Where Have I Been?

Damned if I can remember.

Shoved a full-flown memoir of my two years in Southeast Asia during the Viet-Nam War — “HOTEL CONSTELLATION: Notes from America’s Secret War in Laos” — to the family and a few very close (tolerant) friends.

Finished a supernatural adventure novel called “The Mark of the Spider” and sent it out to beta readers last spring. Still awaiting feedback, so that’s not promising.

Rewriting a straight sci-fi called “PSNGR” — formerly “The Passenger”? — seemingly forever. Instead of tackling chapter 28 today, I’m doing this.

I first wrote PSNGR as a long short story; then as a graphic novel when I had a comic book publisher willing to take a look at it. Now trying to finish it as a potential indie publishing project.

Bailed on my writer’s group for personal reasons having nothing to do with the calibre of their kind feedback.

Journeys, which is what this writing process was intended to be, can be tortuous. Witness The Odyssey. Which is not to say my journey has been nearly as exciting, or even interesting.

And the point is …

But I digress from my intent today, which is to point out links to two stories that struck my fancy.

Ten Books that Were Written on a Bet — From the terse Dr. Seuss to the loquacious James Fennimore Cooper and C.S. Lewis, I’ll be dipping into this list in future.

Publishers Are Now Shedding Best-Selling Authors — So … what’s the point?

Bottom line

keepcalm

iRoyal

iroyal-small

 

Bought this fantastic, ironic photo at Jeff StruthersD&NO Gallery in Elizabeth, Colorado, during a recent trip to Denver.

Struthers is a remarkably inventive landscape photographer who dabbles in stuff like this.

His photo of this Wisconsin corn field not far from my home town caught my eye and drew me deeper into the gallery where I found the iRoyal.

Ribbons of Pre-Harvested Corn,    Handshill Road, Iowa County, Wisconsin

We did not get to meet Jeff, but his wife, Pam, treated us like old friends. Thank you to both.

Memoir Writing Extra – Keep a Log

I can’t imagine how I forgot this step in the writing process, but I did. Perhaps because it’s like breathing for me.

As you write, edit, rewrite, suffer and curse, keep a log.

Call it a writer’s journal, a dairy, a writing companion. Whatever. Just do it.

I do two things:

First, I keep – and have kept for years – a Writer’s Journal in which I record overall how things are going. Problems, issues, solutions. What’s working, what’s not.

clip-books-stacked

Clipping books from my memoir project stack up 18 inches high.

From time to time, I actually go back and consult this, but mostly I don’t. The value comes from recording my thoughts. That seems to inspire other subconscious thinking and, quite frankly, imprints things in my memory.

I don’t write in it every day. More often, I get to it every three or four days, but I almost never let it go for more than 10 days.

Here is an entry from March of this year as I launched a rewrite of my memoir, HIDDEN WAR: A Memoir of America’s Secret Crusade in Laos. Note that I was calling it “Hotel Constellation” then.

3/7/2016 MON ==
Key questions as I start the rewrite of Hotel Constellation:
  • How extensively do I rewrite? Reorganize the whole thing? Or shuffle a few things around. Fact is, I feel finished with the project. I don’t want to do more. … Decision: Rewrite as much as necessary; consult all feedback.
  • What do I do with the Viet-Nam war background chapter? Some say move it because it disrupts the flow; others say it’s fine. I agree with those who argue the flow is interrupted. I will make it a Foreward, but with a title like “In the Beginning.”
  • How do I handle the Lao names? I refuse to have two interruptions before the story starts. Decision: On the first occurrence of a Lao name, add the “About the Lao Language” as a long footnote; add a list of the Lao names and their pronunciations at the end of the book.

Second, for every project, I keep a digital log or notes file (often with a paper companion) of daily progress, notes and reminders. Regardless of what I label the file, several kinds of things end up in my logs:

  1. Word counts by chapters. I’m a progress-oriented guy, and I like to keep track of where I am.
  2. Reminders of problems or questions that I have encountered. This is stuff I don’t need, or want, to address immediately, but I also don’t want to finish the project without taking care of them.
  3. Reader feedback. It’s like a reminder, but sometimes my beta readers make general comments that can’t just be taken care of all at once. Again, I don’t want to forget.
  4. Miscellaneous research. In my current project – a fictional adventure with the working title, “The Mark of the Spider” – I researched all the creepy crawly stuff that lives in Borneo, where part of the action takes place. I keep this list in my “Demon1 Rewrite Notes” file.
  5. Versioning. Adhering to the principle that you never throw anything away because you never know when you’ll need it, every time I write a draft or go back and change the thread of the plot, I create a new version (1.1, 1.2, 1.3, etc.) of the manuscript. I also describe very briefly what is different from the previous version. It looks like this in my notes file:
    1.0 — Rewrite through Ch. 27
    1.1 — Incorporates Writers Group feedback on Ch. 1-3 plus DLH changes Ch. 25-28
  6. Rough drafts of dialogue, plot. Here’s a sample from”The Mark of the Spider” that I did not use:
The first time I awoke — naked, feverish, stinking of blood and my own filth — I felt the pain in my face, like some mad dentist had yanked all my teeth with a dirty pliers and no painkiller.
It was dark, the blackest kind of dark, found far from the cities, deep in the jungle. I lay on a rough wooden floor, atop a thin mat of woven bamboo. Knots in the bamboo poked my skin when I tried to roll off my back. The pain forced me back, and I blacked out.

I never delete things from a log file. Sometimes, I find I want to go back and see if I encountered a problem before and whether I addressed it. In short, I don’t want to repeat work. Instead of deleting, I use the strikethrough font. It tells me it’s done.

Both my Writer’s Journal and my log are different from my continuity files. The latter are reference files, meticulously kept but rarely consulted.

The logs are daily, working documents that help keep me on track. Two or three hundred pages into a five hundred page project, I need a place to help my memory. (As a reporter writing stories daily, I learned NOT to keep notes in my head. Once I wrote the story, I purged the memory. Anything I felt I might need later went into a note or a file. So this is old habit for me.)

The writer’s journal records thoughts about a project looking down from far above.

I could not do without any of them.