Priorities and why it’s been a while since you’ve heard from me

Sorry for the radio silence. Life has been full of things that have been more important than blogging and that have been a higher priority even than writing. I think its important that you get at least a little update on what those priorities have been and what’s coming up for me. I don’t believe in making excuses for things under my control, but I do like explanations.

I have a day job that can be pretty demanding of my time. When it is, and when it is demanding, that shaves time off of when I can write as well as draining the mental energy to do so. I’m at a point with my novel where I’m trying to nail act two and it’s not flowing well, so the brain work has been harder than usual. As a result…

I’ve prioritized understanding why I’m stuck and how to get out of it rather than writing. I know this isn’t quite consistent with the advice from the successful folks. That advice generally consists of “just write”, and “you can’t edit a blank page.” Getting this right affects not just the book I’m writing now, but how the universe unfolds and even the appropriate antagonists for the story and is something I need to fix. “Save the Cat” and “My Story Can Beat Up Your Story” have been a great help when added to notes from Kevin Ikenberry’s workshop from a somewhat recent convention. You’ll be getting a better story for it.

The single biggest priority for me over the past few months has been fixing my health and fitness situation. I knew that I had been putting on weight over the past 18 months, but hadn’t realized how out of hand it had gotten. My habits that were supporting writing productivity (weekly brewery and burgers at #FridayNightWrites) were not helping. That’s just one example. It’s always easier and faster overall to go to a nearby restaurant and grab a bite to eat than it is to grocery shop, prep, and cook for one. To fix this, I’ve been making more frequent and longer trips to grocery stores, cooking the overwhelming majority of meals myself, and spending about 5 hours lifting each week… this was writing time and blog time. I’ve also been trying to get to bed earlier and get more rest (one of the most important things you can do for fitness and weight management).

Sets at 136kg (299.8 lbs)

End result – over the past eight weeks, I’ve written very little, plotted quite a lot, am down 21lbs on the scale and up a fair bit of weight on my primary lifts in the garage gym.

Works in Progress

I’m editing a short story for submission to next year’s FantaSci anthology – “Bonds of Valor” and working on mid-point revisions of my novel.

What I’m Doing and Where I’ll Be

I’m going to be at 20BooksVegas in about two weeks and I’m taking some time either side to focus on writing with my good friend Mike Massa. Taking time out to just change environments and bounce ideas last year was very productive and resulted in my short story “Fellblade” getting into last year’s FantaSci anthology.

If you’re going to be there too, let me know. If you’re interested in some aspect of the event or an after action report, let me know that, too.

If you haven’t read “Fellblade” yet, why not? You can get it here, along with other really good stories by authors I love like D.J. Butler and Glenn Cook.

Things to Read

Have you considered the Eldros Legacy? A multi-author fantasy series edited by Rob Howell and featuring established authors like Aaron Rosenberg?

Currently available:

Get all the Eldros Legacy novels at: amazon.com/dp/B09Z9WVKYV

May Happenings

What am I doing?

That’s a good question. I’m miles away from being a full-time author, so the day job continues to consume much of my time. But, I have done some writer things. Since the last update, I have:

  • Attended a Convention at the last minute
  • Finished a short story for a contest submission
  • Gotten “active” in social media for the first time in a few years
  • Learned more about how I most effectively edit

Penguicon – the Convention:

A Convention Like No Other

Penguicon is a local convention that I had started attending the first year it started. It’s a different kind of convention than most – a mix of fandoms and creative types – with an emphasis on “makers.” It’s kind of cool. Even before the <redacted> shut down the world for two years, I had slowed my involvement, often just buying a pass and showing up to see friends on a Saturday evening. But, between being a new author and Penguicon super short on room nights and attendance to keep the con going, I dedicated a whole weekend. End result – saw friends, helped save a convention (a little bit), and sold a few books at the Writer’s Block. It was worth the time, but it did eat into my writing time.

The Writer’s Block was interesting. Instead of having individual author tables, they grabbed programming space and set up a table where any author who had registered with the con could put the books that they wrote (focus on makers, remember) up for sale. A single merchant account with a Square register had everyone’s books and the prices that the authors wanted to charge loaded into it. In exchange for a few shifts staffing the Block, an author’s books were on display and able to be sold without the author being present. There was no charge and no table fee to do this. The folks with the merchant account deducted the processing fee, collected sales tax, and should be sending the net sales out along with the collected sales tax out this week.

The Short Story:

Baen Fantasy Adventure Award Contest

I’m afraid that I can’t talk about the story itself much because there’s a small, but not negligible possibility that one of judges for the Baen Fantasy Adventure Award may read this. I don’t want to disqualify them from judging my story or sabotage my chances. I’ll have to keep quiet for the next couple of months, but I really like this one.

One of the things that I’ve been learning in this journey of mine is how important community is. My friend and author, Monalisa Foster, was one of several individuals who gave my story a read ahead of time. She took the extra time to point out some things that, when fixed, made for a much more polished submission. I am not relying on this sort of deep review from her, or anyone going forward, but it’s a great example of why you need to maintain and grow your network. Pay it forward, pay it back… be kind and build up others.

Gotten “Active” on Social Media:

Social Media is too much like work….

Following advice from the books on writing and getting published that I’ve been reading, I’ve dipped my toes back into Social Media. What does this mean? I’ve started posting again on Facebook and created an Author account there. It can be a tremendous time sink and I’m carefully managing my time and efforts there, with a focus on keeping engagement with my friends and potential readers. I’ve also recreated a Twitter account. And, unlike my first account, I have actually started engaging people. I have followed and am being followed to a much greater extent than before. My last account consisted of a single tweet over several years of the account being active.

“I have more Twitter followers than Julius Caesar, Alexander the Great, and Ghengis Khan combined.”

There’s a balance here, staying active and engaged without it taking time from the more important things in life. Like writing more stuff for you to read.

Editing is NOT Writing

I may have mentioned before… if not here, then definitely in other forums… that I need to get out of the house to be really effective at creative writing. Too many distractions at home and I spend 8-10 hours a day, every weekday, working from home. I need the physical disconnect, different space, etc. in order to be creative.

That’s exactly the opposite of what I need to effectively edit. I spent four hours doing what I thought was a final editing pass at my Friday Night Writes hangout.

Fortunately, I took some time Saturday afternoon to do a “last minute” pass before submission when I was at home. My time the night before was largely wasted and it took me just as much time to re-edit everything as I had spent the night before. Lesson: Creative space is not the space I need for editing.

What Else is Going On?

Well, I never stop reading for one.

As predicted, Larry and Steve’s Servants of War was amazing. I’m still going through the third book in the Author Fundamentals series by Chris Kennedy Publishing. Kevin Steverson’s Salvage Fleet book (book 2 in the series) was a fun ride.

Talons and Talismans is a bittersweet read for me. I apparently just missed the cut with a story submission for the two book anthology (tons of great stories in there). Even without my contribution, it’s a great read.

Up next for me is one of my favorite authors, Joel Shepherd, with the eighth book in the Spiral Wars series, Ceephay Queen. I can’t wait to dive into it. The first book in this series, that I can’t recommend highly enough, is called Renegade. Start there!

As far as writing goes, I’ll be getting back to my science fiction novel WIP this week.

And now, I leave you with a picture of a kitten, guarding my books. Peanut is more likely to run from you than to attack, but he at least pretends to be fierce.

This is not the Cave to the Underworld