Posts Tagged ‘ASMSA’

General Updatery

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Hopefully it will come as no surprise that my NaNoWriMo push this year is about where it was when I mentioned I’d try for it.  I did allude to the insanity of the plan, after all.

What surprises me is the backup I found the other day.  I was looking through my flash drive backups for something else entirely, and found a backup of nothing but my programming folder — which was, it should be noted, the only significant casualty to my flash drive dying earlier this month.  It was an up-to-the-day backup, too.

This borders on being a religious experience.  I think Great Cthulhu wants me to continue work on that roguelike.

In other news, life is pretty awesome.  Things are looking up in general; my kid is doing great (save for some acid reflux and colic), and has begun occasionally sleeping as much as four hours at a stretch.  (This is actually better for Kat than for me, as I sleep like the dead.  She doesn’t.)

And, I now have a signed copy of The Gathering StormA friend of mine got it for me and shipped it down, for which I am now eternally indebted.  I’m reading the book now, and of course it’s great.  It also has me thinking.  See, Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson have a funny place in my writing/reading history: they’re the two writers who, more than any others, got me writing.

I’ve wanted to be a professional writer for a long, long time.  My earliest major writing project would have been when I was about ten, when I decided to write a sci-fi trilogy.  For years, that project (called Trikan) was the largest body of cohesive text I had managed to assemble.  (I’m looking it over now, and it’s . . . er, not as bad as I thought it would be, actually.  It’s also eight thousand words long.  Go, younger me.  But it’s still never seeing the light of day.)*

After Trikan, there was a lengthy period when I didn’t get any really significant writing done.  It was Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time that inspired me, the summer before I left for ASMSA, to get to work on a big project again.  That was when I started the project formerly known as The Storms of Heaven, and when I wrote most of the novella Ghost Ship — which astute readers (and people I’ve trapped in conversation long enough) may recognize as the work that formed the basis of Derelict.  If I hadn’t read The Wheel of Time then, there’s a pretty good chance these would never have gotten written.  It was a pretty influential work for me, to say the least.

Fast-forward to last year.  Having heard of Brandon Sanderson via his connection to The Wheel of Time, I picked up the books of his that were out at the time (Elantris and Mistborn: The Final Empire — I didn’t spring for The Well of Ascension until it came out in paperback.)  I read them.  I loved them.  And they inspired me to write again.  If I had to pick a single influence that got me started on Derelict in its full novelish glory, I would pick Brandon Sanderson.

I didn’t make these connections until recently — not as such, anyway.  The knowledge was there, in the back of my mind.  The reason it comes to mind now is because now I’m reading The Gathering Storm, which is by the two authors who have influenced and inspired me the most.

I wonder what’ll happen this time.

*Interestingly, the science vessel from which the characters of Trikan hail was named the Blue Star, and the salvage vessel from which the characters of Derelict hail is the Blue Star IV.  I was not aware of this, and to my knowledge wasn’t aware of it at the time that I wrote Ghost Ship.  Funny how the mind works.

Midnight Run

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

I just got back from a run around the block.  I feel pretty good.  It’s 2 in the morning.  I ran barefoot.

I’m not crazy, promise.

I’ve always had a tendency toward moving when I write.  I sit down and write for a moment, and when I need to think, I get up and pace.  Or something.  I used to be like a jack-in-the-box back in ASMSA and college late at night — when I was writing something in my room, whether it be personal or academic, I would pop out of my room and frantically pace up and down the hall for a while — sometimes less than a minute, sometimes much longer — and pop back in to write.  A page or paragraph later, whenever I hit the next tough spot, I’d be out again, up and down the hall, until I had it worked out.  I’m sure I drove my dorm-mates nuts, but there just isn’t space in a room for the kind of high-speed high-intensity pacing I prefer.

So I was trying to write earlier, and, finding that the writing wasn’t coming, I decided to read a little bit of my backlog while I thought.  (Incidentally, I highly recommend the Read It Later firefox extension — it saved my life.  I can mark something to read later and tell myself I will, instead of feeling a desperate need to read it before it gets away.)  I ran across a Lifehacker post on how running barefoot might be good for you (also cool shoes) and thought, heck, I love being barefoot!  I’ve been meaning to take up running for a decade now!  Sure, why not!  So I half-ran, half-walked around the block.  I’ll regret it tomorrow, but it was worth it.

This isn’t the first time I’ve actually gotten around to doing some running.  For a short while I and my friend Morgan (the blog’s down now, but it won’t always be) were running about once a week, way back before she left Little Rock . . . like almost a year ago, wow.  Time flies and all that.

So what’s bugging me about writing?  Well, I figured out part of it: I need to delinearize my revision process.  I figured out a long time ago that writing the first draft in order just doesn’t work for me — sometimes I have ideas for the middle or end of the book way early, and if I don’t write them (a) they’ll get away and (b) I won’t get anything else written, either.  I’m not an outline writer, though; I’m sort of a nonlinear discovery writer.  End tangent.

Somehow, I forgot that important lesson when I started revising.  I think it’s because I really wanted to finally have something to show to my very patient friends and family, so I got the first chapter all fixed up (something I’ve wanted to do for a while anyway) — and then I wanted to keep showing stuff off, so I immediately threw myself into the second chapter.

This won’t work.  I know how the beginning goes, but the late beginning all the way through to the end are going to suffer reorganization, sometimes drastic, of scenes.  I can’t just go through and look at each chapter individually, making the prose prettier.  I need to rewrite a ton of stuff, write new material in places, and just completely relocate scenes from, in some cases, very nearly one end of the book to the other.

There’s still some stuff I need to work out.  Which route I’ll take at the end of the second part.  Certain details about the climax.  Whether or not I’ll give a certain treacherous character an antihero plot arc in the late book.  But ultimately, I’m in much better shape after that run.

Current music: Nena, 99 Luftballoons, everybody’s favorite german feel-good nuclear holocaust song from the 80s.

My Writing Process — Such As It Is (Part I)

Friday, July 24th, 2009

I don’t know what my writing process is – or rather, I do, but it’s constantly changing. I have yet to settle on something I like that works for me in both the short and long term. Part of that’s probably due to my schedule – which is about to change – but not all. Since I’m putting Derelict in a drawer for a month while I start my next book and work on Zosias, I thought I’d talk about how I write, have written, and plan on writing.

I think it’s worth mentioning, at this point, how Derelict got its start. (It’s kind of funny, I’ve always thought.) In the summer of 2004, I was enjoying my last summer vacation before moving to Hot Springs for the Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences, and the Arts (ASMSA). I had recently acquired the first computer I could call my own, an Emachines laptop (because I didn’t know any better). There were two main reasons I wanted a laptop: because I figured I would need one at school, and because I wanted a laptop to write on. I had done some writing on the family computer in the past, but for some reason the static environment in the computer room just didn’t do much for my muse. The fact that the computer was running Windows 3.1 probably didn’t help a great deal.

At the time, I was on my first read-through of The Wheel of Time. It got me thinking. I’d always wanted to be a novelist, right? What better way to get my start than a massive multi-volume epic like the one I was currently engrossed in? (I got better, I promise.) The first chapter of the story (entitled The Storms of Heaven, a name that sounds a heck of a lot like Jordan’s The Fires of Heaven) went great. But after that I found myself suffering from a pretty big problem: the second chapter. I concluded that I needed to develop the world more to continue on the main story, and started up a short story called Ghost Ship in order to do just that.

Around the time Ghost Ship hit 10,000 words, I accepted that maybe it was going farther than the so-called “main story.” In retrospect it wasn’t that bad: the original draft of Ghost Ship reached 11,783 words, while Storms reached 8,803 words, 7166 of which were in the first chapter.

In retrospect, my problem with Storms wasn’t what I thought it was. I kept trying to come back to it because I loved the characters in it – I still do, in fact. They’re neat characters, with a lot of potential, even if the old version of Rose does trip some Mary Sue-sensors in my head now. And I’m happy with the premise. The problem was that a bunch of neat characters, and a means for getting them in the same place, isn’t enough to carry a novel – much less a series. What I needed was a plot, and that, in a nutshell, is why Ghost Ship beat the socks off of The Storms of Heaven. Going into it I thought, “I need a clear idea of what this story is about, so I can get it written at short-story length.”  (Look how that turned out.) And if most of the characters were cardboard cutouts, if literally every other scene was solid exposition, well, at least the thing got written. By the end of that summer it was too late for Ghost Ship to fit into a short story, but it could have been a decent novella. I was almost done with it as such when I left for ASMSA. It was probably within three or four thousand words of the end – and there it would stay, because by golly, ASMSA keeps you busy. What time I wasn’t devoting to schoolwork (and hanging out with large numbers of fellow geeks for the first time in my life), I was devoting to the process of meeting and falling in love with my then-future wife. I would occasionally pull out Ghost Ship to tinker with, and I made dozens of false starts on other works, but it would be quite a while before I got serious writing done again.  Years, in fact — because the next serious writing I did was when I picked up Ghost Ship and began expanding it into the novel that is now Derelict.

Let me back up, though, to that summer before ASMSA. I think it bears studying, since the hypothetical topic of this post is my writing process. Let’s look at how I worked during that summer that I got so much done.

First, I didn’t have anything resembling internet. I had access to it at school and the public library, but not at home. I had plenty of books, but I don’t really think of those as a distraction from writing – ultimately, they tend to work as inspiration. (When I’m reading a lot, I want to write. When I’m playing a lot of video games, I want to create them. When I watch a lot of anime, I want to write, score, and animate one. For the sake of my sanity and that of those around me, I try to do lots of reading.)

Second, my schedule was essentially free. Most days I stayed home all day while my folks went to work. Sometimes, probably about once a week, I would go into town with them. But most of the time I just stayed home. Given a completely free schedule, I would usually settle in to start writing at the kitchen table with my laptop around the time my parents went to bed – about 8-10 PM. I would write until my mother woke up at four the next morning, spend some time with her in the morning, then maybe write another hour or two before going to sleep for the day. I’d wake up in the afternoon, often with an hour or two to spare until Mom and Dad got home, and I’d pretty much just do other stuff for a while, often involving hanging out with them.

And I got a lot of writing done. In retrospect, given that this process went on for around a month, and I got around 20K words written, that means I wasn’t actually churning out words at a very rapid pace – writing anywhere from six to ten hours a night, I got less than a thousand words a day in general. It wasn’t my typing speed – I was easily in the mid-60 WPM range at the time, and I’m not any more. It was mostly that I just dawdled around in my writing. Didn’t stress out about it, didn’t try to force it, had all the time in the world to write however much I wanted to and pretty much took my time. For years, I would look back on that summer – my last free one – with longing, as a sort of idyllic time when life was good. In some ways, that represents my ideal writing process: write by night, sleep by day, perform some human interaction in the afternoon, get paid enough for my work to not worry about anything else.

I didn’t expect this to take so long. Possibly because I didn’t think about it too much, who knows. Either way, I’ll save the rest of this for next Friday. (Look at me, I have a buffer!)

Current music: Better than Ezra, Greatest Hits album. I have it because of their song Desperately Wanting, which is rather nifty. As it turns out, it’s not the only one.

Programming and Text Adventures

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

I’ve loved computer programming for quite a while now.  I don’t know exactly how old I was when I first started programming in QBASIC, but I know there was a book on BASIC programming I checked out from my school library over and over again sometime in elementary school.  I didn’t have a way to write the programs in it at the time, but I loved reading it.  A couple of years later I started on QBASIC. (You don’t need line numbers?  The line numbers don’t have to be in order?)  Then I got a computer that wasn’t hopelessly out of date and went off to ASMSA, where I learned Java, my language of choice since (though Python is pretty neat).  Most of my class notes for the next couple of years included snippets of Java code.

So programming’s been part of my life for a while now.  Sadly, I’m kind of out of date.  Since I started serious work on my writing last year, a lot of my other hobbies have fallen by the wayside (notably not including gaming).  Programming’s one of these, and it kind of makes me sad sometimes.

I don’t know where I’m going with this.  (Am I allowed to admit that?)  But I have to wrap it up somehow, right?  Oh, hey, I remember now!  I’ve been being attacked by programming ideas again lately.  Mostly I’ve just been jotting them down for later reference, but a couple have stuck with me.  One of these has to do with Inform.

Inform is this lovely little programming language I discovered . . . four or five years ago at ASMSA.  (Whoah.  That long?)  In short, it’s a programming language designed for writing text adventures, and if you don’t know what those are I’m not going to spend a lot of time explaining them in this post.  It’s been a while since I played with Inform, and apparently there’s been a major upgrade to the language since I last did (as in, apparently the coding is intended to be in natural language now — whoah — but I’ve not yet toyed with the new version.)  Nonetheless, if I write a text adventure any time soon, it’ll be in Inform.  And I just might, because I have a nifty idea.

I love indie games.  I love books.  I’m a writer.  I’m a programmer.  Why not smash these together a bit?  I have an idea for a text adventure prequel to a duology that’s been kicking around the back of my head for a while now.  I think it’d be neat — the text adventure available free on this site, with some references back and forth between it and the duology so that neither is necessary to enjoy the other, but they enhance each other.

That’s about it for tonight.  I bid you all well.

Current Music: Creedence Clearwater Revival, Bad Moon Rising.  I’m listening to a Pandora station seeded on Johnny Cash right now.  I love Johnny Cash.