I always think of Florence and the Machine when I think of the dog days. Technically, the dog days are ahead of us but I’ve just spent the month of July dealing with medical issues and wrestling with this troublesome story.
The good news is that I appear to have turned the corner on both of them. I know what the story is now. My instincts last month held up and I’m on track to finish this thing off.
Eventually.
I’ve learned not to count a book done until I write the last line, but maybe this time, I’m finally steering the proper course.
Seekers Tales are still on track for Audible release this fall.
The Tanyth Fairport Adventures are still in production.
Halfway through the year and I’m not exactly burning up the pages. Still, there’s progress.
By Darkness Forged is finally out in paperback. (Pay no attention to the text in the URL. I have no idea why my paperbacks keep getting linked to YUNY clothing products.)
Cape Grace is finally coming together. I’m still struggling to get the missing bits put in but the 73,000 words I have now seem to be the right ones.
The Smuggler’s Tales are still in the queue at Podium. It’ll be a few weeks yet before they’re out.
Tanyth’s audio is still not back. No word on when those books will get released in audio.
I’ve had some health issues this month, but – with luck – those are behind me. My mood’s improved as I’ve been hitting the bricks hard this month. This morning’s walk was 100 miles for the month – my two mile morning walk/podcast and a two mile treadmill walk in the evening. I missed a few days in June, but I’m getting into the groove for July.
Wish me luck!
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May was a challenge month and I definitely didn’t reach my stretch goals.
Cape Grace: This poor book has been through the mill. Twice. As I said last month, I’ve started stripping it down to the bones to find the real story behind all the verbiage. The big problem is that the earliest drafts were dated in 2010. I’d already abandoned all the work from 2008 and 2009, but little pieces kept cropping up.
I couldn’t seem to get it in the right order. Chapters had scenes with characters who weren’t even in the story any more. Chapters had the wrong conversations and even the wrong places in them. Even after I got it stripped down and started adding new pieces to fill the holes, it just wasn’t working.
Then somebody mentioned Scrivener. Again.
I’ve had a kind of love/hate relationship with Scrivener since I got my first copy back when NaNoWriMo gave a half-price coupon for winners years ago. I tried it but my ADHD just wouldn’t let me use it effectively. This time it’s different. I’ve got the book and I need the tools that Scrivener provides. I’m on a new 30-day free trial but I’m cautiously optimistic that the stuff I have now is right and that the direction we’re going is good. The structures in Scrivener that I found so distracting before now fill the need I have for overhauling this manuscript.
It’s probably going to be shorter than my other novels but I’m still pushing close to 70k words now and will probably break into the 80k word levels in the next few days.
Jesse Young is still working on the final drafts for the new covers. I’m really liking the rough sketches and looking forward to the finals.
In Darkness Forged: Yeah. No progress on the paperback there.
Tanyth Fairport: No news on the audiobooks for this yet.
SFWA: This month SFWA has been both blessing and curse. The Nebula Weekend in Burbank gave me a break from the mundane life but also stripped me of every bit of reserve energy I had. After a week in Burbank, it took me the better part of the next week just to begin catching up on sleep.
Bottom line: I’m behind on my goal of four books this year. I’ve been tempted to chuck Cape Grace a couple of times but the longer I spend with it the more I like it and feel the need to push through this mushy-middle and get the story to where it needs to be.