December 2007

World in the Satin Bag

Totals For 2007 and New Years Resolutions (Sorta)

First things first, an explanation of the totals. I haven’t been keeping track of the totals all year, so these are, more or less, only totals since October. I’ve written considerably more when you take into account that I finished WISB this year, among other projects. So the totals are: Words Written: 26,855Words Edited: 44,200Submissions: 6Rejections: 4 (2 pending) Next year is going to be much better though. I have several short stories waiting to be edited, a lot of stuff still being written, etc. Now for my New Years Resolutions. Well, these aren’t really resolutions, but more like “things I want to do for ’08”: Start The Spellweaver of Dern (book two of the Satin Bag series) and finish it by October (130,000 words). Start Wellmere (working title) with my girlfriend and get about halfway by this time ’08 (100,000 words). Finish Marx Ignatia (25,000 words). Submit Death By Poking, Asher, Marx Ignatia, and any others sitting in limbo. Get published (with anything really, but preferably with a short story). Finish The Lies of Venicia by summer (95,000 words). Step up my writing ten-fold. That means write more, submit more, and finish more novels. Read a lot of review books (this is sort of a given). Read more young adult fantasy/sf (yes, I actually would love to read more stuff in this genre, but I’ve not received much yet and I don’t really know where to go to request review copies for this stuff–maybe someone could throw my name out?). Get good grades (also sort of a given). Figure out where I want to go for graduate school (yes, I actually have to think about this even though I just got here because my adviser told me I could technically graduate in fall of ’08). Fly to England to visit my girlfriend. Sell a bunch of stuff I don’t need anymore (pay attention to my ebay because I’m going to put up a bunch of books, dvds, cds, etc. in the next few weeks). Start and podcast. I actually really want to do this and Lindsey, my girlfriend, thought it sounded fun. We might do it. I’m hoping so. We have to talk about it more though. I think that’s it…I might edit that list at some point later. 2008 is looking to be a ‘writerly’ year for me. I’m trying to step things up considerably. I’m getting close to graduating and I have a lot to think about… Happy New Year by the way!

World in the Satin Bag

SoD Contest: You Decide Something

Well, I mentioned I was going to have a contest. What you have to do:    Create a character, place, thing, creature, etc. that you think should be in the world of Dern. That’s right. You get to actually create something and if you win, I’ll use it!    Some information about Dern, though, to help you stick within the continent.    Dern is a new continent I’m creating for the World in the Satin Bag, which becomes, at some point, a centerpiece for The Spellweaver of Dern, which is the second book that I’m going to hopefully start writing in January. Dern is going to be somewhat similar to a colonial England or America. There will be gunpowder, a lot of sailing and ships, etc. There will be differences, of course, but I’m shooting for that sort of feel. I’m not looking for it to be authentic colonial England or America, but to have little tinges of both. Given that, there will be new critters, races, etc. Humans will still be there, but I will be including a lot of fantasy elements, new magic, and the like, only all within this colonial, muskets and gunpowder and big-gun ship world.    So, invent something that will go there. It could be a tower, a person, a creature, a thing, even a magic style, etc. The skies the limit. Just don’t invent machine guns and nuclear bombs. This is still very much an old, slightly industrial world where such things wouldn’t exist.(Yes, I know that in WISB there were ships that had cannons. I have an answer for that and it’s something that fits into the continent of Traea) Here are the rules: Anyone can enter. You can be of any age. One entry per person. You must use the comments feature and choose your name as anonymous. The reason for this is so there is no chance of there being a personal bias at all. I want this to be fair. Just remember what you wrote. Check your spelling and grammar. You don’t need to be perfect, but if you write in text speech I’ll just toss your entry out. I need to be able to read it. Hopefully that’s not unreasonable. Be specific, but not too specific. Don’t go off and write every single little itty bitty detail about whatever it is you’re entering with. If you create a place, say a special building, just talk about the building, not the city it is in, or its location. I want to be able to integrate what you create into the story properly. By entering you are agreeing to let me use your idea for the Satin Bag books (however many there may be). I won’t use them for another unrelated story without your permission, but you are basically saying I can have the idea. This also is why I don’t want you being too specific. You’re basically giving up copyright on the idea and you are agreeing to that by entering. Contest ends January 5th, 2008, at 12:01 AM, Pacific Time. Why? So I can actually look at the entries and pick a winner. Winter quarter opens up on the 3rd, so I don’t want to get bogged down in the middle of the quarter if I’ll be writing SoD and a dozen other projects. What will you win?A $10 gift certificate to Amazon.com! Or something of equal value (which translates to books) If you win, you will be given credit for the idea. If the Satin Bag books ever end up in print or in some other media form, you will be credited. That’s it! So, start thinking!

World in the Satin Bag

One Day I’ll Write My Memoirs–Part One

And when people read it five hundred years from now they’ll say, “No wonder he wanted to be a writer.” Whether or not I’ll be published one day, or famous, or rich, or hell, even making a living as a writer will never remove my love for the craft. I love telling stories. Period. It doesn’t matter to me if I never get published. I’ll never give up either way. This is something that is so much a part of me that to remove it would likely kill me. Yes, it is that extreme. I love to write. It’s the only ‘hobby’ (for lack of a better word) that ever made sense to me.I imagine none of you know that I used to want to be an astronaut. Then again, I imagine many kids under the age of 10 want to be astronauts. Nobody who knew me then told me that they don’t hire asthmatics. So, like many kids, I gave that little dream up, although I would love to go to space one day. Then I wanted to study astronomy, because the stars have always intrigued me, even if I don’t understand them or the nature of the universe. Space is such a fascinating place, and I figured if I couldn’t see it for myself, I could at least study it from the ground. I’m not sure if this dream ever disappeared or if writing science fiction took away the need to peek through a telescope, but I suspect that writing about the stars and aliens and what not turned me away from that. But what got me onto writing as a passion? First, I have to say I’ve always liked writing stories, but it was always just something to do for no apparent reason. I wasn’t originally interested in developing my skills, whatever they may be, but only interested in telling silly stories. The actual turning point was senior year British Literature in high school. For those of you not from the U.S., high school comprises of the last four ‘grade levels’ or years before you go off to college/university. Senior year is the last year of those four, so it’s somewhat the most important. We were reading Beowulf (I don’t know what it has to do with British Lit., but we were reading it nonetheless) and Ms. Smith (that was our teacher’s name) assigned us to write our own poetic version of the story, in groups if we wanted to. Somehow everyone in the class thought a simple 5-10 pages would do, and so it was that everyone else turned in 5-10 pages. But my friend A.J. and I had other plans. We sat down and looked at maps of old time England, or what looked like old time England, and developed our own short English mythology that used the basic Beowulf theme of a warrior fighting off an evil monster as a backdrop. We created a couple cities that never existed, but maybe did, and we wrote a story where all the characters had special abilities. There was a mighty history between one of the villainous characters and the main character, and so much more. It turned out to be significantly more in-depth than I think either of us intended, and when it came down to it we had to come to a decision on how to write it. Everyone else was going to use typical language, but we wanted it to be more authentic. After all, with all the work we had done, why would we want to sully it with standard free-verse poetry? We decided to write it, as best we could, as one of those old time, cryptic-style epic poems. We turned simple things like swords into poetic images and invested great time into the characters, turning them into real creatures, as real as you can get in a poem, rather than cardboard figurines. And when we started writing it we realized that with one week left to go for the project, we were in for a wild ride. We’d plotted the whole story, to some extent, and when we looked at it we knew that this wasn’t going to be 5-10 pages. it turned out to be 32 pages. For a bunch of high school kids…well, you can imagine what it must be like to get a bunch of rebellious teenagers to put so much work into something. A.J. and I always worked well together I think. If he were a person with the mind to be a writer, I think we both would do well to work together, but he now serves our military, the brave and wonderful man that he is, and I think that despite my opinions of the war and our President, he belongs there. The military is his calling and I can’t imagine anyone more qualified to serve our armed forces than he. In any case, you can imagine the surprise on Ms. Smith’s face when we flopped that 32 page manuscript down on her desk. Her eyes literally went wide. I’m not joking here. Her jaw dropped, she looked at it and looked up at A.J. and I, and we were both grinning wide. We got an A, though I think we both thought we deserved a better grade considering the work we had put in. This project, however, sparked me to begin my first fantasy novel/series entitled “Revival of the Ancients”, which was a modified, deeper version of the 32 page poem we wrote, which then was called “Paladin”. “Revival of the Ancients” was a dead project from the start, but it was an amazing project nonetheless. I wrote a good 63 pages, single-spaced, in Times New Roman. That amounted to a whopping 36,500 words! But I didn’t know anything about writing then. I had read fantasy stories before and I really enjoyed building a world from scratch, but I didn’t understand POV, sentence structure, and general style. But it was my first attempt

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