Well done Tracer! I'm really pleased you've continued with that
book; the early version I saw had lots of potential :smile: 84,000
words is a huge achievement in itself; relative to that, I've barely
started. Words have weight; my writing feels distinctly light so far.
In theory, I'm writing a novel. It's a fantasy allegory that
connects with a real-world background story. The real world part
details a character and some of her history, together with perspectives
from the other people in her life. The fantasy story involves her
in a dreamworld allegory, in which she explores a world that is
generated by, and represents, her own mind. But the reader isn't
supposed to know about that until near the end, so don't go telling
everyone :wink:
In practice, I'm slogging through the piles of planning that I need to do before I become convinced that:
- The story will be exciting
- I won't end up with cardboard characters
- The fantasy sections will be neither cliched nor zany
- The fantasy world will be richly detailed enough to feel like a
convincing, if strange, place. In particular, I need to work on
the inhabitants of the fantasy world</li>
- And so on.....
There's a good story in there somewhere, and some killer themes, but
actually turning the ideas into something I can write is proving
difficult. Some of you will know that I tend to select
over-ambitious and massively complicated projects, rather than nice
simple ones. It's just the way I am, but it does make life
difficult sometimes.
I believe Stephen King says (paraphrased):
<div style="margin-left: 40px;">Writing a novel is like trying to row across the Atlantic
</div>I might prefer:
<div style="margin-left: 40px;">Writing a novel is like trying to row across the Atlantic, in a boat with a leak, and only a teacup for bailing
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