So I've complained all year that there seems to be less and less time to write. But this week, if all goes well, will be the first week in months that I will actually have 4 days out of 7 that I can devote to writing. Amazing! Since when did I go and get myself a social life? I mean, really!
Today, however, it isn't my social life that has me distracted from writing. It's a little guy named Leonidas who doesn't have nearly as many muscles as this Leonidas:
My Leonidas showed up in the neighborhood a couple weeks ago, nearly dead from starvation and dehydration, not because he'd been attacked by Persians -- or Persian cats, for that matter. And who's the biggest sucker in the neighborhood? Yep, me. Just as we were getting him fattened up again, he developed a terrible infection and I was sure he would have to be put down. But the vets were determined to save him, and save him they did. Now, Leonidas is running wild all over my house, and my other cats still aren't sure what to make of him.
This is Leonidas telling me that the old draft of Fury of the Falcon really stinks. But, he says, the paper tastes great.
This is Leonidas being caught in the act of trying to tell this story his way.
He wanted me to post that he was fighting off a thousand Persian cats in the alleyway and is the lone survivor who must tell the tale. And he says the white stripe over his right eye is really hiding the scar he earned from battling the ferocious wolf-chihuahua of Suburbia Pass. ... Why am I not sure I believe him?
So I blame my being distracted from writing this morning on Leo's escapades and using me for a jungle gym. And since it's been a while since I've updated my blog, I thought it appropriate to gave a hint about why I've been, well, distracted.
As soon as he falls asleep, I will sneak in a few paragraphs of a new chapter.
(Side note: the page of text in that middle picture is crap. Don't read it, at all cost. Your eyeballs might melt. Not one word is being kept and used in the new draft.)
(Side side note: I am not a kitty rescue service. Please don't send me any more cats. I have all I can handle.)
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
National Poetry Month: The Everyday
Only a few days left to celebrate. On the 24th, our poetry moderator provided us with the following prompt:
* Write a poem about a mundane, everyday activity.
Well, I've been watching the history series Nazi Hunters recently, and so my psyche is filled with accounts of human carnage. Let that preface my little poem about gardening:
"Pulling Weeds"
Is it worth raw fingers,
bleeding scrapes,
mud caked under fingernails
to pluck up roots, overturn
cities of underground highways,
to iron out the ugliness, trim and mold and
beautify to my liking,
to change the world one blade at a time?
It takes a certain sense of false
supremacy to say
this beetle’s abode
is worthless.
Monday, April 14, 2014
Road Trips: Mountain Corridors
My husband had training this week in Denver, and it's times like this that it pays to be a writer. I get to pack up my laptop and my notes and travel with him. Writing in hotels, where there are no distractions, is one of my chief pleasures. Hiking in the mountains with friends is another. Once training was over, we kidnapped our friends and they took us to the South Platte Corridor. It's a gorgeous hike up a pine-clad mountain that overlooks the tumbling river. The voices of rushing water below and wind in the pines above sound almost identical.
We came up over a ridge and were faced with the devastating results of a forest fire. The sight of the barren landscape took my breath away. This particular fire had happened a decade or more ago, but the land still had not recovered. My inquisitive mind, however, was fascinated by the lay of the land, as it looks underneath all the trees. It felt like getting to glimpse a secret.
We came up over a ridge and were faced with the devastating results of a forest fire. The sight of the barren landscape took my breath away. This particular fire had happened a decade or more ago, but the land still had not recovered. My inquisitive mind, however, was fascinated by the lay of the land, as it looks underneath all the trees. It felt like getting to glimpse a secret.
This rocky peek that jutted up from the burned slopes inspired all kinds of fantastical stories in my head.
And bleached tangles of old roots always provide lovely specimens to admire.
We snacked and refueled at an abandoned mine, then hiked back down the mountain. On the 11-hour drive home, we raced a snowstorm. Made it just in time.
Looks like our next trip will be in August, when we'll head back up the mountain for the Leadville mountain bike race. Until then, I have ogres to slay.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
National Poetry Month Returns!
I love April because National Poetry Month comes round again. Check out Poets.org for more info on what this celebration is all about, and even find a link to 30 ways to celebrate the art of poetry.
At LegendFire, the moderator of our poetry forum has put together another month's worth of poetry prompts and inspiration. It's a great time to practice.
I wasn't home yesterday, so I missed the grand opening of LF's activities, but I got to dive in this morning. One of the prompts she provides today is: "Write a poem about one or more elements/forces of the weather. For example, rain, sleet, hail, tornadoes, clouds, wind, etc."
Now, I dread the coming of spring. In tornado alley, spring is the season to be watchful. This year might be the year, I say. Our town, our house, might lie in the path this time. And since today we are having our first threat of severe weather I chose to write about tornadoes and my first experience of running to a neighbor's storm shelter, which I blogged about last June.
So here I am, inflicting some really bad poetry on the readers of my blog. But it's for a good cause, right?
Prompt: Tornado
Style: haiku series
black afternoon sky
eyes raised to watch boiling clouds
a wail of sirens
running rabbit-like
a burrow deep underground
hail knocking on doors
morning in the sun
a palace where dreams are stored
strewn trash by nightfall
May 31, 2013. From our iPhone. Copyright 2013 Court Ellyn |
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Jack Tales: The Art Lover
Last month, I introduced Jack, my new writing buddy, who also happens to be the orneriest cat on the block.
Yesterday evening, as I was rolling towels and socks from the laundry basket, Jack decided to make himself at home among the piles of clean laundry. Cats, he once told me, only like clean laundry. They refuse to lay among dirty laundry, because later, when they bathe, they will be licking human toe funk, which, believe it or not, doesn't taste as nice as tuna fish.
In a short while I looked over and saw him hiding under a towel. Luckily this towel is not used in my kitchen. So instead of scolding him, I asked him, "Jack, what in the world are you doing?"
He said, "Can't you tell? I'm reenacting La Primavera, and I'm quite good at it, thank you very much."
Jack as La Primavera
La Primavera, by Sandro Botticelli, 1481-82, detail.
Monday, March 17, 2014
"My Writing Process" Blog Tour
When I try to talk to friends and family about my
writing, a curious frown often develops on their faces and they ask, “How do
you do that? How do you come up with
your ideas? How can you sit still
that long?”
The Writing Process Blog Tour is where we get to answer
some of those questions. A huge thanks to YA Fantasy author Lisa M. Green for
inviting me to take part in this tour! Check out her response to the questions
on her gorgeous blog.
So it’s confession time. What exactly goes on behind
those closed doors to produce … *hand flourish* … magic?
What am I working on?
Currently, I’m trying to strategize a war and puzzle out
how to defeat an army of flesh-eating ogres. Book 3 of the Falcons Saga is
underway. Fury of the Falcon will
conclude the adventures of my Ilswythe twins. That’s not to say that Fury is the last readers will see of the
characters, however. Just that the focus will shift to someone else in upcoming
adventures. So, while “the ogres go munching two by two,” I’m also weaving in
details to set the stage for those later adventures.
How does my work
differ from others of its genre?
The characters, definitely. My fiction is hard-core character-driven, rather than quest-driven. Readers may discover epic battles and hunts for stolen children, but it's what happens inside the characters and in their relationships with each other that drive the story forward. In truth, when readers pick up copies of the Falcons
Saga, they will find many elements common in traditional fantasy, from the
races they will encounter to the magic system. However! My ultimate goal is to make my characters so real to
readers that they will feel a lingering void when they’ve been away from them for too long.
Why do I write
what I do?
*Shrug* That’s a matter of practicality, I suppose--if
writing fiction can be called ‘practical.’ I started out wanting to write
historical adventure. But at the time, the internet was in its infancy, and in
my house we did not have a computer or internet access. Libraries that featured
research material weren’t near at hand. So the short of it is that I felt
frustrated in acquiring the information I needed to write authentic historical
stories. So it just made sense to start making up my own worlds where I knew the
history, the laws, the culture, etc. Suddenly I felt confident in what I wrote,
so I stuck with fantasy.
How does my
writing process work?
Groaningly. That’s how. By 11:30 a.m, I had better be
sitting at my writing desk with a mugga joe in my hand, or I start to get a
little peevish. With my first cup of coffee comes the pleasant task of
re-reading what I wrote the day before, making changes, big or small. Then, with
the second cup of coffee starts the mental anguish of writing new material. I despise writing the first draft of most
everything. All the words want out at once, and most of them aren’t even the
right words. The brain becomes a bottleneck, and the fingers on the keyboard
start twiddling, saying “Ho-hum, is there anything
up there? We’re waiting.” So I pace my house,
or I say my mantra, “It’s a rough draft, just write it,” or I go pull some
weeds or chase a cat out of the house or sweep my floor. I’ve found that sweeping
is the best exercise for finding the next phrase. Why did I leave the broom
lingering in that doorway? Because that’s where the muse decided to show up and
cooperate.
Some days the words flow. Some days they don’t. Magic is
hard to come by.
So there’s a peek behind the glittery door of writerhood.
It might be best to back away slowly.
Next week, on Monday, March 24th, take a gander at the writing habits and quirks of these
writers. I’m honored to present to you:
Brian Fatah Steele is co-founder of Dark Red Press and horror author of Brutal Starlight, In Bleed Country, and many other gruesome and thrilling tales.
CL Stegall, co-founder of Dark Red Press, is the author of the Urban Fantasy novel The Blood of Others, as well as the YA adventure The Weight of Night.
CL Stegall, co-founder of Dark Red Press, is the author of the Urban Fantasy novel The Blood of Others, as well as the YA adventure The Weight of Night.
Sunday, March 9, 2014
Fury of the Falcon, Progress Report #2
It feels wonderful when I'm writing a chapter a week. I can tell it's still early in the game.
RECENT PROGRESS
Chapter: 4
Pages Revised: 5
Became: 9.5 pages
New Scenes: 0
Death count: 1, a tree
Good things that happen: Picking up the pieces...
Bad things that happen: Carah and Thorn butt heads. Again.
Next week, I'll be participating in the "Writing Process" Blog Tour. Stay tuned for a glimpse of what really happens behind this writer's closed door.
RECENT PROGRESS
Chapter: 4
Pages Revised: 5
Became: 9.5 pages
New Scenes: 0
Death count: 1, a tree
Good things that happen: Picking up the pieces...
Bad things that happen: Carah and Thorn butt heads. Again.
Next week, I'll be participating in the "Writing Process" Blog Tour. Stay tuned for a glimpse of what really happens behind this writer's closed door.
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