Jun 20
Posted: under Good News, Limits of Power, Reader Help, Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: Life beyond writing, revision, the book business, the writing life June 20th, 2013
The first week out is the week that determines (nearly always) whether a book will reach “bestseller” status. It’s the week that agents watch over, checking BookScan numbers regularly, checking rankings any place they can find one and making their own calculations of raw numbers v. other books’ raw numbers. In the first week, LIMITS […] [...more]
The first week out is the week that determines (nearly always) whether a book will reach “bestseller” status. It’s the week that agents watch over, checking BookScan numbers regularly, checking rankings any place they can find one and making their own calculations of raw numbers v. other books’ raw numbers. In the first week, LIMITS sold a few fewer hardcovers than ECHOES, and a few more e-books, to wind up with a modest increase of total hardcover/ebook sales in the US market. So thank you, all of you who wanted to and were able to buy a copy in the first week. Thanks for talking about the books, and introducing others to them. You’re the ones who keep a writer in bread & butter (and dark chocolate. Can’t forget the dark chocolate.) Read the rest of this entry »
May 24
Posted: under Crown of Renewal, Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: revision, the writing life May 24th, 2013
So today, the nitpicking round it is ongoing, and it’s…always interesting. Nitpicking has various uses. One of them can be shortening a book that’s too long (too long defined by publishing economics.) I think I’ve posted before about some of the shortening strategies. But this book isn’t too long, so nitpicking is aimed at other […] [...more]
So today, the nitpicking round it is ongoing, and it’s…always interesting. Nitpicking has various uses. One of them can be shortening a book that’s too long (too long defined by publishing economics.) I think I’ve posted before about some of the shortening strategies. But this book isn’t too long, so nitpicking is aimed at other goals. Tyops of course, like that one right there. Not just letter reversals and misspelled words, but words mistakenly typed in place of others. “Heard” for “herd.” “Policed” for “pleased.” (Don’t ask how I did that one…I don’t know. Brain burp. It wasn’t in this book.) Anything that sticks out as awkward, bothersome, annoying, confusing. For instance:
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Feb 05
Posted: under Background, Reader Help, the writing life.
Tags: reader help wanted, revision, the writing life February 5th, 2012
In the book I’m working on, the Company is once more camped near Ifoss, as in Sheepfarmer’s Daughter. In that book, the Company camped on the west side of town. Now they’re camping on the east side. Moreover, the town’s changed some (as most towns did, during and after Siniava’s War. Paks at that point […] [...more]
In the book I’m working on, the Company is once more camped near Ifoss, as in Sheepfarmer’s Daughter. In that book, the Company camped on the west side of town. Now they’re camping on the east side. Moreover, the town’s changed some (as most towns did, during and after Siniava’s War. Paks at that point didn’t care whether the town had a grange; it does…on the west side. Ifoss is still the smallest of the Foss Council cities, but its wall is no longer complete; expansion after Siniava’s War (the war to end wars, in the locals’ minds) led them to breach the wall to the northwest, while retaining most of the rest. Several inns are mentioned in Sheepfarmer’s Daughter, and without my notebooks it didn’t occur to me to reuse any of the same names. Until now, when–looking for something else–I ran across them. So there’s another bit of revision to be done.
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Jan 15
Posted: under Craft, Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: craft of writing, revision, the writing life January 15th, 2012
Chapter numbers. Chapter numbers don’t go on until I’m sure all the chapters are there, in the right order (OK, MOSTLY sure.) Before that, chapters have a title, such as “Chapter: Kieri & Elves Talk History” (not actual title.) That way I can use a search on “Chapter” to find the beginnings of chapters, and […] [...more]
Chapter numbers. Chapter numbers don’t go on until I’m sure all the chapters are there, in the right order (OK, MOSTLY sure.) Before that, chapters have a title, such as “Chapter: Kieri & Elves Talk History” (not actual title.) That way I can use a search on “Chapter” to find the beginnings of chapters, and the title tells me if I have the one I want. Chapter numbers change during the writing, as I may be off-chronology. Chapters are numbered now, all forty-one of them.
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Dec 17
Posted: under Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: revision, the writing life December 17th, 2011
Some of you know the nonsense song, and some of you don’t, but in terms of finishing this book…I found the elusive duplication, removed the elusive duplication, put the single copy in a better place in the sequence, and…then found the elusive sequence gap that I knew was in there somewhere and filled it. Progress […] [...more]
Some of you know the nonsense song, and some of you don’t, but in terms of finishing this book…I found the elusive duplication, removed the elusive duplication, put the single copy in a better place in the sequence, and…then found the elusive sequence gap that I knew was in there somewhere and filled it. Progress returned to normal for a time, with only top-level fine-polishing to do.
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Dec 06
Posted: under Contents, Echoes of Betrayal, snippet, the writing life.
Tags: Contents, craft of writing, revision, snippet, the writing life December 6th, 2011
First a thank-you to y’all for your patience. It has been a…um…very busy time here at the old homestead. Tonight is the night of the Messiah performance, and that will make four days in a row of driving to the city for 3+ hours of singing (and on Sunday I drove in early to sing […] [...more]
First a thank-you to y’all for your patience. It has been a…um…very busy time here at the old homestead. Tonight is the night of the Messiah performance, and that will make four days in a row of driving to the city for 3+ hours of singing (and on Sunday I drove in early to sing the first service at church, then drove home to do the other stuff.)
Your reward for the patience is a snippet, after a short review of revision progress. I have finally (FINALLY) got important two important events tied in neatly with all their threads connected. As I near the end of a book, everything has more and more threads hanging off it (it’s connected to this, that, and the other in various ways–foreshadowings that may go back several books, links to contemporaneous happenings, hooks set that will turn out later to be significant, etc. The next to last book in a group is even more rife with threads for every major event, internal and external. And every one of those little stinkers needs to be woven in, as invisibly as possible, so the pattern is unbroken. But enough about the work in progress: Herewith a snippet from the work to come.
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Oct 22
Posted: under Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: revision, the writing life October 22nd, 2011
Writer emerges from the undergrowth, stained and ragged and wild-eyed from having taken “the short cut” to getting this thing in order. Taking it down to be printed somewhere else never happened, due to Lifestuff. So Writer elected to do it all in the machine (the printer is not happy about churning out lots of […] [...more]
Writer emerges from the undergrowth, stained and ragged and wild-eyed from having taken “the short cut” to getting this thing in order. Taking it down to be printed somewhere else never happened, due to Lifestuff. So Writer elected to do it all in the machine (the printer is not happy about churning out lots of pages in a hurry. Some pages in a hurry, fine. 800+ pages in a hurry…not fine.) Writer then looked at the mass of thick, impenetrable brush in front of her and spotted what looked like a short-cut game trail. And plunged in.
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Feb 21
Posted: under Crisis of Vision, Kings of the North, Life beyond writing, Oath of Fealty, Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: Life beyond writing, progress report, revision, the writing life February 21st, 2011
The morning began with the discovery (not unexpected by me!) that the dozen or so ants on the counter yesterday had become a superhighway of ants along the edge of the counter, up the wall, and into one of the cabinets. They had also constructed a network of smaller routes on the counter itself. Some […] [...more]
The morning began with the discovery (not unexpected by me!) that the dozen or so ants on the counter yesterday had become a superhighway of ants along the edge of the counter, up the wall, and into one of the cabinets. They had also constructed a network of smaller routes on the counter itself. Some of them had crossed the Great Chasm between counter and stove top, with the result that the sugar bowl (these are sugar ants, much to be preferred if you must have ants) had ants in it.
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Feb 17
Posted: under Crisis of Vision, Editing, Life beyond writing, Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: Life beyond writing, revision, the writing life February 17th, 2011
It took longer than it should have, thanks to getting sick (at which point my brain goes duuhhhhhhh… and can’t see the sense in a sentence) but Editor Revisions are second-run done. Now to see if Editor agrees with what I’ve done with what she did. [...more]
It took longer than it should have, thanks to getting sick (at which point my brain goes duuhhhhhhh… and can’t see the sense in a sentence) but Editor Revisions are second-run done. Now to see if Editor agrees with what I’ve done with what she did.
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Feb 15
Posted: under Crisis of Vision, Editing, Life beyond writing, Revisions, the writing life.
Tags: craft of writing, Life beyond writing, progress report, revision, the book business, the writing life February 15th, 2011
Today has been not-quite-typical but sufficiently full of writing stuff that you might find it interesting. Though it started not with writing stuff but with the car making odd noises the last time I had it out. [...more]
Today has been not-quite-typical but sufficiently full of writing stuff that you might find it interesting. Though it started not with writing stuff but with the car making odd noises the last time I had it out.
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