises in the morning, has a cup of tea (ok, it would be ice tea with tons of sugar and lemonade or other juice because I kind of hate tea), and leisurely starts my productive day.  However, I am actually the sort who gets woken up at 11:10 by a phone call from her mom, rousting her out of bed in time for lunch, eats Chinese food, wanders around Goodwill, and then proceeds to do nothing constructive the rest of the day.  It was nice, though.

When I start a vacation, one of the first things I do is make a list.  I know there will be a lot of down time, times when I’m playing Plants Vs. Zombies or reading or watching tv.  I also know there will come a time when I am sick of doing those things (I know, amazing, right?).  So then I can go to my list and see what I can cross off.  I put all sorts of things on my list, knowing I will not finish all of them, but I will feel great if I get about half of the things done.  (I am reminded of Allie Brosh on Hyperbole and  a Half saying CLEAN ALL THE THINGS!)

Here is my list so far:  (of which, I’ve done none)

  1. Do dishes, including emptying the dishwasher and scrubbing all the pans that collect on my stove
  2. Take out trash, the easiest and most ridiculously hated chore
  3. Vacuum.  I used to do this weekly, once.
  4. Wash patio door glass.  Yep, it’ll rain immediately after I do this.  I know.
  5. Oil change for the car.  My poor, abused Tesla Stubbyhorn.  Yes, that’s its name.
  6. Finish third story for next short fic collection, and
  7. Format and publish it at Smashwords and Amazon
  8. I suppose if I type in “make cover for short fic collection, I could check it off, but that would be cheating since I’ve had that done a month now.
  9. Edit some chapters in Ethne’s book.  (This won’t get done.  Look how sloppy that goal is.  How many chapters?  What kind of editing?  Just cutting out the crap in the draft?  Rewriting?  Writing new chapters?  Pathetic.)
  10. Start setting myself up for NaNoWriMo.  Only one month away!  I’ve figured out that I’m not a pantser, so I will try a more definite outline this year.  Plus I have to pick some character names because I’m not happy at all with the two main character names.  (Remember how problematic Jezra’s name was? That was constantly distracting.)
  11. Build a sheet fort in the living room.  This is a holdover from my last vacation list.
  12. Write in aforementioned sheet fort.
  13. Get the house really cold and watch a movie with hot chocolate and a whole nest of blankets on the sofa.
  14. Clean bathroom.  Actually the second or third most likely thing to get done.
  15. Laundry.  In order of importance, this ought to be first.  However, since this is a random list, here it is.
  16. Read a book.  Doesn’t matter which one.  Just not Sherlock fan fiction.  Something I can admit in public.  🙂  Also note that Mystrade fan fiction does not count as NOT Sherlock fan fiction.
  17. Format and post a story on literotica.com.  This is part of my marketing strategy.  If I publish a new collection, I ought to pop up somewhere else online to try to gain readers.
  18. Think of new marketing strategy, since this one isn’t really working 🙂  Find a few other places to post, for instance, or check out some of the review blogs.
  19. Oooh!  It’ll be October!  Decorate for Halloween!  (Who am I kidding?  My tentacle stocking has been hanging up continuously since I made it, my tablecloth has been my spiderweb one since last Halloween and there is a furry monster wreath with a devil sitting inside it hanging across from my front door.)
  20. Finish creepy circus altered book and post a blog about it.  Uhm, remember to take photos.
  21. Watch the 2 movies I rented and return them by Wednesday.  (Sherlock Holmes 2 and Albert Nobbs)
  22. Hem the new pants in the closet.  Important!  Can’t wear capri pants all winter!
  23. The printer needs new ink.  Not sure if this will involve buying some or just finding a box I have stashed somewhere.
  24. Try not to go too nuts at the office store.  I still do want a legal notepad with a spiral top.  Hrm.  And pens.  New pens.  Because the 483 pens I already have aren’t enough.

I think that’s enough for the time being.  When I start sinking in office supply fantasies, it’s time to stop the list.  So as you can see, I should not be bored, even if I never leave the house.  My loving mother always thinks I’ll be lonely and bored, but I think that’s projection.  If nothing else at all, I have the joy of procrastinating against every single item in this long list.  With what?  What could possibly be left?  Well, that’s yet another list.  🙂

 
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Posted by on September 30, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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Chapter 666, A Devilry of Imps

The quote that popped up when I posted my last blog was this:

“The best time for planning a book is while you’re doing the dishes.”  –Agatha Christie

Hah, I hate doing dishes.  🙂  Maybe that is why my books tend to be so unplanned.  Just this evening, (okay, just this minute,) I finished jotting down an outline with which I plan to edit the NaNoWriMo novel I rescued from Hard Drive Hell.  I’ve never been a big fan of outlining, but I find I need it.  In this case, I’ve done the outline with the majority of the book already written.  That way, when I go through each section, I can simply follow my outline, make each segment exactly what it needs to be to fit into the outline, and move along.  I can add or tweak a bit more next draft, but this should get my plot more coherent, at least.

I’m also finding difficulty in the task of editing an entire novel because the scope is so big.  I am hoping an outline will make each part stand out more, make it all seem like several smaller tasks.  I find myself wanting to take on everything at once! and I can only barely read through 200 pages in one sitting, much less do everything I want to those pages!  I mean, this must be what someone with ADD feels like.  There is so much!  And I want to do it all now!  And that’s impossible, so I don’t do anything.

I also had been meaning to post a segment here, just for kicks.  I think it was the segment from the imp battle.  Let’s do that.

***************************************************************

“That’s why I’ve never vacationed in Hell.  It’s the heat, not the humidity.”

With those words, Ethne slammed on the brakes.  The car screeched to a halt, tossing Ethne against her seatbelt and shooting Jezra out through the engine block.  He walked back from where he landed and stuck his head through the passenger window.

“At least it wasn’t icy this time.”

Ethne agreed.  She’d blown a brake line one night when it was icy, braking hard when some idiot in a truck crossed the intersection from a stop sign right in front of her.  She managed not to slide into the other driver, but sure as hell blasted the horn after she’d come to a full stop.  Asshat.  No one wants a t-bone on Christmas Eve.

“Where do you suppose they came from?”  Jezra gestured to the frolicking, rampaging imps breaking off tree limbs and pissing acid against the post of the speed limit sign twenty feet ahead.

“Where they all come from, I imagine.”  Ethne drove carefully onto an imp-free portion of the shoulder and put the car into park.

“Watch the car.”  She unfastened her seatbelt and hitched up her skirt a bit.  She wasn’t the happiest to be fighting a devilry of imps in a skirt and heels, but as long as she kept control, the fight would be easy enough.

“Watch the car, she says.  What am I supposed to do if they swarm the car, Eth?”

“Just keep them from shitting in it.  The guys at the detailing place won’t touch it again after last time.”

Jezra assumed a grim protective stance near the left headlight.  As a ghost, there wasn’t much he could do against imps, really, but if he concentrated, he could kick them away.  It would use up more power than he normally expended, though, manifesting physically.

Ethne walked slowly down the road, head ducked against the sulfurous wind blowing down the channel between the trees, counting the imps in her head.  Imps usually manifested in multiples of three, usually around twenty one or twenty seven.  There had to be at least thirty here, but at least they were scattered some distance away.  Well, that was both good and bad.  It would take the farther away ones a while to come back once they realized what she was.  However, she had no real way of knowing exactly how many had manifested.  She didn’t want to accidentally leave a few to perform mischief.

She caught eyes with one picking leaves off a tree branch that hung low to the ground.  It snarled to itself after each leaf, as if mumbling, “She loathes me, she loathes me not.”  When it realized that Ethne was looking directly at it, truly seeing it, it scurried down off the branch like a flying monkey with a bad case of mange.

Ethne reached up over her left shoulder and pulled her scythe out of nowhere.  The blade shone with inner fire, pure light, and it cut through the imp like butter, leaving two smelly, charred halves of imp on the ground.  The maniacal screeching alerted the others, though, and they came at her in a rush.

There was a real art to fighting with a scythe.  It wasn’t technically a battle weapon.  Still, she could catch two or three imps with each swing, if she timed it right.  One imp impaled itself on the blade, running at Ethne from just the wrong direction.  Its scrawny legs churned as the blade split its thorax.  Ethne ignored it until the the sharp heat of the blade cut through the ugly little beast and the thing fell onto the ground, dead.  Her scythe balanced again there was another pile of steaming shit on the ground she had to avoid.  Her shoes were ruined as it was, drops of dying imp piss eating into the leather.

The scythe sang shrilly as it cut through air and imp.  No blood showed on the blade.  Either the creatures lacked the ability to bleed due to cauterization or the blade drank the blood of the damned.

A couple of imps dropped from the trees.  The first she hacked at in midair, a panicked, flapping bird still clenched in its yellow teeth.  The second one she deflected with her left hand, freed from the grip at the end of the shaft just in time.  Ethne sliced the bottom half of the imp away, and the three legs ran a distance before finally collapsing into a puddle of thick greenish-brown goo.

Ethne finally remembered to breathe, but was a bit sorry for her deep breath.  Dead imps smelled worse than Hell.  For all the rotten-egg sulfur in the air when they were alive, the noxious taste of decomposition in the air and the smell of over-flowing outhouse pit were utterly overpowering.  Ethne would rather lick a skunk’s hindquarters than smell dead imp.

A few latecomers, whether they were smarter than the first imps on the scene or just farther away, eyed Ethne warily.  She swallowed hard, looked threatening, and pretended she wasn’t planning to vomit in the bushes when she was done.  She brandished the scythe over her right shoulder.  Hardly a trained fighting stance, but it was effective and menacing enough.

“Behind you!”

Ethne spun at Jezra’s voice, too late.  One little bastard clung to her back, biting a mouthful of ponytail like a dog with a chew toy.  It hurt only in an annoying way, but the little talons scratching her skin like kitten claws as it clung to her back through her clothes bothered her on a more intense level.

The hold-backs jumped at her while she was occupied with the imp on her back.  Ethne had to force herself to deal with the ones in front of her, to not get distracted.  If she worried about the one on her back, ignored the several coming at her, she would fall.  And no one wanted to be at the bottom of a pile of imps, not even Lucifer himself.

Finally the last little pustule fell in front of her and she could give her attention to the one still clinging to her back skin.  Carefully, she raised the scythe over her head like the world’s most dangerous back-scratcher and slipped it through the unsuspecting back of the imp.  It fell in twitching pieces to the ground, neatly bisected from crown to crapper.

Ethne inspected the ground and the trees.  She had lost count of those that fell, and the remains on the ground clumped together.  She listened for snarling or chatter, but after a few moments of silence, heard the birds hesitantly begin chirping in the trees instead.  She straightened up slowly, arched her back to stretch it out.  Picking her way through the steaming piles of imp remains, Ethne surveyed the damage to her shoes.  Well, she examined the one shoe that hadn’t rotten completely off her foot from contact with the mess.  She kicked it off towards the side of the road and walked cautiously to the back of the car.

Jezra wordlessly popped the trunk, but kept his gaze alert while Ethne cleaned up.  She swung the scythe behind her shoulder again.  She felt the wooden shaft in a warm line across her back before it faded into the ether again.  She opened the first of several jugs of heavily salted water that she kept in the trunk.  The water was bathwater warm from the heat of several summer days, but it hadn’t evaporated yet.  She poured half the first jug over her feet to clean them, then the rest over her back to cleanse the imp scratches.  The water bubbled and hissed as it came in contact with her wounds.  Ethne swore in every known dialect of Hellion (75% of Hellion idioms involved curse words, so it was easy) and continued swearing in languages that hadn’t been invented yet.

Halfway through the second jug of blessed saline, Ethne stopped cursing, except in English.  She didn’t have any other clothes in the trunk today.  Usually she was  prepared, but she’d worn the ones she kept in there the week before and forgot to replace them.  Damn imps.  Damn smelly imps.  She would have to drive wet.  And call to postpone the appointment she’d miss.  At least she had a pair of pedicure flip-flops she’d accidentally worn home from the spa last week.  Ohh, her pedicure.  She couldn’t look.

Ethne hefted a third jug in her free hand and went back to where the imps had melted onto the cement.  She emptied the half a jug first, diluting and washing away the goo from the road.  She tried to estimate the amount of imp goop as she purified the scene.  Thirty three was her best guess, a nice round number.  Still, a lot of imps for one infestation.  She’d have to call Charles again.  He was likely sick of hearing her voice today.

Charles was, as predicted, a little underwhelmed by her news.

“So if you’ve taken care of it, why are you calling me?”

“Relata refero,” she said, basically, I report reports.  It was the motto bestowed upon Charles when he became head of the local Curia office.

Charles snorted.  Ethne wasn’t sure if he was amused or annoyed.

“I’ve made note of it, Ethne.  Location?”

“Highway 19 outside Waterloo.  Also, could you have Grace call my appointment in Watertown and reschedule?”

Charles made a noncommittal grunt, which he still managed to make sound snooty in an upper-crust British way.

“Anything else Miss Winter?”

“Nope, that covers it.”  The line went dead on the other end and Ethne folded up her cell phone.

“You didn’t tell him about your wounds.”

“I’m aware of that, Jez.”

“You’re not going to see the healer?  You really should.  Imp infections are only treatable in the first day.”

“Aware.”  Ethne wrung out her ripped shirt and put it back on.  Lucky that traffic was sparse on the road this afternoon.  It was unusual, but at least no one saw her fighting the imps and no one got a flash of bra besides Jezra.

“So what are we doing then?”  Salted water or not, imp claws were much like the mouths of Komodo dragons.  It wasn’t the wound that would kill the victim, it was the disgusting infection that would follow.

When Ethne didn’t answer, just shook out her emergency blanket to protect her car seat from the blood that would inevitably ooze from the imp wounds, Jezra scowled.

“We’re going to see that vampire.”

“You and I both know that vampire saliva is much more effective than anything the healer could do.  Hell, it works better than penicillin.”

“You don’t have to convince me.  I know I’m not in control of this little cruise to hell.”  He picked at her antenna topper, a full-length red foam cord topped with pitchfork prongs.  Stellan, that vampire, had given it to her shortly after they’d met and she’d thought it was tremendously funny.

“I don’t want you to be mad about it.  I work with him; this is just a piece of the trade.”

Jezra got into the passenger seat of the car, snapped his seatbelt, and crossed his arms.  Ethne tried not to get angry with him for being upset; it was a stupid thing for someone to get angry about.  She took a deep breath through her mouth, still trying to avoid the lingering smell of imp.  When she felt her breathing ease and her heart slow, she got back into the car.  Jezra was playing something mournful on the radio, but she ignored it.  She started the car, rolled down all the windows and put the vents on full blast.  Hopefully her clothes would be mostly dry by Madison.

*Copyright 2012

** excerpt approximately chapter six, rough draft

*** doing edits on the fly, since this is still the rough draft.  Totally subject to change.

 
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Posted by on February 26, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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The back of the book…

NaNoWriMo is only 25 days away.  I’ve nowhere near accomplished the work on other things, and soon I’ll set it all aside to do something crazy and fantastic for the third year in a row.  Last year was tough.  I’m apparently not a pantser, yet I’m not the best at making a plan.  More often than not, I would never make an outline for anything I wrote, even long research papers in school, unless I specifically had to turn one in for the assignment.  I think they’re a great idea, and I wish I could really plan things out that way.  I think I really need them when I write a long piece, to both keep myself on track with where I’m going with the story, and also to keep motivated day after day.  If I know what I’m going to write, and don’t need to wait for an idea or inspiration, it goes much more smoothly.

That is something I learned in two NaNoWriMo months.  I don’t think that I knew that about myself in either high school or college (where I majored in English with a writing emphasis).  And this is where I need an outline when I write, because I am completely off the topic and far from the point I wanted to make.

With NaNoWriMo only 25 days away, I’ve been checking their blogs more frequently and just tonight went to the website and looked at my profile.  I reread the description I had up for my 2010 novel and I thought, “If only that was the novel I ended up writing!”

Oh, I guess I was always making my point.  How unusual of me.

I wrote the description and thought it was a bit slapshot at the time, somewhat over-generalized and, while not inaccurate, not quite a representation of the plot I had in my head.  The elements were all truthful, but some of the scenes didn’t work as I had planned and the logic didn’t quite solidify in the finished work.  I realized as I reread the paragraph, though, that this was exactly how I would want this book to be described on its back cover.  And also, that this was how I had really wanted the book to turn out.

I think that, as I consider revisions, I should keep this paragraph front and center as I edit, forming my corrections to the content as described.  I should look at this paragraph and list the ways I deviated from my vision, and scenes or lines I might add in to shift the book back to where it should be.

I suppose this is how editing works, really, but I’ve never had such a clear line to judge by before.  Mostly, my “books” are just jumbled scenes in my head that come out in no particular order.  They’re daydreams and thoughts that help me put aside the stresses of the day so I can sleep.  And here’s a punchy, if not perfect, paragraph I could use to refocus, sell, and promote this book.

(I have an urge to say “Shit just got real.”)

As an added bonus, here is the paragraph:

Ethne is the world’s cutest Curia exorcist.  Blonde and petite, she kicks demon ass and shows ghosts the Door.  However, she can’t make her undead partner Stellan get along with her dead boyfriend Jezra.  Vampire-Curia relations are in a steady decline, making working with Stellan even more politically incorrect.  And now she’s run across a ghost that won’t leave its house; not to mention it’s annoyingly smug that Ethne seems to have lost her Key to the Door.

 
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Posted by on October 6, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

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Not reading, barely functioning

Had a day back at work today, but I’m off tomorrow.  It’s a funny way to come back from vacation, but it gives me the feeling of one more day.  Got my yearly review, and while all went well from it, even the praise made me feel uneasy.  Don’t want them expecting more from me or anything.

Other than that, it was a rather uneventful day.  I caught up what I missed not being there a week, and came home and watched the first episode of Dexter for the season.  That’s some seriously messed up stuff, there.  Love it.  I haven’t really been reading lately, but the Dexter books have been on my list for a while.  There’s something unaccountably quirky about them that just intrigues me.  However, since I’ve had a book sitting on my desk since the start of my vacation that I haven’t touched, not to mention a 100 page story on my e-reader that I’ve been (ever so slowly) working through, my reading list will not get much shorter.  Which reminds me, I saw a book I thought looked interesting the other day, but I never did make a note of it.  I ought to go download a sample (to cozy up to the 50 other samples cluttering up my library) just so I remember I wanted to read it.

Whoops, tried to do that and can’t remember the title.  Oh, no, I actually did.  It’s not available as a nookbook.  Really James Lovegrove?  No e-book?  Oh, I see, a Kindle book.  Thanks, Solaris.  I’ll just have to read my other book instead for now.  Blood and Other Cravings edited by Ellen Datlow is the book sitting on my desk.  I just love the title.  Yes, I know that shows my cute little goth insides, but there is something about the title that just slithers inside my brain quite delightfully.  I’ve had other books edited by Datlow over the years, and I’ve grown to like anthologies of short stories more (in my old age).  I find something interesting about giving a loose topic to ten or twenty writers and seeing where their brains go.  There’s always something interesting and clever that turns up, some new take that maybe isn’t enough for a novel, but the idea is brilliant in a short story.

I used to dislike short stories.  I always wanted more than just a few pages.  It didn’t matter if the story was concluded, or that it was wrapped up so neatly in its tiny package.  I wanted to see more.  I remember reading “Harrison Bergeron” by Vonnegut in high school and really being taken by it.  By college, Vonnegut was one of the few authors whose short stories I really enjoyed.  I did a paper on some of the other stories in Welcome to the Monkey House.  It’s kind of amazing the amount of world contained in just a few sentences sometimes.  I can only aspire to that.

I feel distracted now, having gone to read the story and now have a clanging in my head disjointing my thoughts.  🙂

One of the points I wanted to make today was my inability to be decisive.  So many of my decisions are made with no real intent.  I didn’t do anything much on my vacation because I never got around to doing anything.  I didn’t decide to do nothing, or to rent movies and stay in bed all day.  I simply put off making a decision to go to the video store, and by default, decided not to do so.  I put off deciding to write, and thus flipped through channels on the television, unable to find something I wanted to watch enough to sit through commercials.  At one point I did decide to go to the craft store, but my last entry discussed what resulted then.

And my inability to finish a novel or two?  More than lacking the decision-making skills to firmly decide that I want to write and want to publish and want to make something of my life, I lack the ability to decide exactly what happens to my characters.  Even at the point of editing (because, if nothing else, NaNoWriMo has given me two basic manuscripts on which to work, though I lost half of one due to not backing up) I cannot decide what to change and what to keep.  I cannot decide if I should add more characters to make things more interesting, to give the book more conflict and more plot or if I should leave the story as is.  I can’t decide whether to put some characters I’ve planned in earlier, or take them out of the ending.  I don’t think I want to have them just show up at the end; that’s too Deus ex machina.  Here’s characters you know nothing about coming in to save the day.

As I edit through, I print out and set aside chapters I consider done.  I look at them and think that there’s little more I can cut, nothing more I need to add, and try to make a decision.  But then I get two chapters later and think I ought to add this or that to chapter one, or add a prologue, or …

And my question becomes, when am I done?  When will each little decision take hold, announce itself king, and bend the other instances to its will?  When will I know each decision I’ve made is the right one?

Of course, when I was in school, I was bored when I didn’t have a challenge.  And now I’m complaining about the very thing.

 
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Posted by on October 3, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

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