Sunday, April 3, 2011

Eyes Bigger Than Your Belly

Have you ever been to a buffet, inhaled the scents, eyes darting from selection to selection, mouth watering from the mere thought of succulant meat or perfectly-seasoned veggies or bread - glorious bread! - sitting on your tongue? Then you picked up on oversized plate and filled it with a little bit of each of the buffet's offerings, started your meal with the gooey baked mac and cheese, but before your plate was half empty, you realized you couldn't eat another bite? Not even dessert?

Me too.

Follow the metaphor - January is a time when goals are set and we're gung ho about meeting them, out of the gate running. For me, the first part of the year is also the time my clients require more of my attention (the IRS is picky about its deadlines!) and I make plans for athletic endeavors. Like a triathlon April 16, one day after tax day, 12 days after the 90 Day Challenge wraps up.

Not a single one of the tasks on my goal list required an hour or two before I could call it complete. They all required weeks, months even, of attention, training, and discipline. Some things fell through the cracks...

So, back on the wagon for me. I owe someone pages for tomorrow. Better get to it.

Have you stayed on track for your New Year's goals? Climb back on that horse, baby. Never give up.

Happy Writing!

Ava

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Refilling the Well

We're 25 days into the 90 Day Writing Challenge and I have written 19K words on Big Dixie.

I think I fall more on the side of Pantsers vs Plotters, so the word count was a big surprise. But it also took my focus off the WRITING and shifted to simply stringing words together on a page. Essentially, I was over 70 pages into a 400 page novel and I had no idea where it was going, or more importantly, WHY it was going there.

So, accepting responsibility for my own career, my own manuscript, my own time, I freely admit, I chose not to write. For two days.

But I didn't abandon Big Dixie. I took the time away from my computer to figure out who my characters are and why they want what they want, and what's standing in their way (basics, yes, but hey, PANTSER here). I've figured out weaknesses of the scenes already written, so I know what I can toss and what I should keep. I've discovered how my Hero reacts the first time he meets my Heroine, and how to make that initial spark more of a zing.

I have not given up on the challenge. I'll write tonight, for at least 2 hours with the girls at the Ruby Slippered Sisterhood. And I'll write tomorrow. But I don't want to write a 100K word manuscript simply to brag about the word count - I want the words to count. (See what I did there?)

Happy Writing (or Well-Filling, whatever the case may be)!

Ava

Friday, January 21, 2011

Hair Trauma and Why It's Good For Us

Last night's topic of discussion for the LaLaLa Sisters (fabulous group of fabulous writers) was hair and the embarrassments inflicted upon us by well-meaning mothers or sight-impaired beauticians.

After the Sears Perm Debacle (3rd grade - and really, the hair was only half the problem), the mullet (4th grade) and the nickname "Tilted Head" (5th grade), my mom pretty much let me do what I wanted with my hair as long as it wasn't hanging in my face.

It may not sound like much. I mean, we all have a bad hair cut at least once in our lives, but you must understand that THIS 3rd/5th grader was very image conscious (because she was already into boys) and it didn't help that my mother - dear, sweet Mother - laughed about the perm EVEN THEN. We still can't talk about it over meals.

I think hair trauma builds character. In real life, it teaches us that pride has no place, and even if every one tells you you're the cutest child they've ever seen and compliments your lovely, chestnut brown hair, five minutes in Rose Anne's chair can nip that in the bud.

In fiction, it adds a sympathetic element to your characterization, a layer of insecurity or grit or compassion that takes hold and somehow alters their lives. For Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum, bad hair is yet another external conflict to overcome. For Big Dixie's Kaylen Murphy, bad hair in middle school was just one more reason to hide behind her big brother and build a pattern she'd spend the rest of her life trying to break free of.

What life experiences are mirrored in your characters? Good or bad?

Happy Writing!

Ava  

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Progress

I'm 17 days into the 90 Day Challenge, and I'm prod to say that I've written EVERY DAY since January 2. Yes, it's only 17 days, but I'm building the discipline of not waiting for my muse to tap me on the shoulder before I get off the couch and sit at my desk.

January is crazy for my day job - all of my clients have the same Jan 31 deadline, in addition to the normal weekly business. I generally work from 6 am to 9 pm, stopping to eat (when I remember) and speak to my husband when he walks in the door. Not this year.

The first thought in my head in the morning for the first week was this: When Mr. Ava Milone leaves for work, I'm going to get one more hour of sleep.

The second thought in my head was: If I go back to sleep, my writing time is out the door. Then I have to write on my calendar, "Today I chose not to write." Ick.

Two hours, on a timer, every morning. If I miss it in the morning, I make time in the evening, after dinner. Weekends included. And 17 days into the challenge, I've got over 15000 words of my first draft.

Progress. It's a good thing.

How are your 2011 goals shaping up?

Happy Writing!

Ava

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Math

My goal for today is to set my goals for 2011. Not just set them, but break them down into daily / weekly / monthly goals so I can nibble away at them until they're done rather than staring at an overwhelming project.

I want to finish Big Dixie by the time I go to Nationals at the end of June. That means I need to complete draft one, The Discovery Draft (a much nicer name than others may give it), by the end of April. I write Single Title, so I need 80-100K words. That's in the range of 350 to 400 pages. I've written page ONE. (Speaking of nibble...)

Starting January 2, I am participating in Kelly L. Stone's 90 Day Writing Challenge. Set a daily goal, do it for 90 days straight. Build a habit. Finish a book.

Simple math, write 1000 words a day and you've got 90K words when it's finished. Hmmm. Ever sit down to write and stare at a blinking cursor for an hour or so? Because some days the well has run dry and others, my cup runneth over, I'm setting 10 day goals, word count-wise. My daily goal will be based on a clock.

90 Day Writing Challenge Goals:

Devote 2 hours every day to writing (research, learning craft, or actual writing).
Every 10 days, I will have 10,000 new words on virtual paper. 
I will make this a daily priority, as my goals are not as important to any one else as they are to me.
If I fall short one day, I will get back into it the next day with renewed focus.

If you'd like to join the 90 Day Challenge, visit Kelly's website http://authorkellylstone.com/ or visit the 90 Day Writing Challenge on FaceBook.

Happy Writing!

Ava

Monday, December 6, 2010

Accountability

Early December for me is like the calm before the storm. It's time to evaluate and set goals for the upcoming year, because if I don't set my focus now, the craziness of my day job will overwhelm me January through April 15th. I'll grab whatever writing time I can and when I look back it will be like I was on one of those supermarket game shows where people just reach for anything and everything they can get their hands on, only to realize they've missed the prize.

I have a goal of finishing a manuscript between now and April 15th. Which means I also have the goal to START said manuscript sometime between now and April 15.

Two of my writing groups, the LaLaLa Sisters and the GIAMx5, are great for keeping each other on track. We're supposed to post our goals for next year and break them down into manageable, bite-sized daily / weekly / monthly goals. This is what I need to make things happen.... I will admit to being that kid who waited until Sunday night to tackle Monday morning's Science Fair project.

What are your goals for 2011? How do you stay focused?

Happy Writing!
Ava

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Epiphany

In October, I attended Moonlight and Magnolias, a fabulous conference hosted by Georgia Romance Writers. Day 2 was a Michael Hauge workshop which changed the way I thought about my writing goals.

Publication is one of those far-of goals for a lot of writers, the thing we want more than anything else, to see our name (or pseudonym) in print on a book jacket on a shelf at the local B&N. Sitting down to WRITE the dang book is hard, but finishing the manuscript is only the beginning. The writer has to turn into a seller - a promoter of our work to garner the interest of an agent or editor, enticing them to say, "Yes. I want that."

Mr. Hauge posed this question, a fill in the blank. "I will do whatever it takes to sell my novel, just don't ask me to _________________."

It took me weeks to figure out the answer. It's not a matter of giving up time or devoting the energy to write, it's not even networking, which I'm decent at as long as I can take breaks to recharge. I'm nervous when it comes to pitching and querying, but I know that if I don't do it, no one else will do it for me, so logic says self-promotion is a given. What then?

During my third round of revisions on Dark Water, in the midst of a love scene, when I was contemplating a word choice, it hit me: I'll do whatever it takes to sell my novel, just don't ask me to disappoint my mother.

Huh. The thought was at once freeing and disconcerting - I am, after all, an adult, and have been for several years. As much as I'm worried about my mother accepting her daughter as a romance author who allows the occasional F-bomb to sneak in (with purpose, not just for shock value, mind you), it also forces me to recognize that I can't spend my life trying to live up to the expectations that I believe others have of me.

I'm sure my mother is proud (she calls me Ava sometimes now, which is not the name she and my father bestowed upon me), maybe not because she's a fan of what I write, but because she's a fan of ME.

I got an email from someone the other day and her signature line said, "Be yourself. Everyone else is taken."

Now it's your turn, fellow writers, to fill in the blank. "I will do whatever it takes to sell / finish / promote my novel, just don't ask me to ____________________."

Happy Writing!

Ava