Writing Workshop Mapping Exercise

I’ve been taking this writing class called Mugging the Muse by Holly Lisle. (http://HowToThinkSideways.com) One lesson has us think of a new story idea by drawing a map.

Here’s mine.

Image

After you have some things like cities, mountains, lakes, oceans on the map, you start naming things, coming up with ideas about who lives there, what are they all about, and so on.

I’ve developed a whole Fantasy story from this map with people and 2000 year timelines and wars and social strata. Pretty exciting. I don’t know when I’ll write it but if you ever wanted to know the thought process behind writing a story. Here’s just one.

Flash Fiction Friday: New Life

Another one of the stories I worked on while taking the Holly Lisle class: How to write Flash Fiction that Doesn’t Suck. (https://howtothinksideways.com/)  I’m not happy with my title to this one. What do you think? What would you name this story?

New Life

“Jean, you really did it?” my best friend Joy asked, wide-eyed with surprise.

I nodded, heart thumping. She’s the only one I told.

“What are your parents going to say?” she covered her mouth, glancing quickly around the room. “What will the pastor say?” she whispered.

I knew what they’d say. Mama would retreat into silence and Papa would erupt. I tossed my braid over my shoulder. “I don’t care,” I sniffed. “There’s more to life than marrying the man the community picks for me and having his babies.”

Joy looked over her shoulder at the door. “But you can’t just…leave!”

It all crystallized for me right then. “I don’t want to end up like my mother! She never talks, Joy. Except to call us for meals or tell us what chore needs to be done next. No! There’s a whole world out there,” I pointed out the window. “And I’m going to see it.”

Two months later Papa called from the parlor, “Jean!”

It was time to make supper and Mama said I cooked so well, I made most of our meals. “Yes, Papa,” I walked into the room, wiping my hands on a towel. I froze. Mama was sitting down, hands folded and eyes downcast. I’d never seen her sitting down this time of day before.

“Come here,” he said. I loved my parents but his tone of voice made me hesitate. He pulled a paper out of his pocket. “Did you send this stranger,” he shook the paper, shouting, “a letter?”

In a soft voice I answered, “Yes, Papa.”

His face grew red and his voice quiet. “You shame us. Writing to strangers! Outsiders!” He dropped the letter and his hands to his lap. He shook his head. “What do you say to this?”

The look on his face told me he didn’t understand. “I want to see the world, Papa. I want to be more than a farm wife.” Mama’s head came up, tears flowing down her face.

Papa burst out, “Are we not good enough for you?”

“No…no, I just want something more.”

I spent the rest of the week in my room, staring out over the horizon. Mama brought me all the bread I could eat and plenty of water.

On Sunday I was made to stand in front of the congregation, Papa and Mama behind me.  After a long sermon about the wickedness of the world and the weakness of women, I was excommunicated. Papa drove me to the bus stop giving me my letter, ticket and $100. We stood quietly until it was time to board. As I climbed the steps, I heard him say, “Be safe.”

At the meeting with the director, he looked me up and down, and even though I’d cut my braid off, I still wasn’t much to look at. “Can you cook?”

Standing in the grocery store line, Joy noticed a tabloid picture of her friend, Jean. She was named Hollywood’s best personal chef.

The End

497 Words

Find more of the Forward Motion Flash Friday Group here:http://www.fmwriters.com/flash.html

July’s NaNo Challenge Progress

I’m eight days into July and 13,000 words into my July Camp National Novel Writers Month, called July Camp NaNo http://campnanowrimo.org for short. I’m also checking out another community, called July Novel Writing Month http://julnowrimo.com/. I have writing friends working in each site and some, like me, recording our progress on both sites. Each site is a community, (see my post on July 18th on Community!) dedicated to helping the writer get through a challenge to write 50,000 words in the month.
So far, I’ve been writing about 2,000 words per day on my 2nd book in the series I used to call TriPoint Station and have since changed to Gulliver Station. CJ Cherryh wouldn’t have been threatened at all by my use of her name for a space station but why cause her any embarrassment. There are four books in this series. I wrote the 4th book first, in November 2012. I know, but I hadn’t planned for it to be a 4th book, I was hoping it would be a 1st book in a completely different series. After I wrote it, I realized I didn’t have series material for my protagonist. But I was captivated by the space station world I had just developed. Go figure.
Anyway, I wrote book 1 in April, Gulliver Station: A New Start (all titles subject to change.) And now book 2, Gulliver Station: The Challenge. Book 3 will be drafted in November: Gulliver Station: Revolution. The 4th book is called Stories from Gulliver station. It contains a novelette and some short stories. None of the drafted books have been revised yet. I’m still hemming and hawing over exactly how I want them to come out, as well as still struggling to learn my craft enough to revise them properly. I hope to start publishing in January 2014. We’ll see how that turns out.
Speaking of publishing, I have my newest book, Recall, up on a promotion on Smashwords.com. For a limited time, it will be free to download. Go to http://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=Connie+Cockrell and use coupon code SW100. Go today. This promotion won’t last long.

Merry-Go-Round Blog Tour: Writing Characters

Characters.

I think this is one of the hardest things to master as a writer. I want to write a Beowolf, Jack Ryan or Pyanfar Chanur. Instead I get half dimensional talking-heads, mouthing platitudes and engaging in dull conversation. I write characters that make a Mr. Milktoast look like Superman.

I’ve just started reading the Janet Evanovich series about Stephanie Plum. I can’t wait to get to the next book. Stephanie Plum and her supporting cast of characters are real, and I want to find out what trouble they get into next. Shoot, I want to move to New Jersey to meet her.

I want to write great characters like that; real people who my reader can’t get enough of. Characters that can carry my novel from start to finish and aren’t ever, ever boring. I’ve got a long way to go. Sometimes, I actually write a scene where my character’s personality shines through. The character, for just an instant, is real. I can’t wait until I can do that with the same skill as Tom Clancy, C.J. Cherryh or Janet Evanovich.

The Merry-Go-Round Blog Tour is sponsored by the website Forward Motion (http://www.fmwriters.com). The tour is you, the reader, travelling the world from author’s blog to author’s blog. There are all sorts of writers at all stages in their writing career, so there’s always something new and different to enjoy. If you want to get to know the nearly thirty other writers check out the rest of the tour at http://merrygoroundtour.blogspot.com!  Up next: Jean Schara!

Status of May’s Goals

May has been hectic to say the least. I’m not sure I even remember everything but here’s my recollection of how I did.

– Write 4 Flash Fiction Friday Stories (one per week)

I wrote more than 4 but missed one Friday posting.

– Update my Blog and Facebook Fan page (Both are titled ConniesRandomThoughts) weekly

I updated regularly.

– May Story A Day

Finished with 12 stories, two over my goal. Not every one is a gem but I’ll set them aside and one day I may actually fix them up and publish them.

– Submit Recall to Publisher or Self-Publish

I did finish Recall and on May 27th, self published it. I designed the cover and my hubby gets credit for the photography on the cover. I’m pretty excited because I think it’s the best story I’ve written yet. It can be found for purchase on CreateSpace, Smashwords, and Amazon.com.

– Begin revision of TriPoint

I actually started my revision a couple of months ago but with the April Camp NaNo and the May Story A Day, I let it drop. I’ll pick it back up now and try and get it done in June.

Other stuff not in the plan.

1. Signed up for and completed a Holly Lisle Flash Fiction course. That generated 5 flash fiction stories for May Story a Day.

2. Entered a Holly Lisle short story contest and actually had my story, A Taste of Copper, accepted for her anthology! It will be out sometime in July.

3. Entered a Scribophile contest and was not selected as the winner but I had enough confidence in the story to enter it in the Writers of the World contest for the 3rd quarter. I won’t hear a thing until late September.

4. Today I cleared the wreckage from my computer desk, putting things away and digging out my TriPoint story to continue its revision. Now I’m ready to get serious about finishing that revision and outlining my July Camp NaNo story.  I’ve signed up on a different site, http://julnowrimo.com/ for my July efforts. Several of my Forward Motion friends love the site so I thought I’d try it out for the next book in the TriPoint series.

Here’s hoping your May was productive and your June will be a success!

Flash Fiction Friday: By the Water

100 Word Challenge: …a picture of two little girls peaking over a rail fence at the river on the other side…? I’m going to call it By the Water. I first saw this challenge over at Peter Denton’s site. Head there immediately (after reading my post, obviously.) Originally, the prompts are over at Julia’s Place.

Note: a story of exactly one hundred words is called a drabble. They can be fun.

By the Water

“When’s it comin’,” she whispered.

“Soon,” Amanda said. At eight, she was more worldly than her little sister.

“Will there be princesses?” Chelsea asked, standing on tiptoe.

“And fairies,” Amanda pulled herself higher, both hands on the top rail trying to see around the bend of the river.

“Does the parade come every day?”

“No,” Amanda shook her head. “Just mid-summer’s day.” She stopped stretching and turned to her sister. “And only if it’s sunny, like today.”

Chelsea’s eyes went wide. “What if it rains?”

Face gone serious, “they don’t have the parade.”

“Oh,” she grabbed the top rail, waiting.

How’d I do on my April Goals

I’m a little late with this. I like to post on Monday, but this will do.  So how did I do with my April writing goals?

– Write 4 Flash Fiction Friday Stories (one per week)

I wrote 6 and scheduled them to release on www.ConniesRandomThoughts.wordpress.com because I needed to keep my head clear for working on the April Camp NaNo. More on this in a minute.

– Update my Blog and Facebook Fan page (Both are titled ConniesRandomThoughts) weekly

Done!

– Finalize Recall if I haven’t already done so

Done. In May I need to format it (for both book and ebook) and design a cover for it.

– Outline more Short Stories

Done. They’re ready for May’s Story A Day.

Other stuff.

1. When I developed this list I didn’t know April would be a NaNo month. So, I drafted the 1st of my TriPoint Space Station series (the 3rd book was done in November 2012). There will be 4 books in this series. I may have some short stories for this station as well that may come out as a book. I have to see how it all goes.

2. I completed the April NaNo, 50,000 words! It was a tough one. I couldn’t get my head into the story.

3. Umm, that’s it. I was mainly focused on NaNo pretty much to the exclusion of everything else.

Let’s see how May turns out!

April’s Camp NaNo

For those of you who have been following my blog I’ve mentioned National Novel Writing Month, NaNoWriMo or NaNo, before. In April and in July, the organization offers Camp NaNo, just because we’re (writers that is) not crazy enough.

Anyway, I had this idea for a series. Stories about a fictional space station. I’ve been writing what I consider to the the first book of the series this month as part of the Camp NaNo challenge. (Writing 50,000 words in one month.) I’m not happy with my book. It seemed fine enough in outline but it’s not working. Yesterday is the first time in the 20,000 words I’ve written so far that I actually had a writing day that wasn’t a drag.

This is the first time since participating in the NaNo challenge (this is my 4th one!)  that I’ve had such a poor experience. I already know the problem. The book is boring. It’s cerebral, not much action. I’m growing as an author if I can figure that out for myself. So I’m happy in that regard. I’m going to keep writing this book, because I know it can be a compelling story. Yesterday was a good start.  I just have to keep that action and excitement going. Then in a couple of months, go into revisions with a heavy hand to improve the first half.

In the meantime, I just reissued my first book, The Bad Seed. My inexperience was obvious when I put it out. I’ve spent the last two weeks reformatting it so that it now looks more professional. It should be available on Kindle tomorrow. I’ve priced it fairly low, (the ebook) at $2.99. If you buy it, I’d appreciate a review on Amazon.com.

Oh, and happy Tax Day!

How I did in March

It’s time for another monthly update on my writing goals. Here’s what I said I’d be working on and what I actually accomplished.

– Write 4 Flash Fiction Friday Stories (one per week)

Done. All five Fridays have a story posted. You can see them here on this blog.

– Update my Blog and Facebook Fan page (Both are titled ConniesRandomThoughts) weekly

Also done.

– Continue revision of Recall

As you may remember, I finished my revision of Recall last month. I did start my revision of TriPoint Station: Hard Choices. I wrote this draft last November. It prompted me to go for a series centered around TriPoint Station. Today is the 1st of April and I’m starting my month long Camp NaNo where I’ll start the 1st book in that series. See below for more info.

– Outline more Short Stories

Done. I not only outlined but drafted 7 flash fictions to post each Friday this month. Some of those are going to get a longer treatment in May for the May Story A Day Challenge.

Things not on the goal list:

1. I purchased the program Scrivener from the Literature and Latte site. I have been playing with it, a little. I plan on drafting my April Camp NaNo story in it. We’ll see how it goes.

2. I completed my outline for TriPoint Station: A New Start, in the new Scrivener Program. I’ll see how I like using it for drafting my novels.

3. I participated in the Merry-go-round blog tour in March. I’ll do the same in April.

4. I released a small e-book called A Trio of Animal Tales. Also put out a small book of the same. You can find it on Amazon.com, Smashwords, Kobo, Barnes and Noble and a few other sites.

So that’s pretty much it for March. It was both too long and too short. April brings Camp NaNo, where I’ll draft my next book in the TriPoint Station series. I like using the NaNo’s for these novel drafting exercises. They’re regularly scheduled (the next one is in July) so I have time to outline the book and be ready for a steady round of writing. There’s enough time between them for me to revise the previous book. So, for the way I write, the NaNo’s are very useful.

For those who don’t know about National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo or NaNo for short), it’s a challenge to writers. A personal challenge, can the writer write every day for 30 days and complete a 50,000+ word novel? I’ve done it three times now. (November 2011, August 2012 and November 2012) So I’m excited to get going on it for April 2013.

Don’t forget to come back on Friday. There’ll be a new Flash Fiction for you to enjoy.

Flash Fiction Friday – 100 + 5 word challenge: My Third Date

100 Word Challenge: …what does it taste like…?

I first saw this over at Peter Denton’s site. Head there immediately (after reading my post, obviously.) Originally, the prompts are over at Julia’s Place, and last week’s prompt for the 100 Word Challenge for Grown Ups was:

…what does it taste like…

So here I am with a prompt and here’s the story I came up with.

My Third Date

It was my third date with this guy. I never ate anything like this.

“You’ll like it,” he said, pointing out the pepperoni and mushroom pizza.

I tried to smell it, still under the warming lights. These were fresh mushrooms, browned and shriveled looking from the oven heat. I wrinkled my nose, “Aren’t they fungus?”

“I’ll get a slice and you can try a bite or two, if you don’t like it, you can get something else.”

“What does it taste like?”

His mouth opened and his eyes rolled and shoulders shrugged, “Like mushrooms.”

So I tried it. Pepperoni and mushroom pizza is my favorite.