posted by
nightbird at 10:05am on 19/06/2010 under the falling woman
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So here's the thing about The Falling Woman. I'm having a dilemma. I am so, so close to finishing, but every time I try, I can't. Part of this, of course, may be the classic "I'm afraid to end the story!" (variety of your choice), but even though the things that are left are purely emotional threads that really won't require a ton of alteration (reunion, restoration, return, that sort of thing), I find myself banging my head against the wall going, "The structure is wrong!"
See, I know the first draft is supposed to be your "discovery draft," the one where you just get it all out and get to know your characters. For the past few weeks, though, I've been mulling over backstory. I've suddenly figured out what the relationship is between the Rot-Cat and the Plague Doctor, as well as the Rot-Cat, Rabbits and the Quiet Sisters. I know why Cethe was murdered, why the Quiet Sisters came to Scotland and why Gruoch was brought into Hecatia. And now that these really critical threads are clear to me, I'm tearing my hair out because everything up to now has been wrong.
Well, that's not true. Not at all. But I want to start fixing things now. I know what happens next. I could list it all out for you if you wanted to know, in exquisite outline, even if I can't seem to get it out in a draft. It's frustrating, because I know intellectually that it's copping out to not write that last scene, to not show the confrontation, to not show our protagonists emerging somewhat victorious. Readers, you've been true champs, and I am so, so grateful for those who have been following and commenting and discussing with me. I don't want to let you down. But I love editing, and I want to get in there and whip this baby into shape.
I want to do more world-building.
whatistigerbalm linked to this fantastic video about Italian gestures, and I realized that I hadn't done justice to culture in Traitorsburgh by a long shot. There are more discussions of race in fiction going down around the internet: I know I have things to fix there. I want to tweak Rhona a little: she began as one of Gruoch's actual handmaids, a Scottish girl, but then she was changed to someone native to this other world. She doesn't have to be pseudo-Celtic. Maybe she's Ronit, and maybe she came from closer to Eridu. She also could, you know. Have some aspects of being made of stone that she really enjoys. Right now she's very sweet and somewhat naive. I don't want to diminish her sweetness -- it's an aspect of her I really like, and which is a good contrast to Imber and Gruoch -- but maybe she could enjoy being immeasurably strong. Maybe she could be more adventuresome, and maybe she knows how to paint herself and mingle in a crowd already. Making her capable makes her so much more interesting. And it also forces Gruoch not to hand off Macbeth so easily for most of the story.
That's another thing. I want to give more sides to everyone. I want to illustrate and develop genuine friendship between Rhona and Imber and Gruoch. I want people to know why Gruoch is so captivating, how she is more than an imperious sociopath on a revenge quest. I want to show why these women would stick together on this insane, impossible journey, and give them some real payoff (and consequences) by the end. I want to have them learn from each other, and from the people they meet. And I want the people they meet to be rich and challenging and complicated too. I know that the bulk of this first draft is from NaNo, and thus can't be expected to be perfect, but I want to make this story what it could be, and I want to start now.
Every bone in my body is telling me it's bad to not finish the draft, though. It feels like letting somebody down, or rushing. But I'm working out backstory and outlines on note cards right now, and it's awesome. I'm in love with the story again, and frankly, I've written four cards and what's showed up already could be a novel in itself. (Guys, the Plague Doctor is bad news. The more I find out about him, the more I'm like, YOU GET WHAT'S COMING, BUDDY.) The smart thing, probably, is not to torment myself, to just work on the note cards and write the end when I'm ready. In two weeks I will be landing in Spain, and from there I'll be traveling for three weeks, so it wouldn't be too wise to start too much right now.
But even though I'm anxious to start on another project, I really want this one to be good. The story first came to me more than four years ago, and dammit, I want to do justice by it. It's been that long. I want to set it loose, and I want to do it right. It feels more and more my own the more I work on it, which is amazing. And I've learned so much, probably more than any other original project. My goal really is publication, and I want it to be a good first novel. I think it will be. At some point, however, I have to finish it.
See, I know the first draft is supposed to be your "discovery draft," the one where you just get it all out and get to know your characters. For the past few weeks, though, I've been mulling over backstory. I've suddenly figured out what the relationship is between the Rot-Cat and the Plague Doctor, as well as the Rot-Cat, Rabbits and the Quiet Sisters. I know why Cethe was murdered, why the Quiet Sisters came to Scotland and why Gruoch was brought into Hecatia. And now that these really critical threads are clear to me, I'm tearing my hair out because everything up to now has been wrong.
Well, that's not true. Not at all. But I want to start fixing things now. I know what happens next. I could list it all out for you if you wanted to know, in exquisite outline, even if I can't seem to get it out in a draft. It's frustrating, because I know intellectually that it's copping out to not write that last scene, to not show the confrontation, to not show our protagonists emerging somewhat victorious. Readers, you've been true champs, and I am so, so grateful for those who have been following and commenting and discussing with me. I don't want to let you down. But I love editing, and I want to get in there and whip this baby into shape.
I want to do more world-building.
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That's another thing. I want to give more sides to everyone. I want to illustrate and develop genuine friendship between Rhona and Imber and Gruoch. I want people to know why Gruoch is so captivating, how she is more than an imperious sociopath on a revenge quest. I want to show why these women would stick together on this insane, impossible journey, and give them some real payoff (and consequences) by the end. I want to have them learn from each other, and from the people they meet. And I want the people they meet to be rich and challenging and complicated too. I know that the bulk of this first draft is from NaNo, and thus can't be expected to be perfect, but I want to make this story what it could be, and I want to start now.
Every bone in my body is telling me it's bad to not finish the draft, though. It feels like letting somebody down, or rushing. But I'm working out backstory and outlines on note cards right now, and it's awesome. I'm in love with the story again, and frankly, I've written four cards and what's showed up already could be a novel in itself. (Guys, the Plague Doctor is bad news. The more I find out about him, the more I'm like, YOU GET WHAT'S COMING, BUDDY.) The smart thing, probably, is not to torment myself, to just work on the note cards and write the end when I'm ready. In two weeks I will be landing in Spain, and from there I'll be traveling for three weeks, so it wouldn't be too wise to start too much right now.
But even though I'm anxious to start on another project, I really want this one to be good. The story first came to me more than four years ago, and dammit, I want to do justice by it. It's been that long. I want to set it loose, and I want to do it right. It feels more and more my own the more I work on it, which is amazing. And I've learned so much, probably more than any other original project. My goal really is publication, and I want it to be a good first novel. I think it will be. At some point, however, I have to finish it.
(no subject)
oh god do I feel your pain
(no subject)
(no subject)
[Put fight scene here]
[Ending where X X and X happens]
[Construct metaphor] for Character X to say to Character Y
I suggest scrawling out (assuming it is not already so) the ending in some form of an outline, *just* so that you have a touchpoint for *yourself*. However, if your own notes already cover that much, then just dive into the re-write.
In the end, I think you should do what makes you happy to write and what makes you love your story!
(no subject)
Yeah, I could do this in circles all day. :) Your advice is sound, though.
Out of curiosity, which author?
(no subject)
* 2005 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer
* 2006 Locus Award for Best First Novel for Hammered/Scardown/Worldwired
* 2008 Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for Best Short Science Fiction for "Tideline"
* 2008 Hugo Award for Best Short Story for "Tideline"
* 2009 Hugo Award for Best Novelette for "Shoggoths in Bloom"
* 2009 Gaylactic Spectrum Award for Best Novel for The Stratford Man (Ink and Steel and Hell and Earth)
(Not sure if you're familiar with the Hugo, but it's the award that sci/fi fantasy authors would sell their organs to get. It's the Pulitzer/Noble of the field, along with the Nebula for authors who are published in the US. If you win a Hugo or a Nebula, it's the kind of thing that will go on every biography/press release written about you for the rest of your career. It also means that you have a very good chance of having a 20, 30 or 40 year career.)
She is also famous for being one of the touchstone personae of Racefail09, and is thus somewhat of a controversial writer.
(no subject)
(no subject)
So, I really never know who was there and who wasn't, because I was totally not there at the time. :)
As such, I'm really glad that there are people willing to do link round-ups and fandom wikis, because tracking this stuff down link by link by back-tracking user names and postings would likely have been out of my ability.
(no subject)
The first draft always feels to me, if I'm lucky when I'm nearly done, if less so then by the time I'm halfway through it, like it's already ridiculous. Like I already know the flaws of the story, I have so much more backstory and worldbuilding now, I have a billion tweaks I need to do with the characters. But that's the first draft, that's just how it works, for me. I've learned to trust that feeling in the back of my head that needs things to run their course, that needs complete processes.
It's also that there's a certain power in being able to say something is done. For me, at least, it's always important to be able to put that final dot and say, "this may be utter crap, but it's a novel and I finished it." It gives me a sense of closure and allows me to put it aside and start entirely afresh, without being pulled back by that tiny incomplete feeling about the previous draft. It also gives me confidence. I already finished this once, I can overhaul it again and make it better. If I don't have a "finished" first draft it's like the first and the second become somewhat entwined in my head and it's not good for how I distribute my energy. It's easier if I have a clear sense of a cut.
Especially if you're traveling soon and so you have a limited window in which to finish this last bit then leave and come back to all this stuff fresh (and eeeee being excited about the story again, how awesome is that!), I'd say finish the draft.
(no subject)
Well, stranger things have happened in two weeks. Fortitude, self!
(no subject)
I wish you much, much fortitude!
(no subject)
The entire first half of my novel is getting extensively rewritten and restructured (second half too, but that bit's tighter since I changed to more-or-less final plot structure halfway through). I wanted to stop a million times and go back and fix things so they'd stop being WRONG, but.
If I'd done that, I don't think the crappy, rough zero draft would be done now, because I'd still be working on editing and revising. I wouldn't have learned what I did in actually writing the ending, because I had a clear outline for the end of my novel, knew exactly how it was going to go, and a minor but significant bit changed on me in the writing.
And finally, and most importantly, I learned that I can finish a novel. Even when the excitement is directed elsewhere, even when it was a slog to just sit down and make myself put down word after word, I came through it and I finished a novel.
I think knowing that I can write even when it's not buoyed by sheer glee, when I'd rather be off working on the fun bits, and that I can get through it and complete it anyway is what makes me think I can be a published author. I have to say, I recommend that feeling pretty highly.
(no subject)