Tuesday, October 31. 2006
It is not the big story that I have been promising, but it is something to hold you over in the meantime. And, it ties into The Curse of the Five Pennies, too.
The story can be found over at Fictional Musings. Kelly Parra posts a lot of flash fiction stories that writers send to her. If you have something around 700 words or less, you should consider submitting it over there. Anyway, here's the link to my story.
Monday, October 30. 2006
Unfortunately there were no monkeys and my story, Curse of the Five Pennies, is not going to be finished in time.
After reading my rough draft, I was very unhappy with the basic story arc as well as most of the writing and decided that it needed a pretty big rewrite and I did not get enough time over the weekend to make that happen.
I will post the story when I get around to finishing it and hopefully it will turn out to be a better story with the rewrite.
For those of you who are spitting mad that I teased you all along and now have nothing to show for it, I have a story that will be showing up tomorrow I thing on Fictional Musings. When it goes up for sure, I will mention it again with a direct link.
That's all. Carry on.
Saturday, October 28. 2006
I have a short story that I am supposed to finish by Monday night for the Paperback Writer eBook Challenge. I am horribly behind schedule and have a ton of other stuff going on between now and then. What are my odds of finishing on time?
As they say on Wayne's World, "Yeah, and monkeys might fly out of my butt."
I will type frantically between now and then and try to get it finished. After all, it is just a short story. How hard could it be to finish one of those?
UPDATE:I just stopped by over there to get the link above and noticed that I jujst won a free book. If you write fiction and are not reading her site regularly, you should be. She gives a lot of great advice and had drawings to give away free stuff from time to time. Plus, she has a ton of books published so you should at least go over there to try and figure out how she does it. As far as I can tell, she seems to put most of the emphasis of the magical experience of getting published on actually sitting down and writing...a lot.
Which reminds me. I need to go look for a monkey.
Monday, October 9. 2006
This is just a little teaser for the Curse of the Five Pennies which is due to come out on October 31st. None of the teaser stories will actually be part of the official story. These are all just side stories around the events that happen in the story. This one takes place one day after Curse of the Five Pennies ends.
Aftermath
The head football coach walked into the locker room. The team quieted as Coach stared at the floor.
"I just got some bad news." Coach struggled for his next words.
"Is Tyler sick? If so, we'll be fine. These guys suck."
"No, Randy. Tyler isn't sick," a tear rolled down Coach's face. "Tyler is dead."
The locker room exploded with questions. Coach waved his hands to try to silence the team. One of the assistant coaches whistled to get the locker room back under control.
"Nobody knows anything right now. Something bad seems to have happened. The game is canceled and there is going to be a city wide curfew tonight affective immediately. You all need to head straight home. Now before you guys get all macho and go sneaking around, it appears that somebody is running around killing people, really butchering them up. This is no joke and you all need to get home."
The assistant coaches took over hurrying the kids into their street clothes, coordinating transportation, and creating checklists to keep track of which kids called when they got home. Coach drove through the small town to his neighborhood on the outskirts. The newer subdivision with fresh siding and small trees contrasted with the small ranches throughout the rest of the town.
Coach grabbed a beer and stood on his back porch staring at the woods behind his house. Small towns were not supposed to have problems like this. But, then again, the woods were not supposed to have some of the sounds he had been hearing recently either.
Thursday, October 5. 2006
I just updated the sidebar with a semi-official title for one of the stories. The Curse of the 5 Pennies.
Whether I finish it in time or not, I'm writing it in response to the E-book Challenge of at Paperback Writer's blog.
I'm hoping to finish it on time. The story is a campy horror story with lots of action and a fair amount of violence. There are only 6 characters and 1 monster so there can't be that much violence, eh?
And it takes place between a dirty, run down gas station and a creepy, old, abandoned bridge with evil looking drawings on it. On Halloween, of course.
And there's a monster that just can't possible exist...right?
The stories in the challenge don't need to be creepy or have anything to do with Halloween, but with an October 31st deadline, how can I resist.
No matter when I finish, and it better be before October 31st, I will publish the story over here in PDF format. I'm working on getting in touch with an artist friend to make a cover that will make downloading the story worth while on its own. He's good and can do creepy with the best of them.
So far, I have finished doing an extremely quick and dirty run through of the plot. It has sentences for everything that needs to happen from start to finish. Now, I need to go back and fill in all the details, dialogue, and killings. Oops, did I say that out loud.
Are you planning on entering the challenge? If so, how is your story coming.
Tuesday, October 3. 2006
Do you have a character stuck in the woods? Does she need to find her way out or further in? It sure would be nice to know which way was north, right? Tired of having your characters look for moss on trees?
Go read article of 13 ways to find north if you're lost int he woods.
Make sure you do your research before using them to make sure the methods listed are acurate. If you ever get lost in the woods and get more lost using these techniques, don't come looking for me.
What the hell. Come looking. You won't find me. Your already lost in the woods.
I'm writing again. Buy me a cookie.
I'm going to try to write a minimum of 50 words for each of 3 stories that I am working on. I'm not planning on having many 2000 word days and don't really care at this point. I figure if I make myself write 50 words every day, I will normally write a little more. For example, today I wrote 75, 193, and 78 for the stories.
50 words can't possibly scare anybody. I can cough fifty words. Typing them takes about 2-3 minutes. Our new hamster could pound out 50 words a day. My big fear with this new experiment is finding out that the hamster writes better than me.
A couple friends recently have been politely pestering me to write something. So, I figured if I can put a little progress bar like you find in the sidebar, they can see my progress and only pester me when the sidebars don't move for a few days.
Monday, September 18. 2006
I was riding back from the Iowa - Iowa State football football game on Saturday. We stopped at a gas station in Rochelle, IL for potty and snacks. I walked into the tiny, slightly dirty bathroom and noticed about 4 flies buzzing around which just made the whole room seem a little creepier than it should have been.
There were 4 pennies sitting on the back of the toilet bowl and 1 on the ground next to the toilet. 5 lonely pennies in a dirty bathroom in a medium sized town in the middle of nowhere.
As the flies buzzed around and I made room for another Pepsi, I realized what those 5 pennies were doing in the bathroom. Scary, scary stuff. I was smart enough to leave the pennies where they were.
One of the characters in a soon to be written by me story will not be so smart. He and his friends are sure going to regret that decision.
Tuesday, September 12. 2006
I had kind of give up on writing a book/story for a while. I've been working on my daddy blog and it is taking care of all of my writing desires recently.
Yesterday, I had a flash of an moment in my past out of nowhere. When I was in tech school in Monterey, CA back in '96, I spent Thanksgiving alone. Almost everybody else went home for the holiday. I went down to a bar and met this older civilian couple. They were in their 50s. I was 21.
We hit it off instantly and were talking and laughing all night while listening to a cool reggae band.
They found out that I would be spending the next day, Thanksgiving alone on base eating some lame food in the food hall. That was unacceptable. They invited me over for Thanksgiving with them.
But, there were some problems. They couldn't drop me off at base because I had no real way of contacting them the next day. This is pre cell phones everywhere. So they let me spend the night. Then drove me home so I could shower and change the next morning. Then drove me back to their house to eat all day with them.
Amazing story right there.
But, it was a little more bizarre. They had a daughter that was 19. We flirted for a few days afterward, but she ended up being a bit of a junkie so I bailed. My friend ended up dating her friend for a few weeks more. The friend had a baby which weirded my friend out a bit and they ended up calling it quits without much fanfare, too.
So, I was remembering that night in the bar and the day eating at their house and meeting their daughter and the whole thing and thought, "Hey dummy. There's a story there."
And my wife might be interested. There won't be any dragons.
If I ever get around to writing it that is.
By the way, if that couple happens to be reading this, thanks. That was one of the most memorable nicest things a stranger ever did for me.
Monday, August 21. 2006
I have never really paid attention to how important chapter endings are before. After reading a couple Michael Crichton books and a few adventurish stories recently, I noticed that they all do one thing really well. The last few lines of each chapter make you read the next chapter.
You hear a lot of talk about making sure your story opens a bang. This is the moment when the reader decides to bother with the book or not.
I have read a lot about making sure the ending captures the reader, too. This is the moment when the reader decides whether to buy another of your books or not.
People do not talk about the structure of chapters as often. When you are reading a book before going to bed, what is it that keeps you awake until 3am reading the last page? The chapter endings.
If a chapter ends, "Yeah, we'll have to talk about that more tomorrow," then guess what. I'm going to read about it tomorrow.
If a chapter ends, "'Yeah, we'll have to talk about that more tomorrow....' At that moment the monster emerged from the closet and bit off Marge's head," there's a good chance I'm going to stick around to see what is going on.
The problem with ending chapters with such a dramatic hook is that the book can quickly become hokey. I find myself yelling, "Come on. Nobody has that many bad things happen to them."
But, in reality, that is why the big hook endings work. We do not read books to live in reality. We read to escape. If somebody has a problem, it better be bigger than mine, or I'll go back to doing my own chores.
I do not expect to win any literary awards. I would like to entertain a few people now and then. While writing my next story, I am going to remember to focus on keeping the pages turning by ending my chapters with a bang...even if I have to kill somebody to do it.
|