Posts Tagged "Writing Process"

  • I’m blogging today over at the Ruby Slippered Sisterhood (the wonderful group of ladies who were fellow Golden Heart finalists in 2009) about my experience with non-romance-related writing classes and one of my favorite techniques for exploring and developing your voice. Please stop by and join the conversation!

    Beyond that, I have very little of interest to report — I’m still slogging through Madeleine and Ferguson’s story (ONE NIGHT TO SCANDAL), while my agent slogs through the submission process for ONE NIGHT TO SEDUCTION. As soon as I have any news about either of them, you’ll hear it here!


    | Scenes from the Interweb | Writing Process |
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    Posted 7 April 2010, 8:32 pm

  • So, as you may be able to guess from the fact that my last true blog post was over two months ago, it was perhaps a bit premature of me to claim that reality was coming back ’slowly.’ In fact, I have essentially been beaten over the head with a big fat stick of reality ever since Nationals. I’ve switched apartments, attended two out-of-town weddings, planned an 800-person conference for the cursed day job, and tried desperately to maintain the eight hours of sleep a night that I need to feel like a functional human being.

    But, the biggest focus has been on getting back into my writing. I adore the characters that I am currently working with (Madeleine and Ferguson, tentatively titled ONE NIGHT TO SCANDAL). But perhaps because I adore them so much, I feel honor-bound to write them the best book possible; and so while my first book was much more of a seat-of-the-pants ordeal, I’m attempting to be more of a plotter with this book. I started out without a strong roadmap and wrote around 40,000 words, but over the past couple of weeks I’ve taken a step back, outlined what I had, and brainstormed virtually every angle of what will come in the last half of the book. This will of course necessitate rewrites of what I already have, but since it was a first draft, that’s to be expected.

    Allow me to embrace my inner technology dork (while I may be a Regency writer, I have a fascination with shiny electronics) and recommend Scrivener if you are a writer using a Mac. I downloaded it a week or two ago, and it has revolutionized my writing process. It has this cool corkboard feature that you can use to essentially write out brief synopses of every scene, categorize them by whether they’re done, partially drafted, or not written, and then move the ‘index cards’ around if you want to reshuffle the order of scenes. Best of all, moving the index card on the corkboard automatically moves the actual written scene to the right place in the manuscript. Score! For me, this is huge — since I can visualize the progress I’ve made, the balance of scenes in the female POV vs. the male POV, and what’s left to accomplish, I have a much clearer understanding of where I will take this work.

    Okay, technology dork moment over. The gist of this post is that I’m back in the game, looking forward to finishing the first draft of Madeleine and Ferguson by the end of November, and hoping to get back into the blogosphere just a bit more than I have been. If you are anyone other than my mother and you’re still reading, thank you! (and Mom, you’re of course always welcome :)

    [also, for the purposes of those ridiculous FTC regulations around recommendations on blogs - I bought and paid for Scrivener myself, so this is an unbiased review]


    | Ferguson and Madeleine | Recommendations | Writing Process |
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    Posted 7 October 2009, 8:45 am

  • When I’m writing, I usually just put “[CHECK]” at the end of a sentence when I’m not sure I have the historical details exactly right, or when I don’t want to bother looking up where hemlines and waistlines were in 1811 vs. 1812. However, when I was working on Madeleine and Ferguson’s story last night (yes, I wrote after work! score!), I realized I’m at a point in their saga where I need to take a step back and do some research. Fudging the details in a first draft is all well and good when the details relate to a type of fabric; it’s a much bigger issue when your whole story hinges on how betrothal contracts worked, because if it turns out they don’t work the way you thought they did, your story may never be right again.

    So, it’s research time for me — which is too bad, because I really just want to keep writing. But perhaps this is a lesson that I should do this type of research sooner; I knew about one hundred pages ago that this was coming, and if I had discovered then that the twist could not possibly work, I would have written the past hundred pages with another goal in mind. Fingers crossed that the betrothal contract is sound, or I will be one unhappy camper.


    | Ferguson and Madeleine | Research | Writing Process |
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    Posted 20 May 2009, 10:07 pm

  • I’ve decided to write all day today — well, after I blog, of course. And, since I’ve already been up for almost three hours, perhaps “all day” is an exaggeration. But I’m ignoring the desire to clean, the desire to shop, the desire to see friends, etc., and focusing all of my efforts on Madeleine and Ferguson for the next eight or ten hours.

    Hopefully my horoscope for today is accurate:

    You are energized in a very real way, for you can see what’s ahead if you continue to work hard and plan for your future. But the currents may be speeding up now and this can make you nervous, even if it’s also exciting. You want to succeed, but you may be afraid that it won’t last if it all happens so fast that you don’t have a strong foundation. Don’t let your fears get in the way of your success.

    Happy Saturday, everyone! By this time tomorrow, Madeleine and Ferguson will be even farther along in their journey towards the happily-ever-after.


    | Prognostications | Writing Process |
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    Posted 16 May 2009, 9:39 am

  • I procrastinated as long as I could this morning (albeit with useful distractions, such as changing the sheets on my bed and cleaning my kitchen), but I spent the rest of the day rereading the entire manuscript of AN INCONVENIENT MARRIAGE. I had not read it all in its entirety since I submitted it for the Golden Heart contest in December; after the deadline, I spent a couple of months relaxing/seeing friends/working on my query letter, and then submitted to a few agents in February. I was hearing back from them at the same time that I heard back from the Golden Heart — and while I’m thrilled to be a finalist in the Regency category, I haven’t had the same luck with agents.

    The verdict after a reread? I’m really happy with it overall, particularly with the last two-thirds of the book. But, with the space and distance of a few months spent doing other things, there are a few pieces that leap out to me and begged to be changed. In particular, there are a couple of scenes that I love — but that I should have rewritten when I did second-draft rewrites of everything else, because while I love the idea of the scene, the style no longer fits the stronger, faster style of the rest of the book.

    So, I’m not in despair mode; I’m actually pretty satisfied with what I have, and I’m confident in my ability to fix the pieces I’m not satisfied with. It will require a couple of cuts, a couple of new scenes, and a couple of rewrites of existing scenes — but I’m setting a goal of being done by mid-May so that I can start querying again before the madness of summer hits in earnest.

    Now I’m off — I’m having dinner at a friend’s house, which is a welcome respite from my hermitage, even if I took the unusual route of buying dessert (tiramisu cake from Whole Foods) rather than making it myself due to a) time constraints and b) a lack of ingredients already in the house. Theoretically I should buy some groceries, but the book comes first. Have a lovely weekend!


    | Dreaded Rewrites | Hermitage | Writing Process |
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    Posted 11 April 2009, 7:10 pm