Thursday, December 15, 2011

Fix your face.

Last week I received my first 50 pages of edits from Inspired Quill. It was a really enjoyable experience. Reading through my work after it had been through the editing process was quite weird but super-funky at the same time. They sent it with a mixture of blue and red text. Blue text is mainly comments and suggestions, while red text is ‘Change this’. Almost all of the red text covers typos, odd grammar mistakes and incredible tense errors. A few of them had me wincing. ‘How the hell did I miss that!?’

There were a few editorial observations which have really helped already. It was pointed out I use a lot of ‘He/She’ at the start of sentences. While it made me giggle a little shamefully – mainly because there’s another 190 pages of that particular fault to come for Sara as she goes through the manuscript – it also made the problem quite clear. As a result my future writing will keep an eye out for overuse of such simple language terms. Also I tend to repeat words quite a lot. Some of it is stylistic, but occasionally I get carried away. Obviously this is a second draft thing, but I’ll certainly be looking with a more critical eye over my future drafts for five uses of the word ‘Bounced’ in a single paragraph.

There was also some positive stuff throw in, along with chapter summaries. Sara has been very kind with her feedback so far. One of her comments about the protagonist, Sarene, really had me smiling. It’s quite a kick to be told by your publisher that a character is a favourite. In addition the small dashes of humour I throw into my work seem to be well received. I can’t wait for the rest of the edited manuscript to come back to me. Here’s hoping that she still enjoys it when the vampires and werewolves turn up in alien spacecraft halfway through the book.

-grins-

A recent conversation with @madeleinecook on Twitter gave me a bit of inspiration for this blog. Y’see, a lot of times when we communicate with others through text it’s hard to pick up how something is written. Sarcasm is a tricky one. While you hear a wry tone of voice when you type it, the person who reads it may hear deadpan, straight-forward delivery. Smileys help – a pokey-out tongue here and a wink there cuts a lot of the bite out of potentially hard words – but what if you don’t tack one on? (I smiley the hell out of my Facebook and Twitter posts, and it sometimes annoys me. Surely it just detracts from the words themselves?)

I guess the better you know a person the easier it is to work out their intentions. An odd example is when I send applications and cover letters to jobs. Yep, I’m job-hunting at the moment. Anyway, when I write those emails out to prospective employers, the words on the screen sound a little soulless and forced. You can’t inflect them with wit or charisma. You can’t build a rapport anywhere near as well as you can with a phone conversation or face-to-face meeting. You certainly can’t add a fucking smiley. While it’s now easier to communicate with others than it has ever been, the communication has changed. Words are plentiful but charm is lacking in its place. In my opinion anyway. But then, I’m one of those stuck-up arseholes who thinks textspeak will be the death of the English language, so you can’t really trust what I say too much.

In other news: I’m still in Essex for the time being. It’s been a bit quiet over here. Had one incredibly messy session with a few old friends in Romford last week, which was ace. Next week a lot of my buddies here in Grays will be taking various breaks from work so will be looking to be out and about a bit. I’ve picked up my workrate during my break from Norway, so the other two WIP I have at the moment are ticking along nicely. However that may all change when the new Star Wars MMO is released next week. I’m going to have to be pretty strict about doing my daily work before logging on. I might even get my brother to set up a parental control on my internet, arf.

Please feel free to add comments or thoughts below, and remember to follow my Facebook page (ick) and my Twitter account. Cheers.


Sunday, December 4, 2011

I'm flying..?

I’m sitting in Oslo Rygge airport. It’s 5.27am. I’m on my way back home for a currently undetermined length of time. It could be for a week. It could be for a month. It’s basically out of my hands at the moment. I’m cool with that, though. I’m not really in a rush to be anywhere.

I like airports. I like the routine – travel, waiting, security, waiting, boarding, waiting – and I like what an airport does to you. There’s a struggle with duty free and what you may potentially need at your next stop. There’s the common debate about whether you’re hungry enough to pay the exorbitant airport prices for a burger. There’s a lot of people watching. And then there’s what an airport represents. Often it just represents going to visit family or staying with friends. But potentially you could go to an airport and then just leave. Go somewhere else in the world you haven’t seen before. Not everyone will do that, but it’s a possibility. Nothing’s stopping you.

In the end I didn’t buy duty free, I didn’t pay for a burger (I brought my own cheese and pickle sandwich; fuck you, commerce!), and I’ve watched people. I like people watching. It gives me ideas for characters. Not whole characters, obviously. Writing a character based on someone you saw in a waiting lounge would be pretty lazy and I’m not sure you’d have a great character on your hands. But the little things people do in airports are details which can be added to a character. A person who moves their lips while they read. A person who nods their head and air-drums to their earphones. Someone will fall asleep on the shoulder of someone else, all the while dribbling happily onto their shirt. Some will travel alone and ignore everyone around them, while others will travel in groups and critique everyone who passes by. Security workers will drift between enthusiastic, apathetic and stoic. It’s the same with the people who greet you at the gate. Sometimes they like the job and sometimes they don’t.

I’ve been at this airport for about six and a half hours now. I’m only about halfway through my journey. I’ll land in Stansted around 10, then spend two hours dicking around on buses. I don’t mind too much, though. I do wish I had some headphones, but a book will suffice.

Anyway, book related... Queen of the World is currently being edited by Sara of Inspired Quill for the first time. I’m looking forward to my initial update in that regards. I think it’ll be cool to work out how the book is handled by the publisher once it’s out of my hands. Happily I’ll get the final say on things but I have no reason to believe I’ll have to put my foot down at any point. LinkObviously that may change if they slip a vampire in somewhere. -grins- I have a few friends working on art pieces for the main characters, which will be excellent to have. The cover art is in a queue, so I’m guessing that will have to wait before I can discuss it in more detail. I’m thinking trees will be involved, though. Everyone digs trees.

Updates have been a bit slow because there hasn’t been much book related going on recently. I’m considering just filling this with some random tripe in the meantime, but I wouldn’t want to detract from the point of this blog, which is cataloguing the process from book writing to book printing. We’ll see how it goes.

-read above update-

...Bugger.