Preparation

I am starting to work on my first novel. As I mentioned in my introductory post, I have been writing for over ten years, but I kept getting hung up at the stage of defining a plot with a cohesive set of characters. I also refused to commit to a single genre and setting. I didn’t suffer from writer’s block or a lack of ideas; it was just the opposite. I had way too many ideas for a single story. Spaceships kept cropping up in my heroic fantasy and I kept wanting my protagonist to be a magic user and a blank (non-magic user) at the same time.

I knew the problem was my aversion to making decisions but I persisted. It is absurd to let something that could be as simple as a week’s worth of effort keep me from my lifelong goal. Fortunately, I am not willing to leave this on the back burner any longer. I started by deciding to decide.

This past week I watched a series of lectures from fantasy writer Brandon Sanderson. They are posted online for free by his former student Scott Ashton: Brandon Sanderson Creative Writing 2012. Thank you Scott and Brandon for sharing this invaluable information! Brandon’s lectures gave me a concrete plan on how to get started along with an intense craving to create, write, revise and eat gummy bears. Brandon’s insights into his personal writing processes, the writing industry and the nuances of fantasy and science fiction were practical and inspiring.

Yesterday I decided that my first project will be a young adult science fiction novel. Specifically, I chose space opera. This genre can be described as adventures in space of the Star Wars and Star Trek variety. While it includes weapons and speculative science, it doesn’t need to be as detailed or accurate as military or hard science fiction. So far I know there will be magic and a spaceship pilot; her name is Dakota St. Clair. The rest, well, I have more decision making to do. I’ll let you know how it goes.

Hello world!

“Hello World!” was the default title of this post. It’s perfect. It speaks to my computer programmer sensibilities and is a fitting name for the post that commemorates the first day of my post-procrastination writing career.

I daydreamed about writing novels for over 10 years. I brainstormed and wrote ideas in notebooks, but I didn’t have the guts to make the decisions necessary to write one particular story.

The buck stops here. I scheduled a week away from work to sit down and focus on defining a story. Step one was to choose an audience and genre. Creating the tagline of this blog helped accomplish that (along with a healthy dose of research and soul-searching). Next comes more decision making about world building, characters and plot; then the outline.

I learned from my one and a half forays into National Novel Writing Month that discovery writing is not for me. I should have known right from the beginning that the more structured techniques of an architect writer would appeal to me. I am obsessively organized and I like knowing what’s going to happen in advance. Hello, outline? It was a bit of a “duh” moment for me, but at least I had the powerful and therapeutic experience of getting 50,000 less than stellar words down on paper. I instinctively started revising and loved the process of making the words tastier and more efficient. My writing fire is stoked, I just need to keep going.

Every journey starts with the first step. My writing journey starts now. I hope you enjoy the ride with me.