Rewrite: Part Two

I’m back to where I was when I realized I needed a complete rewrite: sixty thousand words, or about two-thirds of the way done.

So much better.

My lead is lovable and believable, the love interest isn’t whiny and helpless, the bad guys are horrible and deserving death. There are twists and turns. There are emotions.

I’ve learned how to balance overpowered characters, and I’ve learned how to weave multiple layers of intrigue. Well, at least I feel like I have. It’s better. I’ll say that. This manuscript is by far the most challenging I’ve worked on, and I realized it’s because the characters’ levels are epic (to put it in rpg terms.) Epic-level characters need epic-level bad guys, and epic-level stories to live in. It’s tough.

I can’t just keep throwing dragons and the like at them, even though I love them so. This manuscript is host to a plethora of new, unique, original creatures. And those creatures who aren’t unique to me are given my own spin. I’m excited for you all to meet them.

I’ve also mixed in some old with the new, in regard to the gods (whom these epic-level characters have regular contact with.) Not only will you find original deities of my own invention, but you’ll also find cameos from favorites like Athena. Pandora has a minor role as well, and others will be present.

But it’s much more engaging than the previous draft. I’m back on track.

Thanks for reading!

Rewrite (Or: Sometimes I Really, Really Hate My Characters)

Not after like three chapters. Not after the opening. Not even at the halfway point. I was sixty thousand words in, man. And I absolutely hated it.

It wasn’t the content I hated so much as the reason behind the rewrite. It was my goddamn characters again. They’ve taken on a life of their own, I swear. Each of my characters is very strong-willed and powerful and intelligent, and now I fear they’ve become self-aware. I argue with them, and sometimes they win. Which is how that manuscript made it to sixty thousand words to begin with. But I finally put my foot down. Enough is enough. No means no. I don’t know what it takes to keep them in line.

It’s going much better this time around. I’m about twenty-one thousand words in again (which is the reason for the delay since my last post. Sorry!) and the picture is much clearer. My lead character Shane was trying to do too much. But that’s my fault. I made him too powerful. Of course you try to take on the world when you actually can, am I right? Eh? Am I? I’m right. So that’s why everything was getting to muddled up. Not only that, though. It was turning into a romance novel. I have no problems with romance. All of my books have romantic elements. It’s one of the baser emotions any human can feel, or want to feel: love. That’s why it works. But Shane, being the charismatic, silver-tongued devil (wink wink) he is, wanted to focus more on the skirt he was chasing that the bad guys. Yeah, I said skirt. I’m bringing it back. And he’s not just a devil. More like half-devil. More like quarter-devil, actually. But that’s all you’re getting.

Anyway, I had to reel the romance in and give Shane more depth. He was the cliché super-hot, super-awesome-at-everything hero. All the ladies wanted him, all the men wanted to be him. Not so much anymore. There was nothing that tied the audience to him. There was nothing that made you care. No flaws, no backstory. But I fixed it. He’s now my favorite character I’ve ever created, which is a bold statement if you know me, and how much I absolutely love Invidia. Gods, she’s the best. Ok, ok. It’s close between the two. I’m not sure anyone could replace Invidia, actually. Shane is pretty awesome, though. I’m excited for you all to meet him. He’s the kind of character that really makes you look forward to writing each day, and hopefully in your case, reading.

The action… This next series is going to be way more action-y-er than my first trilogy. Station and Consequence: Absolution is setting the bar pretty high, anyway. Both with the action and the character development. I surprised myself with Shane. And the intrigue. Absolution has a few more layers of intrigue and plot development than what I’m used to working with. The scope is wider. It’s grittier. You’re going to feel more. You’re going to see more.

So, as much as I hated scrapping sixty thousand words, my characters showed me what I was doing wrong. This rewrite is much better than where I was going with the broken manuscript. Well, not broken. That might be a little harsh. It just wasn’t the direction I wanted to go. And I think my characters knew that, and were warning me away. I think that’s why they were being so difficult. That’s what I’m going to tell myself, anyway.

Thanks for reading!

Kyle

Hitting Word Counts Like a Boss

Some days I struggle.  Some days the words flow from me like snot on a bitterly cold day.  Some days it’s less than struggling – I can’t even figure out where to begin, really.  So I never do.  Days off, I call them (for fear of my sensitive ego catching wind of my failure to perform.)  Just simply taking a break…

Writer’s block.  Dun dun duuunnn!  We all get stuck every now and then.  If you believe in writer’s block, of course.  Some don’t.  To each their own.  I don’t know what they call it if not writer’s block, though.  A temporary lapse in creativity?  The term “writer’s block” is a vague one, that’s for sure.  We can all agree on that.  Sometimes it refers to all writing.  Sometimes it refers to just that one piece you’re working on.  I call the latter “genre block.”  I’ll get jammed up in my fantasy writing and can’t come up with anything, but then I’ll effortlessly hammer out a thousand words on a romance manuscript.  It’s weird.

Today is not one of those bad days.  Today I am on track to reach my daily 2,500 words.  On my fantasy manuscript too, which makes me happy.  It’s the continuation of my Infinity series, Station and Consequence.  Which begins the new series with the same name.  The first in this new series is actually titled Station and Consequence: Absolution.  Absolution is the name of a city.  That’s all you’re getting.  I really want to go into more detail, but I’m forcing myself to stop there.  I’m horrible about self-spoilers.

Anyway… I’ve found the only way to move past it is to move through it.  I keep writing.  As I said above, it usually (hopefully) just turns out to be a genre block and I can still write something, at least.  Maybe not on the piece I really want to finish, but on another piece that needs finishing all the same.  But in the event it is true writer’s block, I just close Word for the day and venture out into world wide web.  Sometimes creativity is sparked doing this, other times I just find some new funny videos to laugh at.  Or I’ll actually go out into the real world, which is also fun.

What are some things that help you push through a block?

After The Book Is Done

This is a post geared more toward the newer writer and/or self-published writer, and/or the veteran author who just wants a laugh at a newbie’s expense.

We’re all happy when we see our work out there. It’s an amazing feeling. I’m not going to lie: I look at my book’s Amazon page every day. That’s my book out in the world – with my name on it. Still crazy to me. But I digress…

I read I-don’t-know-how-many books on self-publishing before making the choice to do so, and all of them basically said the same thing: YOU ARE YOUR OWN MARKETING TEAM! It’s basically screamed in your face from cover to cover. So what did a young, foolish, naïve K. L. Strader do? He scoffed and said, “Psh, marketing shmarketing. I got this.” That’s right. He scoffed and said, “Psh.” What a tool.

So I finish my book. I do all the work through CreateSpace (amazing site) to publish it. It’s published and up on Amazon for purchase. I’m ecstatic. Huge boner. Everything. Then I’m like, “Oh shit. Nobody knows about this book.” I facepalm because of myself. “That’s what all those books were talking about!” I say. Like I said, I was pretty ignorant back then.

My wife becomes my manager (but let’s just go ahead and admit that they’re our managers from Day One, guys and gals.) Without her I’d be lost. I’m not afraid to admit that. I can put words on paper, weave them into a wonderful story, but beyond that I’m less than useless. She’s looking everywhere, scouring the interwebs for any and all information on self-marketing and relaying instructions back to me. Hopefully by the end of this post you’ll have a few new ideas to try, or will at least have gotten a laugh.

I started simply. Vistaprint is a beautiful thing for self-pubbers. (I’m trying to get some advertising royalties by throwing all these names out there…) But it truly is. Check it out. You can put your name or image or book title on literally anything. T-shirts, pens, mouse pads… I went with business cards and small book posters.

The card:

business card

Now I don’t have to write the name of my book out sloppily on a Post-It for curious potential buyers.  I can just hand them one of these.  Do I feel like a douche, having business cards for a book?  Honestly?  A little.  I’m not going to lie.  But the cards show that I care about my work.  Or at least that’s what I hope people see.  They look cool, and fit my image.  (And took hours to design just right, but that may have been the perfectionist in me.)  Just an idea…

And the book poster:

book poster

I really like this one.  It’s the cover of my book with a movie-style tagline beneath it.  These will go up at all the local retailers who will tolerate it.  There are many game and hobby shops around the Ville, as well as privately-owned book stores.  Hell, there are even a few awesome dive bars that my kind frequent who love putting up stuff for local artists, be them musically or literarily gifted.  Just another idea for you…. Vistaprint.  Check it out.

Then there’s the internet.  Gods, the internet.  Social media is a given.  I shouldn’t have to explain the value of the facebooks and the twitters and the instagrams out there.  They work similar to word-of-mouth, but on a global scale.  Use them.  But there are a couple that were new to me, which I will pass on to you.

Goodreads is kind of cool, but limited in its use.  Shows people what your tastes are, and you review works you’ve read.  All you do is add your stuff on there, and then tell people about it.  Then, hopefully, they’ll get on there and review it (after having bought and read it because of your reviews.)  People will see your reviews, then want to buy it, thus gaining you more reviews, and so on and so forth for all time.  And it’s just for books as far as I know, so you won’t be stacked next to movies and all that like on some review sites.

Reddit is awesome.  If you’re new to it like I am, it’s very overwhelming at first.  But you learn to feel it out.  There are hundreds of subreddits.  You can get lost for hours, so keep your wits about you upon entering the beast’s lair.  One of my favorite threads (or subreddits) to follow is Suggest Me a Book.  People get on there and tell the internet what they’re looking for, and people reply with books that fit their criteria.  Don’t be a dick and just answer posts that your book fits.  Become part of the community.  Branch out.  Gain a following – people that will come to trust your literary judgment.  Reddit claims to be “the front page of the internet,” and they are probably right.  If you can’t find information on something via Reddit, it’s probably not out there to find.  Like I said, there are literally hundreds of subreddits to follow – dozens of which are geared exclusively toward books and authors and readers.  Go there.

And finally, how this blog came to be: WordPress (or other blog sites.)  There are so many authors with blogs like mine – authors willing to help by writing out their own struggles toward the Land of the Published.  Read them.  Learn from them.  Interact with them.  Writers are many things, but selfish is not one.  We spend so much time in our own heads, living and breathing literature, that it’s thrilling when someone in real life wants to actually talk to us about it.  So do that.  Make a writer happy by sparking up a conversation about writing.  I love talking about anything literature – be it the last good book I’ve read, the quickest way to push through a block, how to kill off a character organically, etc.  Come at me, bro!  Or any of us.  We have one of the few professions where we actually enjoy talking about what we do at work.

There are many other ways to market yourself out there.  Just look.  And, of course, don’t hesitate to ask another author for advice.

As always, thanks for reading!

Kyle

Things I learned Whilst Writing My First Novel (or Glimpsing Infinity: The Director’s Cut)

Let me start by saying this was no easy feat. I didn’t kid myself by thinking it would be going into it, but suffice to say my eyes were opened much wider by this experience. I thought I knew rejection before, but I didn’t. I thought I knew hard work, but the joke was on me. Maybe my biggest mistake was thinking that once the writing was complete, so too were my duties as author. I was so cute back then, so innocent. Still wet behind my proverbial ears. One grows up fast in the literary world, I found. Below you’ll find a recounting of sorts, both of my journey as first-time author and that of my first manuscript. (It’s a long one, so get comfortable.)

Glimpsing Infinity did not start as a novel. Far from it, actually. Well, maybe not that far from it. It started as a cousin to the novel: a series of short stories. Most of my main characters were born in their own short story a long time ago. Long before I dreamed of writing for anything other than a hobby, and longer still before I ever dreamed of writing a novel. These short stories were all mostly in the same universe, just taking place at different times. With hopes of not revealing any spoilers for the book I’ll try and not mention any characters by name as I talk briefly about their evolution.

One of my male protagonists started out far back in history when he was a young warrior in the Eternal Wars, which was the ever-raging battle between the Heavens and the Hells that preceded our current era. If you’ve read the book, you’ll know who I’m talking about. That short story was nothing more than a battle scene, really. A small raiding party of devils, in an attempt to provoke the Heavens, had gated into the human realm and attacked a hold guarded by a powerful priest. Another of the protags in Glimpsing Infinity had a very similar start, but hers (wink wink) was set much closer in time to our current era, after the Eternal Wars but before the human realm was magically sealed off from the rest of the universe by the gods for safekeeping (an act which also got its own short story.)

I began noticing a common theme to my writing. I’m not religious by any means, but I’ve always been fascinated by archangels, and Heaven and Hell battling over us mortal-folk. So I started thinking bigger than my short stories. Why not try and merge a few together into one story? Sounds easy enough, right? But I wasn’t thinking novel, I was thinking screenplay. All of my writing was action-based, and people love action movies. So young, foolish me starts in on the idea of writing a breakout spec screenplay. As if I’ll write and sell it no problem. After all, a screenplay is roughly only 120 pages, and the author doesn’t delve into feelings and emotions in a screenplay; it’s all action and dialogue, which I’m great at. I bought a few books on structure, one being my favorite “self-help” book of all-time, Save the Cat by Blake Snyder (which will get another post all to itself soon, because it’s simply amazing.)

I soon found out that writing a screenplay was the hardest writing I’ve ever attempted. I have so much respect for screenplay writers now it’s not even funny. A note to all my writing friends who think it would be an easy transition: It’s not. One would think, or at least I thought, the writing would be so much easier without all the emotion and thoughts and inner monologues of the characters – and one couldn’t be, or at least I couldn’t have been, more wrong. The difficulty of the writing is increased at least tenfold without that stuff. You have to show everything in a few quick sentences in a screenplay, whereas in a novel you get pages and pages to explain in detail why a character does or thinks something. In attempting a screenplay, I learned two very valuable lessons about writing (anything): 1.) Cut the unnecessary out, and 2.) I don’t have the ability to do #1 very well. Trying and failing at writing my screenplay (the first time – it has not defeated me yet) showed me that my idea was too big for 120 pages.

I came to a crossroads. I could scale my idea back and adapt it better for the big screen, or I could scale it up, add some meat to its bones, and make it a novel. The first horrified me in that it meant killing off some of my idea babies before they even took their first steps (i.e. characters, some action sequences or subplots, etc.) and the second horrified me in that it meant I had to reinvent all of these characters and ideas burning up my mind to better fit on the same stage – essentially build my own universe. I was scared of the novel at first, until I realized what the possibilities were. And those possibilities were endless. I realized I could literally do anything I wanted. This was my world, and my characters and my ideas would be what inhabited it. The thought was thrilling.

But then the soul-crushing anxiety that writing a novel for the first time brings with it nearly got the best of me. I had all these ideas for characters and a few awesome fight scenes, and an ending – and that was it. I had nothing to tie them together into one story. I had no “bad guy.” I had no real conflict, other than the timeless and cliché “good vs. evil.” Every time I began, it always fizzled into another short story. That was when I started venturing out into writing communities on the interwebs, looking for what the problem could be.

I had no structure.

I scoffed when the thought struck me. Structure? An outline? What, am I in school again? What kind of author writes to an outline? Apparently a well-organized one, who actually cares about their manuscript. So I swallowed down my foolish, impatient pride, and turned again to none other than Blake Snyder. In his book Save the Cat, Snyder lays out a beautiful outline format that has helped me plug through all my manuscripts. In the movie world they are called beat sheets. Blake Snyder’s beat sheet saved my book’s life when I didn’t even realize it was in jeopardy. Sure it’s formatted to the 120-page screenplay, but every beat on it is still a milestone that any good story needs to hit to be well-received by the audience. Save the Cat is a book full of valuable wisdoms any writer – new or experienced – needs to succeed. I highly recommend reading it, and I give many thanks to my good writing friend Andrea Bailey for turning me onto it (whose name you’ll know soon enough, I’m sure.)

So I had my structure, but nothing to give it substance. All of my ideas were still too isolated from one another. That’s when the old, cliché saying “Write what you know” popped into my head. What I knew was Dungeons and Dragons, in terms of being creative. Looking back to my days as a player and as a Dungeon Master helped me begin to fill in all those holes my story had. I realized I was good at coming up with all that stuff all along, I just never associated D&D with storytelling.  (Stupid, I know. But like I said, I was young and ignorant at the start of this.)  But that’s exactly what you are as DM – you’re the storyteller for your players. You make the adventure. I was thinking about writing my novel all wrong. Thinking of my story like it was a game campaign (like what I already knew) helped tremendously (and this logic vice versa is also sound, for any writers out there looking to DM.) That, coupled with my beat sheet, made me unstoppable on the blank page.

In mere days, after months of stalling, I had my main characters and their relationships worked out, and I had my antagonists, and I invented the magical staff everyone was searching for, as well as its backstory. The ideas were just flowing out of me like snot on a bitterly cold day. And it was all thanks to having found my structure. Structure is key. Make an outline. You don’t have to necessarily adhere to it word-for-word, but writing an outline is one of the wisest things an author can do. Even if it’s solely to help guide your thoughts, not necessarily your written words, I suggest it. Because I know how scatter-brained a writer can be when ideas are burning up their thinky parts.

So in conclusion: structure, structure, structure, and write what you know (super cliché, I know.  And yes, I am aware that I overuse the word cliché.) I realize now this blog post could have been much shorter. But where’s the fun in that? And structure isn’t the only thing I learned. I forgot that I touched on what happens after the book is published – that your job as author is never done. Maybe we’ll save that for next time, since this long post is eating into the time I set aside to do those other authorly duties.  See, still learning…

See you next time. Until then, thanks for reading!

Kyle