Nov 30
Back To Work On Horngard I
Posted: under Characters, Editing, Horngard, Life beyond writing, Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: Background, characters, Contents, revision, the writing life November 30th, 2022
Having turned in the stuff I needed to turn in for legal reasons, I’m now back at work on my agent’s requested changes to Horngard I, current (not necessarily final) title of Dragon’s Price. I’m incorporating additional research into the effects of big memory loss…the character has lost everything before waking up after prolonged treatment and unconsciousness. Fortunately, I’ve added Tribel as a possible replacement for Twitter, and one of the people there offered me some of their experience with someone with massive memory loss. This wasn’t something my agent suggested, but works well with one of his requests. I’m going to check a few more sources as well, because although this is not intended as a book *about* memory loss itself it still needs to be plausible (if the reader accepts the idea of an imaginary creature able to magically heal–at least partly–brain injuries.) It’s *about* a bunch of other things in addition to what the main characters are doing visibly in the book. Most books are.
This set of changes will take longer than the previous, because it’s requiring reconsideration of just about every conversation in 800 plus pages of ms.
Meanwhile, Horngard II has lain down and gone to sleep. I opened it yesterday after taking the stuff to the post office and it yawned, rolled over (never opening its eyes) and gave the impression of someone who’d gotten bored waiting and is now soundly asleep. So what to do when the brain hits the wall in revision, as it does at some point in every work period? Organize the next collection of Paksworld short fiction, I guess, since when I do wake Horngard II back up, I need to be prepared to stay with it as the primary activity for at least six weeks to get its engine past the pocketa-pocketa……pock…pock… stage when it can try to go back to sleep. It’s only interrupted books that do this to me; the ones that are allowed to gallop on without any interruption longer than 48 hours aren’t going to stop completely once over 75-1oo pages. But until they’re past the halfway point, interruptions that last a week cause a hiccup and interruptions that last a month are flameout time.
Friday morning is “horse hoof trimming time.” I’m hoping for a calm and cooperative pair of horses. At least it’s not raining (not supposed to rain again until Saturday night) and they’ll have big hay nets the night before. They have hay nets tonight because it’s going to be in the low 30s in the morning…a forecast guess of 33F in the weather we’ve got could end up in the upper 20sF instead.