The Sandfruit People will be available in both print and ebook editions beginning April 16th, 2014. If you're American, you can look forward to reading it after you've done your taxes.
I'll post pre-order information as the date gets closer.
Showing posts with label The Sandfruit People. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Sandfruit People. Show all posts
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Catching Up on Sandfruit
Earlier this year I announced that my next book, The Sandfruit People, would be released on November 28. And then my mother disappeared and I stopped working on it.
I'm back at work on it now, but I doubt it will be ready in just two weeks. I do believe it will be ready before Christmas. I'll keep you informed.
Meanwhile, it's looking like this short story collection is turning into a novella. As I'm bringing out more and more detail and backstory, the various stories are becoming so connected that there's no definite break from one to the next. And since there's already an overall story arc to the collection, there doesn't seem to be any reason to fight the trend.
Here's an excerpt:
I'm back at work on it now, but I doubt it will be ready in just two weeks. I do believe it will be ready before Christmas. I'll keep you informed.
Meanwhile, it's looking like this short story collection is turning into a novella. As I'm bringing out more and more detail and backstory, the various stories are becoming so connected that there's no definite break from one to the next. And since there's already an overall story arc to the collection, there doesn't seem to be any reason to fight the trend.
Here's an excerpt:
Together they walked to
the pool and slipped in. The water, like the air, was warm and rich with plant
life. Jett found her little sibling - the legless, genderless tadpole that
would one day become a bipedal child like herself - and placed him gently in
his transport case. Chegg picked up the case and they both climbed out of the
pool and walked out of the tangle of carefully interwoven trees that made up
their home, out into the sunshine where Chegg's car waited.
The baby didn't have to
stay in the carrying case long. Chegg carefully transferred him to the tank in
the back of the car and set the case on the floor in front of it.
Jett gave her little
sibling a rub on his smooth, soft head, turned her nose up for one more touch
from her father's knuckle and watched him go. He knew she didn't want to stay,
but she was fourteen now and had school in the afternoons.
Labels:
Chuzekk,
daughter,
father,
science fiction,
The Sandfruit People,
writing
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Inspiration and Diligence
When I worked as an employee of a corporation, nobody used to expect me to be inspired, or to work only when the muse was with me. I was expected to show up whether I felt like it or not and get my work done.
As a fiction writer without a boss, I have to work by the same standard. After all, the books will not exist if I don't write them. Please don't misunderstand: I'm not blaming or putting down writers who can't write if the muse is not with them. But I do think that eventually, with practice, a serious writer has to get to the point of writing consistently, regardless of what the muse may be up to.
I recently picked a launch date for my upcoming short story collection, The Sandfruit People. And guess what? I have to actually finish the book, or it won't exist. The next step is to write a few more stories to round out the book. But at the rate these stories just come to me out of the blue, Sandfruit will probably be about five years late to its own launch party if I sit around waiting for the muse. So here's what I'm doing instead:
- I started with a few notes for each new story. There's going to be a general story arc to the whole book, and certain important events need to have their own stories. So these notes were somewhat dry and practical, a little bit like the outline of a history book.
- After that I look for the most interesting slant I can find on each story. I know what happens, but I need to find a compelling way to relate it. So I think about some of the people who would likely be involved in the story, and imagine telling it from their perspectives. When I find one that shows promise, I start writing notes on how this person would see the events as they unfold.
- If that person's point of view would show the events in an understandable and interesting way, then I think about the character and ask myself what his or her goal is, and how the events of the story would affect that goal. Sometimes the answers are obvious, while at other times I really have to think for a while before they become clear. But it's rare that I actually get to make them up, because there's usually a reason that particular character is in the ideal position to see the story unfold.
- Next, I come up with some of the details, such as a character's name or whether a particular scene happens in a bar, a supermarket or a nursery. Some of these decisions are made according to what I feel like at the moment, but most of the time there's only one choice that's best for the story.
- Step five is to find the perfect way to end each story, and I admit, this one really is best left up to the muse. But there are rituals that can be performed to invoke the muse. Mine seems to be drawn to water. You might be surprised how many endings I've found in a sink full of dishes.
Labels:
deadlines,
inspiration,
muse,
The Sandfruit People,
writing
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