Showing posts with label The Writer's Journey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Writer's Journey. Show all posts

Monday, May 23, 2016

The Writer Will Take Your Questions Now #349 -- But I Don't Want to Write


What do you do when don't feel like writing? How do you make yourself write?

I know this isn't the answer most new writers want to hear, but most of the time if I don't feel like writing then I simply don't write. Forcing the muse, so to speak, at least for me, can do more harm than good. Chances are, if I really, really don't feel up to writing, I'm not going to like what I've written.

Now, on the flip side of that, there are times when I simply don't have the luxury of not writing. Deadlines could be pressing. I might need to get some key story segments out of the way before a busy week at work, or a pending vacation (yeah, what are those again?). Regardless, I just might not have time to spend away from the story. In those times, I really have to trick my brain into tapping into the subconscious part of writing.

I can sometimes do that by using a writing prompt, or by reading a short story, or perhaps even by skipping ahead to a part I feel more in tune with (and then once my brain is lost in writing again, coming back to the sticky part).

However, this doesn't always work, and quite often I simply have to trudge through the stuff I simply don't feel like doing. It doesn't make for the most inspired fiction, but it does make fiction take shape. And sometimes that's the best you can get, and all that you need in that moment.

Friday, December 4, 2015

Ideas Like Bullets -- The Wake Up Call You Didn't Ask For

by Tommy Hancock

I have been accused of wearing many hats.  In theory, that may be true. In reality, I typically only wear one, although I do have a back up fedora and a ball cap or two for bad hair day rush trips out and about.  But, usually, that appellation is given to me because of the fact that within the Pulp/writing world, I do many things.  I am a writer.  I am an editor, not just for Pro Se Productions, my company, but others as well. I am also a publisher, a partner in the aforementioned Pro Se Productions. 

In each of those roles, and we’ll be lumping editor and publisher together this time around, I experience many things.  Ups and downs. Successes and failures and all manners of things in between.  There are moments of sheer happiness, sometimes bordering on a creative ecstasy of sorts. There are also periods, unfortunately lasting too long often to be considered moments, of depression, sadness, that ‘give up and walk away’ feeling.  What is funny is that although I know that both groups I’m addressing here have a collective narrow view of this, that only they feel this and the other side of the line doesn’t, the issues and feelings that writers and editors/publishers experience are often very similar, if not exactly the same.  They only differ in which side of the creative room the person happens to be standing on.

What I’m about to write is not intended to anger, incense, or push anyone away, although it might.  I made a commitment to myself when I renewed this blogging endeavor that I would use it in ways that would be useful to me, first and foremost, and hopefully to others as well.  What you’re about to read is useful to me in that it allows me to get things said that I feel need to be in a cumulative manner, all at once, and off my chest and out of the way.

It should also be noted, and remembered as You proceed through this, that I am guilty of everything I am about to spout against and attack.  I am no better than those of you who may do some of what is about to be listed and in part, this is an exercise to exorcise some of those things from me.

Is this a Pet Peeves post? Yes, in a sense.  But it’s also about some of the biggest stumbling blocks that writers and editors/publishers have in building relationships that can be mutually beneficial.  But, yeah, these are things that get under my skin and scratch like a burr buried deep beneath a newly broken mustang’s saddle.  And, again, I have done and even at times still find myself as the example of every one of them.

It must be noted, creatives of any brand are a passionate, emotional lot.  That happens to be the best thing about us. We invest ourselves fully and wholeheartedly in all we do, if we are doing it right, and we give a chunk of our very being into the work we produce.  That is writer, editor/publisher, sculptor, dancer, and the list goes on.  But, that also means that oftentimes feelings are worn on their sleeves and we sometimes look for any reason to be offended, or to think someone is being thought of better than us, or whatever thing we need to justify the sudden onset of creator doldrums we all go through.  To hopefully limit that before probably inciting full on episodes of it, let me say that I am beginning this discourse by focusing on writers, only because that is where the process between these two sides of the same coin begins.  Editors/Publishers would have nothing to do if it were not for writers, so writers get to go first, only for that reason.

A few thoughts for writers, first.  You are a big part of the reason that there is even a publishing industry to begin with.  The fact that people feel it is their job, destiny, and/or disease to string words together and get them put on paper, either the print or digital page, so they can be consumed by the ones, hundreds, or millions that might read them makes you a pretty important cog in the literature machine. 

But don’t forget, especially in the way the market has evolved today- You are a cog in a wonderfully colorful rainbow and storm producing machine.

There are many myths and illusions that surround the vocation of fiction writing, sort of like gathering clouds.  As both a writer who has been doing that a while and as a publisher, I spend time on a regular business dispelling some of those erroneous beliefs, what some would call hopeful aspirations.  First, writing as a whole will not make most of us who do it rich.  It will not, in fact, ever become a full time actual money earning vocation for the overwhelming majority of us.  It simply will not.  And for the few that do find their way into turning pennies a word into enough to feed family and self, that will likely not be all from writing what a writer wants to.  Technical writing, sewing together ad copy to advertise the latest in toddler storage furniture – Yep, have done that - , or ghost writing articles about the effect of global warming on the decline of the Aztec civilization or some such will be the bounty and bane of most writers who can say they write full time.  And, that works for some people, and that’s great.  But most writers have this very lofty ideal in their minds of one day sitting at their typewriter and getting to tell the stories they want to tell for hours and hours and actually being able to live on the proceeds from said activity.

Not a reality for most.  And it’s the concept that it is possible to reach that height that I think keeps many, many writers from ever getting close.  So many of us come into this with that goal in mind and it is all we see, it is the end result of that first short story or that novel, or for many, it will be what happen when they publish that first blog post.  And suddenly, nothing else matters. Or if other aspects of the process matter, then they are definitely colored by the singular desire to be the next Stephen King or Charlaine Harris or Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, or insert your famous author type here.  And it’s simply not how it works.

Let me state this plainly.  If you want to be the writer who only writes to live and who lives well from the writing you do, then focus on two things.  Focus on now, not later. And focus on the fact that your work is only beginning when a publisher accepts your book or when you hit ‘Approve Proof’ as a self publisher.  That is only you turning the knob, not the end of the process.

All writers wants to believe the work they submit to a publisher is the best work that not only they have ever done, but the best thing the publisher has ever seen.  Even if both of those points are true in any given instance, what usually happens next is a mistake. And that next step is the writer consciously or unconsciously sighs with relief and says, “Ah, now my work is done.  It is in the hands of someone else.”  And many times, once that happens, the writer divulges any responsibility for what happens next, for the final product, for the reactions of the readers, or at least the negative reactions.  And if there’s a single writer out there who reads this who says they have not even teased this thought, that they have not even had an inkling of this ‘I’ve done my job, anything bad that happens is someone else’s fault’ line of processing, then please don’t bother to tell me, because it’d end up in a discussion you wouldn’t care for.

As a writer, you must continue to work on the book or story you have submitted after it has gone off to the publisher.  You must be as invested in the process as You are allowed to be by all involved.  You must still live and breathe every word even if the tale is done.  You must be prepared to edit when the editor returns the tale, you must endeavor to tear the galley edit apart. And You must be ready to be the sole marketing voice for your work, regardless of who the Publisher is.  Good publishers will market, some of them having limitations, but they will market.  But if you’re a writer who believes you are not also an editor involved in the final processing of your book and that you’re not the best ad agency your work can have in this market, then you are spinning your wheels.   And if you believe all that AND expect to be on some bestseller list, then you, my friend, are living in a land of delusion.

Writing as a career has never been easy. Ask the Pulp writers whom many of us now know as famous authors.  Before they wrote the books on your shelves, many of them were buying rotten apples and stale breaded sandwiches with short stories.  But, as a writer, remember this as well.  No other aspect of this industry is easy, either.  For every writer who doesn’t feel like they’re getting paid what they’re worth, there is an artist rushing to meet a deadline that has forced them to put in more hours than they will ever see money for. There is an editor who cannot eat the copies he or she gets for reviewing your work or has to slide it in, even paying work, between one real life crisis and the next. And there’s a publisher who, unless they have already worked their asses off or work for one of the much larger companies, who is stringing together the company you have asked to publish you around their full time day job and probably whatever freelance stuff they can put together.  It’s a struggle and a fight and a passion for everyone involved.

And, remember, You’re not the only human in this process.  Everyone makes mistakes, everyone gets frustrated, everyone gets behind. Yes, sometimes You as a writer should put your foot down and stand up for your work in many circumstances.  But never forget that You are not asking God or Odin or apply Deity here to publish your work.  Things happen and if You don’t have the patience of Job, then writing is really probably not the thing for you.

I’m not telling you all this so you feel sympathetic to the other people in the trenches with You. But You need to be aware- There are other people in the trenches with You. And You do have a responsibility, if you ever want to be whatever it is you want to be as a writer, to be as involved as You can be and are needed to be in every step of your book’s life. And if you have a publisher that won’t let you be involved, one that doesn’t send galleys for your review, one that restricts your abilities to market, then I’m telling you right now, I know other publishers that are looking for new work to produce every single day.

Now, on to Editors and Publishers.  The diatribe I unleash upon this section of the wonderful thing we call the industry may be shorter, but no less pointed.  As a matter of fact, what I feel like is a major mistake most Editors and Publishers make is more important in some ways to the success of a work than anything a writer does.

A writer brings their work to a particular Publisher (Editor will just be an unspoken part of this title as they are often inexorably linked) because that writer wants to.  The exact specifics may vary- Maybe the Publisher offers great money, maybe the Publisher produces work similar to the Writer’s output, maybe the Writer’s heard great things, or maybe the Writer is just throwing stories against the wall to see what sticks- but the bottom line is a Publisher gets a story because a writer sends it.  And so many Publishers, once they get a story, suddenly forget that. They no longer understand that they have that work in their hands, not because of anything they’ve necessarily actively done aimed at that writer, but because that writer chose to send them something that is very dear and precious to that creator.

Yes, I said it.  Writers are, for many of them, in essence sending you a child when they send you a story or a novel.  They are trusting You not only to take care of that baby of theirs, but to groom it and trim it, and feed it, and make it into a being, an almost living, breathing thing that can stand on its own when it finally hits the real world.  It is not product, though it is.  It is not a widget, even if You of course have to sometimes consider it such.  It is not simply written pages converting into dollar bills, though that is one of Your end goals, and a valid one at that.  It is a part of the writer, even if that author is a hack as I sometimes am and simply writes what he or she is told to write, maybe a small piece, but still a part of that writer that now sits in your inbox waiting for You to work on it.  You should treat it as such. And no, that doesn’t mean that you have to coddle the writer, hold his or her hand, do exactly as they want you to.

It means you have to work on it.  And not just enough to get it out the door, but really work on it.  You have to make every effort, do everything within your power to make sure the story or book you have is the best it can possibly be before a reader every puts down money for it.  That is in the editing process, the development of the cover, in working with the writer, in every way.  You have to take every single book you get, every word that you may one day print, and do every damned thing within your power to make sure it’s as good as it gets when it is finally in the wild.

And You will screw up.  And at times, You will fail.  It happens. There’s not a book I have read in the last twenty years that didn’t have at least even a tiny issue.  A missed word, a typo, a horrible cover, print too small, something that I can look at and see that the Publisher should have done differently or better.  And remember, I am a publisher and it happens with my own books.  But, the trick is this.  When that happens, don’t say “Well, it happens to everyone.  Things get by us all” even though that’s true.  It is your responsibility and your choice- Remember, no one forced You to become a Publisher- to look at that particular error or issue and not only do every damned thing you can to make sure it doesn’t happen again, but, if possible, to fix it and make it right for all involved.  You have set yourself up as the steward of a story to be told, to be shared.  That stewardship doesn’t necessarily end after the book is published.  Not only is there marketing, but with the way publishing is done today, there are chances to correct mistakes and make things right that weren’t available in the past.  And it is your job to always do what You can to make sure what You produce for any writer is as good as it can be.  And sometimes that means swallowing pride and correcting mistakes…or, when you can’t, falling on your sword, dying on that hill, and admitting the mistakes that were made and where they fall.

And that is where this entanglement of calling the kettle black and toeing lines both comes together and finds its end.  Publishing, especially in the market as it exists today, is a team effort. Yeah, I know how many of you cringed when I said that, especially You self publishing types, but it’s still true, even in that instance.  And Self Publishers, You have the unique situation of having to be cognizant of when You’re being too possessive as a writer of your material and when You’re blaming faults of the final product on other people who were on your team instead of taking your share of the responsibility as Publisher.   But, it is all about working together.  All about having a similar goal and, to be honest, the only goal that matters in the end.

You want to make books and stories people read.  So check your egos at the door, accept your responsibilities, and, if need be, get your figurative head out of your figurative ass and go forth and create.  I need more to read.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

[Link] Great Expectations

by M.J. Rose

Apropos of a few blog posts I’ve read elsewhere and posts here and there, and my own book coming out last week… I’ve been thinking about “post-pub-blues.”

I think one of the real problems we authors face is that in order to write a book–to do all the research, to juggle day jobs and family and make sacrifices to find time to write, to sweat over words and paragraphs and characters, to sometimes bleed on the page–we have to believe what we are creating is not only wonderful and amazing and worth what we are giving it, but that there is no other book like it.

We have to be huge optimists.

We have to believe in the impossible.

Read the full article: http://writerunboxed.com/2015/03/29/great-expectations-2/

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Nugget #9 -- Legacy

I may never know who and I may never know how, 
but the work was there, and the work was read, and 
someone had a reaction to it -- good or bad. 


Monday, June 10, 2013

Preach On, Brother Kermit!


I think I know why this last story was like pulling teeth (not counting all the crazy stuff that happened from broken laptop to trying to break my back in the garage right around deadline time).

I think I've been writing pulp so much lately that I'm beginning to lose myself in what others say pulp is supposed to be. I started writing with a more lit focus, but with a love for genre fiction, and my earlier writing (around Show Me A Hero and my IDW work) reflects that struggle between lit and genre in a way that made me, well, me.

I think what I need to do is embrace that again and stop trying so hard to write for a style.

I need to tell the stories and let the style simply be what flows. I know I have at least two now that I'm locked into a certain style (third-person only, straight-ahead narrative, etc.) but after those, I'm going to just tell the stories the way I tell them and if my publishers don't like it, then I'll publish elsewhere.

I still want to tell pulp stories, but I don't want to get locked into what was considered pulp only in the past. I want to embrace all kinds of work and style and create something new in pulps, horror, fantasy, sci-fi, superheroes, whatever.

As Kermit sang:

When green is all there is to be
It could make you wonder why
But why wonder why wonder
I am green, and it'll do fine
It's beautiful, and I think it's what I want to be


So, I'm gonna be green because, well that's what I am.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

[Link] HOW TO WRITE THE WAY I WRITE, Part 3: Mythic Structure and Me! ...I mean, and You!

by Dan Jolley

I had been getting paid to write for seven or eight years before I was introduced to the book you see up there: The Writer's Journey by Christopher Vogler. It changed - profoundly changed - how I did my job. I wish I had found out about it much earlier. Like, when I was about six.

I was at a con (either Dragon*Con in Atlanta or MegaCon in Tampa, I don't remember which) when I met Scott Ciencin, another freelance writer. Whereas I had been concentrating on comic books, Scott had made a name for himself as a novelist, working primarily in licensed-property novels. Scott had read a couple of my comics and enjoyed them, and he and I started talking on the phone pretty regularly. During one of those conversations he asked me if I had read The Writer's Journey.

"Nope," I responded. "What's that?"

Very seriously and, as I soon came to discover, completely accurately, Scott said, "It's the keys to the kingdom."

I didn't know a single thing at the time about Joseph Campbell, or the work he had done combing through an entire civilization's worth of culture to produce The Hero With a Thousand Faces. I didn't know anything at all about how Christopher Vogler distilled Campbell's work and turned it into, essentially, a how-to guide for storytellers. But I would soon learn. And because of that, my productivity was about to skyrocket.

Let me see if I can break it down quickly here...

Continue reading: http://danjolley.blogspot.com/2012/06/how-to-write-way-i-write-part-3-mythic.html

 Editor's Note: If you're not following Dan's new blog, you're really missing out. Dan's not only a fantastic writer, but also a great guy to get to know. And a mega-boss at networking.