NaNo has Struck!

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It’s that time of year again, folks! My life is officially being swallowed by the worldwide phenomena known as National Novel Writing Month, or NaNoWriMo to those of us who talk about it so much we have to shorten it. The challenge is to write a novel of not less than fifty thousand words in thirty days. I did it last year, got 76K of a 92K novel written in thirty days. I hope to be a lot closer to finishing my novel this year at the end of the month rather than dragging it out for an additional seven months afterward as I did last year.

It is very likely that my life will devolve into me spending most of my time at my laptop writing for the next thirty days. It is highly likely that posts here will become erratic and that you may not see the picture posts put up in a very timely manner. Rest assured, I’m not dead or sequestered on jury duty. I’m just writing a novel. A whole novel. In a month.

Pre-NaNoWriMo Worries

It’s nearly upon us. The web is abuzz with literary twitter (not that other kind, this is…well, it has no capital “T”) over the month of November and what it means for writers all over the world. It’s NaNoWriMo, folks, and during November hundreds upon thousands of writers sit down at their laptops or desktops or notebooks or typewriters or whatever they have, and they write. A ton. Within 30 days thousands who started will have completed a novel of not less that 50 thousand words, a daily average of just a hair over 1,666 words per day.

Last year was my first year for NaNo, after having laughed it off as either “stupid” (What? Those people think they can write a REAL novel in 30 days?? Please!), or “too hard” (That’s too hard!). I actually ended the month with 76 thousand words (gadzooks!), but wasn’t finished with the novel. I chipped away at it over the next several months, and finally put the triple-pound on it at 92,165 words in June 30th. (See how much faster you work when they only give you a month to do things?)

I had an excellent time last year, met a lot of great people, and realized that *gasp!* I actually COULD write a novel! It’s not a great one, but I did write one. I guess I’m officially a novelist, even if said novel is a rough draft that not even I am very excited about ever looking at again.

So, your fresh, newly-minted amateur novelist is all fired up about NaNo again this year. I’ve been visiting the forum (at the sight handily linked above nothatI’mtryingtoencourageyoutogothereoranything) and posting about our kickoff meeting and the various write-ins around the city that we’ll be having throughout the month, but despite all my enthusiasm, I have one nagging problem. I have no story idea. Nothing, zero, empty.

Oh, sure, I have some ideas, but it seems that, while I’ve been gorging myself on some pretty fantastic short works by a number of authors from the West Coast (Charles Beaumont and everyone connected with him notthatI’mtryingtoencourageyoutoreadhimoranything) it seems to have gotten me into short story mode, and all of my ideas can be wrapped up in about twenty pages or so. Twenty pages is just a *little* bit shy of the 175-page tome that I must turn out by November’s end.

I’ve been reading Writer’s Digest a bit lately, and thinking about what I’m wanting to do. Writing has taken a back seat lately to all the visual arts I’ve been working on, but it’s not like I haven’t been doing absolutely no writing whatsoever. Journaling should count for something, shouldn’t it? No? Um…apparently not, not where this endeavor is concerned, anyway.

I hope by November 1st that something shows up. It was fun last year. I’d like it to be fun this year, but I don’t know how I can do that if I’m sitting there going, “Okay, I have a character, this guy, and he….he needs to do………..something…………..”

Wish me luck, kids, and my hat is off to those of you who join me on the journey this year.

Artlit

Many, many art mags, some children's lit, a few colored pencils, and a Nebraska license plate.  All the learnin' you need.

Many, many art mags, some children's lit, a few colored pencils, and a Nebraska license plate. All the learnin' you need.

Darrel loaned me a bunch of his art magazines, because he’s cool like that. I’ve read through one of them already. My immediate impression was that there’s a whole lot more going on out on the West Coast than there is here, but what do I know? I also learned that there’s a pretty awesome little cottage industry booming with art toys – these goofy little whimsical, weird, fun, bizarre, cute, odd and rather detailed little figures made out of all sorts of media, though vinyl seems to be really popular. Anyway, it’s fun stuff to learn about, and I’m happy to have been given the opportunity to pick up on it for free. (Free!)

Tin Sandwich

Mouthful o' metal.

Mouthful o' metal.

I did a bunch of finagling on iPhoto with this one. Can’t tell can you? Yeah, I thought it was okay that way for a while, and as soon as I finished I thought otherwise. It should be doing something it’s not doing. I don’t know what it should be doing, though, or how it should be doing it. This photography stuff is really tough. I’m pushing myself in much different areas than I ever have before. I only had one class in it ever, and it met twice a week. My total instruction in lighting – all of the whole of the subject of lighting – was 90 minutes in length. You might see why certain abilities are beyond my grasp. Honestly, looking at stuff I’ve been doing these past couple of weeks, I’m stunned anyone ever paid me to do work for them. I’m also stunned that I was able to produce work for them that really was halfway decent. This isn’t it. Good thing they didn’t need this, whatever it was I was going for.

We’ll see, kids. I’m finding it very hard to keep up with things lately. I have pretty much filled my plate with things. I love them all, but I wonder how wise this all is. At the same time, I want to give none of them up. Didn’t I blog about this a week ago or something? Probably. Perhaps you’ll have to hear me rant about it for some months before I figure something out. It occurs to me that Bruce Springsteen never had this problem. I’ve read about him. He knew, from the moment he picked up a guitar, that that was it. He’d found IT in his life. He said, “The first time in my life I could stand to look at myself in the mirror was the first time I ever looked in it and held a guitar.”

I don’t have that. I seem to have many choices, and unfortunately I have some amount of ability in many areas. I suppose that’s better than when I used to think I was only good at one or maybe two things, but it brings with it a wealth of other issues, issues which I’m struggling with right now. The universe isn’t reaching out with any obvious answers just yet, either. I’m waiting for some outside force to make things a little clearer, for someone to say to me, “We’re going to pay you sixty grand a year to write for us,” or “We want you to do this public installation of this sculpture,” or “Someone broke into your car and stole your camera,” or “We need someone who can build an engine while taking photos, writing, and playing harmonica.” You know, something like that. SOMEthing!

And while I wait, I keep doing.

Oh, tonight’s writing group meeting went well. It was a mad rush getting there, but I made it, and the folks said I did a great job on my writing prompt, the “barn exercise” taken from John Gardner’s much-lauded “The Art of Fiction.” I’ve not read it yet myself, but it’s on the to-do list. The exercise: describe a barn from the point of view of a man who has just found out he lost his son in war. Do not mention the son, death, or war.

It took me about four hours to write one page, but at least an hour of that was devoted to reading about barns so that I could describe on appropriately. I think I used a single word from that hour of research, but somehow the whole thing was a help anyway.

Keep at it, folks. Keep creating. You owe it to yourself.

I ask, Quinn answers!

If you’ve read the blog rabidly for some length of time, then you know I’m a fan of Quinn Cummings. She writes a blog called The QC Report, which is both witty and insightful. I have had numerous occasions where I tried valiantly not to spit coffee on the keyboard while laughing at one of her entries. You’d think I’d stop drinking coffee while reading her stuff, but I’m a slow learner, and I also refuse to quit drinking coffee, even for short periods of time.

Quinn’s writing isn’t limited to her blog, however. Her book “Notes from the Underwire” has just been published, full of the same humor and self-deprecation as her blog. As part of her self-promotion, Quinn has offered to answer questions from whatever random bloggers send them her way. After deciding that she really didn’t mean to include little people like myself, I abruptly changed my mind one night at around 1am and decided I’d send something her way. Lo and behold, she really answered it!

Keeping it all in the spirit of Thatstom, I asked her a couple of quesstions about creativity…and toast. Click here to enjoy her answers. You might also want to pick up a copy of her excellent book.

Prepared for Party Conversation

I’ve mentioned this in some previous posts, but it’s pretty important, and after several folks asked about it, I realized that finishing my novel deserves more than just a paragraph. I’m apt to minimize the importance of some of my accomplishments, and maybe this will help non-minimize the minimizing which has already started to appear.

Way back in October of 2008 I signed up for something called NaNoWriMo. Some of you are familiar with National Novel Writing Month, but for those not so, it is a challenge where participants attempt to write a novel of at least 50K words in length between the dates of 11/1 and 11/30. This is especially lovely for those of us in the U.S. who work this frenetic exercise through the Thanksgiving holiday.

I loved NaNo. I can’t say enough good things about it. I made some new friends, learned a ton about writing, and overall just had a reall kickass time with the whole thing. I also spent a lot of money on coffee, but that was just a bonus. Come the end of the month I had blown the 50K goal out of the water by writing seventy-six thousand words! One little problem. Novel still wasn’t finished.

That’s right, I’d gone from day one where I wondered how crazy I was to be even attempting to write a real honest-to-pete novel-length novel of not-so-lengthy longness (50K is about 200 or 250 pages, as I recall – about the length of “Fahrenheit 451,” for reference), to “Holy crap, how am I ever going to stop adding words! Won’t these people please resolve their conflicts?!”

My determination at the outset of the project was in keeping largely with NaNo’s idea that it’s just pretty awesome to set yourself a big goal and then allow yourself the time and energy that you need to make it a priority and complete it. Completing it was still my priority, and I was determined that this was not going to be another one of those things where, two years from now I’d run into a friend at a Christmas party or a gig, and they would say, “Hey, how did that book go that you were writing?” and I’d shuffle my feet and look away and go, “Oh, yeah…I, um, I got a lot done, but it sucked, so I didn’t finish it.” I’m so NOT about not finishing these days. It’s one of the hallmarks of my past that I want to change about myself. Even if the final product isn’t that great, or I don’t really do anything with it, I want to be a person who finishes things, because if I keep doing that, then sooner or later those finished thigns are going to improve in quality, and then, maybe, at some point in the future, I will start having finished stuff that I can look at and go, “Okay, not bad. Kind of cool.” and then I won’t hate myself for never doing anything. It just makes it easier to get out of bed in the morning, you know?

So, November ended and me and my NaNo buddies scattered to the winds for the holiday season, but we kept in touch and after things calmed down we were able to regroup and still get together on the odd weekend for a little informal meeting and catchup. I continued to write either at these meetings, before, after, or just whenever the heck I could get some time.

It dragged on…and on…and on. At one point I remember there was a two-week period where I only wrote 80 words or something like that. I just had other stuff to do, plus I was getting the beat-down from the novel itself. I was stuck. I’d never done something like this, and it just wasn’t moving. I dug in my heels and refused to quit. Weeks went by here and there where absolutely no words made it into the document, yet I still refused to say I had stopped. When this happened I’d try to find a couple of hours one week and pound out as many words as I could, sometimes getting a thousand down, maybe two thousand, before events conspired and I was kept away again.

By June things had evolved. I’d moved forward with the plot a good deal, even though I didn’t like where it was going or what was happening, or even how it was happening. It didn’t matter, I was going to keep going until it was finished! I looked at some saved documents and noted that it had been about a month since I’d even pecked out a single letter on the novel. It was grim, but it looked like I was in the home stretch, I just didn’t know quite how to end it.

Have you ever ended a novel? I hadn’t. How do you take all those thoughts and words and wrap them up? I mean, after they’ve done all this incredible stuff, how do you have them do something so mundane as to just…get on with their little imaginary lives? How do they say goodbye to each other? How do I let go of them myself?

On June 28, 2009 I was sitting in the cafe wondering about this. I knew I was at the end. It was a done deal, but I wasn’t sure what to do with them. Two of my characters were down to saying goodbye to each other. They didn’t want to part, and I didn’t exactly want them to just stop living their little lives either, even if I knew their little lives needed a massive rewrite to become interesting little lives.

She has to leave, I thought, staring at the screen. It’s time for her to go. They both have stuff they have to get on with, and this part needs to come to an end. I don’t know what they’re going to do from here on out, but it’s time to say goodbye.

They said their goodbyes (for probably the third go-’round now), and she finally really made it to the door, opened it, walked out, and closed it behind her. He sat on his bed for a few moments, and then picked up what she had left for him.

I leaned back and looked at the screen. There wasn’t anything left to say. They were on their own now.

I clicked “Save,” and took a drink of my coffee as the word counter totaled it up. 92,165 words from hello to goodbye, from start to finish, from “How am I going to write a novel,” to, “Wow, somehow I managed to write a novel.”

It’s been quite a trip. It’s been fun, aggravating, exciting, annoying, interesting, hard, and overall just plain excellent. What I do with it from here on out, I have no clue, but I can at least say I’ve written a novel, which is a hell of a lot more than I could say about myself a year ago. Bring on the party conversation. Go ahead and ask me “How’s that book going?” I’m prepared now, fully prepared.

Day of the Auditioning Dead

Ever wanted to be a zombie? Thought so. Me too, but until now, I never dared believe that such a dream could be mine. It’s not in the bag yet, though, so maybe I just better back up and explain what I know at this point.

A few weeks back I was goofing around on Facebook (yep, I do that, and I do it very well, thank you!) when I saw that one of my friends had added a group to her favorites. The group was called “8 Wheels of Death,” and it had this kicky little graphic with two skate wheels making up the number eight. Combining wheels with anything gets me interested, so I clicked on it. Lo and behold, what should I find but a group for “the upcoming top-secret Roller Derby Zombie short movie to be filmed during the summer of 2009” in my old college town. “What the heck,” says I, clicking on the “Join this Group” button. “I’ll keep tabs on it. Sounds like fun.”

A week later an announcement went up: “A round of auditions will be held Saturday, June 27, from 4-7pm in 9th St Park.” “Huh,” says I, “this might be interesting.” I didn’t take any action, though. I mean, me, get involved in a movie? They’d probalby need for me to be places and do things and – well, that could all get very busy and uncomfortable! I just noted it and went back to my usual Facebook sending of flair and putting up announcements of finishing writing my novel (BOOM! Didn’t see that coming, did you?!).

A couple of days after that a note goes out to everyone in the group: “We need a cool old car for a scene, so if you know of anyone who has one…” *Tom smiles wickedly and rubs his hands together over the keyboard, then begins pecking* “Dear Mr. Director, I may have something you’d be interested in…”

A day later the ’67 Chevelle has been conscripted as the “cool car” for a pivotal scene in the movie. “Hmm,” thinks myself, “maybe I should go ahead and goof off with this audition thing. I always wanted to be one of the living dead.”

I send the director an email: “Glad the car will fit your needs. I don’t think there’s any abuse it can’t take, and it’s kind of beat up anyway, which sounds like that’s what you want. I’ll be heading down for auditions this weekend, too. I’m not dying for a part or anything, but I just thought it would be a fun experience.” At this point it’s prudent to mention that I’ve never done any acting in my life, unless you count grade school spring pageants, and I don’t.

Days later I’m gassing up at a station as I’m about to head out of town for the audition. My brother calls from the drag strip to give me an update on the car’s performance, the same car that will be in the movie. All is good. In fact, he’s doing rather well with it. I congratulate him and say, “I gotta go. I have to gas up. I’m going down to Bloomington to audition for a zombie movie, and get this: they want the Chevelle to be in the movie!”
“Really?” says my brother. “That’s kickass!”
“I KNOW!” I say, grinning like an idiot. I’m getting more excited now that my brother is on board with the idea as well. I gas up and hit the road.

Ninety minutes later and I’m down at the park. I basically just wander over to the one shelter they have there where a few people seem to be headed. I guess that’s how these things come together.

I get up to the group, who are laying out papers and positioning something that looks exactly like a video camera. My powers of perception tell me that I have, in fact, picked the right group to wander toward (this assisted by the fact that there were no other groups in the area at the time).

I introduce myself, and everyone seems pretty happy to be there and happy that I’ve come out as well. They’re a little surprised that I drove 90 minutes for the audition, but I didn’t get the opportunity to tell them that there were no zombie movies auditioning in my town that weekend. (I let them think it’s because I love theatre so much.)

Since I am cool and think of you, my Awesome Readers so much, I had the foresight to bring my trusty Nikon. Behold the gallery o’ fun that makes up the first round of auditions for “8 Wheels of Death!”

I had a blast, and the Chris, the director, was very awesome in granting my request to read first, as I had to leave only about twenty minutes later so that I could drive back up north and play a gig. It was a full day, but one hell of a good time overall. Before I left, Chris told me that it looked like I would probably have a good chance of getting a speaking part in the movie. I read for the part of “Chester” the EMT, who’s pretty much a straight guy, but I also read for “Buck” who is a “smarmy redneck” who comes to a bad end. I’m a little hoping I get to be Buck, because he’s kind of a jackass, and I could SO have fun with that, because I’m so NOT that guy. (It would be the perfect excuse to wear a T-shirt that says “Chicks Dig Me” or “#1 Lover” or something equally tasteless.)

I will certainly keep you all updated on this one. Shooting takes place in July and August with plans to have it done and ready to show to the public by Halloween of this year, which is a pretty short turnaround on a movie, in my mind. It’s a zero-budget thing, and very campy, but I hope it comes out fun and wacky and entertaining all the same. From the folks I met it looks like it’s going to be a good time!

Oh, yeah, and that part about the novel? For those of you who have just tuned in, I started my first ever novel attempt on November 1, 2008 during the wonderful caffeine-infused frenzy that is NaNoWriMo. I got 76K words written within 30 days, which was more than enough to hit the challenge goal of 50K, but not enough to finish the story. My goal in entering NaNo was to completely write the rough draft of a novel, beginning to end. Since it wasn’t finished, I plodded along, and sometimes it seemed like I was never going to finish the damn thing, but the day finally arrived. The day after my zombie audition, June 28, I sat at a table in a funky little cafe near my home, typed the final sentence, sat back, took a sip of my latte, and clicked “Save” once and for all. 92,165 words, and they are all done and all mine.

Stay creative, kids.

The Beaumont Zone

Aw, dudes, check this out!!!!

Collections of sinister, humorous, and just plain weird literary greatness.

Collections of sinister, humorous, and just plain weird literary greatness.

I know, old books. You’re as excited as I am, right??? If not, please allow me to explain just a bit. In the photos above what you see are original publications of short story collections by one Charles Beaumont. Like Richard Matheson, Beaumont wrote for The Twilight Zone. Unlike Matheson, Beaumont was not able to live a long life, thereby enabling him to spread his literary awesomeness to a greater audience, or to garner movie deals from his stories which would go on to be remade three separate times.

Beaumont died tragically at the young age of thirty-eight, victim of an odd condition that has now been said to be Alzheimer’s, but at the time was unknown. Due to his untimely passing, his career was understandably short, yet the body of work which he left behind him has led authors such as Ray Bradbury, Harlan Ellison and Dean Koontz to remark that his influence is deep and wide even today.

Doing some hunting around on Wikipedia in recent weeks, I happened across Beaumont’s entry, and became enthralled. I noted that, while he hadn’t been on this earth long, he’d still managed to produce enough work for several published collections. Not being flush with cash, I checked the local library catalog. Zilch. I then realized that, while there were a few newer anthologies of his work, each one omitted stories here and there from his original publications. This would not do. I had to have them all!

Raiding the change jar (literally – I found I had fifty-two quarters sitting on my dresser in a pickle jar), I went to abebooks.com, recommended by a friend, and typed in his name. Oh, the joy when the search results pulled up numerous copies! I bought all three of his first anthologies. It’s been one week since I received them, and I’ve read every single one of them. They’re outstanding. Some of it is sci-fi, some horror, some are just plain humorous, but all are excellent.

I’ve started making notes for myself on the how and why of his writing. It’s very interesting stuff. For instance, out of 17 stories in his first book, only six of them have death directly incorporated. Out of those six, only four of those deaths are violent, and this from a book subtitled “A Collection of Violent Entertainments.” Here’s a guy who obviously pulls off the creepy and fearsome without resulting time and again to hack and slash violence. It’s not overdone or overwrought, it’s just plain good storytelling, and this, friends, is what it’s all about: telling a story well. If you can do that, then you don’t need to come up with some crazy new idea that no one has ever done before. Although, honestly, Beaumont pulled that off too. His short story “The Crooked Man” caused quite a stir when it came out in Playboy in 1955. No one had seen anything like it in mainstream press at that time. His idea to flip heterosexuality with homosexuality in a word where births were controlled in a lab, making hetero relationships illegal – powerful stuff in that day and age. Still a good story to this day.

I will continue going through these and making notes. He was an expert, a pro, and there’s certain to be much I can learn from him. If you’re at all curious, I suggest hunting down some of his work. For six or eight bucks including shipping, you can do far worse than indulging in Beaumont’s work.