15 May 2010 @ 03:47 pm
Projects, Projects Everywhere, and Not a Page to Submit  
My best friend in high school always told me I had too many dreams. I wanted to fly helos for the Air Force. I wanted to be an archaeologist. I wanted to be an FBI agent. I wanted to write novels. I wanted to act. I wanted to sing. I wanted to be a cowgirl. My mother, of course, told me that it was good to have that many dreams. Problem was, I ended up majoring in history & creative writing, learning a virtually unemployable skill set. Maybe my best friend was closer to being correct than my mom was. Or maybe it wasn’t that I had too many dreams, but that I couldn’t pick one of those dreams to focus on first.

Something I’ve seen as I read blogs about the publishing world is that a writer should focus on one particular area of writing to make her name. (Never mind that Isaac Asimov published fiction and nonfiction in every single category of the Dewey Decimal system, apparently this isn’t as doable in the 21st Century as it was in the 1950s.) Since I have written epic fantasy, urban fantasy, romance, and crime fiction…this is a problem.

My current dilemma is that my urban fantasy is closest to being ready for publication, plus having three sequels/companion novels written/drafted so I need to revise that one. But I am way more in the mood to work on the epic fantasy, which needs to be completely overhauled and re-WRITTEN from the ground up. A huge project, but especially since I started using Patricia C. Wrede’s world-building questions to inspect and tweak my fantasy world, it’s one I look forward to.

I’ve tried using a bribe to move forward. I’ve told myself to revise the first 50 pages of the urban fantasy, just so I have a good submission packet to query with. Then I can turn my attention to the epic fantasy and make a few submission rounds with the urban fantasy to see if I get any interest. If I get any interest and they want a full manuscript, then I make a really fast revision of the other 100 pages.

We’ll see if this works…
 
 
Current Mood: crazy
Current Music: So Long Farewell - Motion City Soundtrack
 
 
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[identity profile] slightlyjillian.livejournal.com on May 16th, 2010 12:15 am (UTC)
Oh Asimov. I love his science fiction and how he could write almost anything not matter how implausible and still get away with a good yarn.

You have my sympathy. I know that I'd like to be writing in the original fantasy universe I've been tooling around in for years, but I just don't have what it takes (skills, understanding, the story) to write that...

On the other hand, I have made progress on the YA novel and it's better for the practice I've put in. So I feel pretty good working on that story instead even if the other is still dear to me. My thought is that the epic stuff will benefit from what I learn toiling through the YA novel.

Haha, maybe it'll make the epic less, well, epic and more manageable? Who knows.

*wry grin* I know that I don't quite have the discipline that [livejournal.com profile] jomk mentions. That's why I need the day job... soon.
[identity profile] stephaniecain.livejournal.com on May 17th, 2010 03:07 am (UTC)
Ha. Asimov not only wrote science fiction, he literally wrote about almost everything in the library. *G* In library school we were told he wrote a book for EVERY Dewey Decimal category, but I see now that's not true, none of his books were catalogued in the 100s (Philosophy). But still. The man worked on around 500 books, and how many short stories? Wow.

Definitely progress on the YA novel is good, and the YA market is a growing one for sure. Also, when do I get to see that! *makes grabby hands*

I think your task for the Epic Fantasy Novel O Doom is to make that timeline. I'm telling you. Two drafts ago, The Loyalty Factor had a day-by-day timeline of the novel, because otherwise I got all confused.