Showing posts with label projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label projects. Show all posts

Sunday, December 25, 2022

Moonless Update: Royal Road and Happy Holidays!!

 Merry Chrysler, my dudes :)

Royal Road Updates:

I wanted to expand on the places you can find Moonless. Now, you can find it on RoyalRoad, a website for posting fiction content. There's going to be some lag between r/RedditSerials and Royal Road as I gradually sort things out--I'm currently compiling multiple sections into beefier chapters so updates look less piecemeal on Royal Road's platform.

Writing Progress:

I've been struggling with whether or not to release certain sections of Moonless because of my worries that they aren't decent enough quality to be worth reading. Hence, uh, delays on three sections from deleting multiple drafts.

"Look," I tell myself, "Your goal with Moonless is to finish a book whether or not it's good." Most romances are dribbling romance, and that's why we like them, okay?

Maybe a year and a half from now, Moonless will finally finished. Or the next decade. Some authors didn't start publishing until their 40s, right?

Monday, August 29, 2022

Update: Moonless Without You



 “Do you know what a lone wolf is?”
“Somebody who… is alone?” I vaguely answered.
“Somebody who’s searching,” he responded. “What are you searching for, Collin?”
-Moonless Without You, Part 9

My sympathy goes out to everyone who's started school—highschool and college. I'm a returning post-baccalaureate in Pre-Nursing, and the program I've gone with has me starting with the freshman basics. Going from 400 level child psychology class back to a 101 Psyx, well. Lucifer probably had an easier time falling from grace.

After a two-week hiatus for the next part of Moonless, the series will pick up again this Friday (September 2nd). My main motivator driving me forward is knowing people have been reading my work, and genuinely enjoying. No big surprise if you're a writer, too.

If you have a Reddit account, I appreciate upvotes and comments on my r/RedditSerials posts, since that's one of the firmest ways of communicating to an author you like their work. It takes only a second, if not less!

🌕 | 🌗 | 🌑

Onto another topic: Some personal notes on what I've recently learned about writing.

I want to share with you some of the writing tactics I've picked up in the past few weeks since enlightenment has been long a journey. I've been writing for over ten years starting in middle school (with, uh... fanfiction), so I don't consider myself naive. But expanding from short stories to long-form has been a novel (pun) challenge.

To bridge that gap, I've been going to writing panels during various conventions, ranging from a comicon-style local convention (Miscon in Missoula), to the largest furry convention in the world (Midwest Furfest in Chicago). My biggest surprise, however, is that some of the most valuable information I've picked up from panels aren't just writing related, but discussions on the psychology of stress and therapists' personal experience in their careers. Characters are illusions of people, and if you want readers to fall for your tricks, you have to have some truth in your characters' thought processes and problems. As it happens, highschoolers have a lot of problems.

There are two plot structures of interest I've been experimenting with to organize key events in my story: the W Plot Structure, and Dramatica's Plot Structure. Both have helped me come up with future events to fill in gaps in the middle of the story where things can get a little boring—a very common issue in the writing community, referred to as a "sagging" or "mushy" middle.

You can find a summary of both plot structures here. Course, there's also your typical Dromedary camel 🐪 hump structure (and I call it that because I think it's funny to contrast with imagining the W plot structure as Bactrian camel 🐫 humps), which Moonless follows the most. Things are just getting started for Collin, anyways, so it won't be too long until things fall off a cliff and start to hit the shitter.

I've attached a map of my recent efforts, so you can get an idea of my learning process—the W plot structure applies more to Collin's relationships (you can see the shape best in Simon's), while the main plot is still a freakin' mess of events.

My ambitious dream is that once I finish the serial, I can do an overhaul targeting the story's order of events, subtracting weak scenes, and buffing up scenes that can delve more effectively into each character's portrayal. I plan on trying to use Dramatica's Plot Structure to cut down on lulls:

initial action --> decisions --> action 2 --> decisions --> action 3 --> decisions --> crisis action --> decisions --> final action

There's a whole notebook full of my plotting junk—insert iceberg quote here—mapping out the serial nearly to the end, to try and keep things on track; no writer's block excuses going forward.



Somehow, my mapping of "chronological events of good/bad experiences for Collin" is a lot more optimistic than the story's W Act plot structure.

For comparison, here's a humpy 🐪 map of the plot structure in Stephenie Meyer's Twilight (SPOILERS)

(Credit to NaNoWriMo's blog)

Currently more in line with Moonless' plot shape, so I feel less bad that my story doesn't have as much as a W/M shape.

As for program advice I've received from writers, there's plenty of options to find something comfortable--conventional and unconventional. I've spoken to writers from the late 1990s to early 2000s who religious confessed to sticking to the Windows XP versions of Word since it's what they learned first. Two writers of high fantasy that worked with publishers such as Tor told me their luck lied with (to my surprise) Microsoft Excel. Plenty of friends online rely on a maze of Google Doc folders because they trust it to keep their files safe. Some swear by USB drives. Some posterboards covered in sticky notes that look like a murder investigation from a distance. And, on a single occasion (in my grandmother's case) a library of floppy discs. Yes, floppy discs she used to save parts of her drafts on a genealogy book.

My personal choice is Scrivener--it works offline, easily backs up to cloud services like OneDrive (free with Windows), is friendly towards organized chaos, and costs far less than services such as Campfire. You can export your work easily to PDFs, Word/Open Office files, etc. And if you're smarter than I am, you can pull off exports that'll make your novel e-Reader friendly. Scrivener is generally $49, $41.65 for students/teachers, but is almost always heavily discounted for those that complete a NaNoWriMo event. I believe mine was 40% off.

An example of Moonless' Scrivener file.

That's it for my unwarranted writing advice. Thank you so much with accompanying me on my writing journey, and hope to hear from even more of you guys soon :)

"[...] consistency is one of the keys to longevity. When you are consistent people know what they are going 
to get, and that's the foundation for having a long career. -Jamal Crawford.

"Key to longevity... drinking embalming fluid every year." -Angus Young.
Cofounder, lead guitarist, and songwriter for rock band AC/DC.

Friday, June 3, 2022

THE SERIAL BEGINS: Moonless Without You - a young, LGBTQ+ Werewolf Romance

 


Queer, werewolf high schoolers with relationship, school, and full moon problems. What's not to love?

My newest project, Moonless Without You, is now posted on Reddit Serials--a forum specializing in serialized fiction. Not to be confused with the Serial Killer Reddit, of course.

Moonless is a focus on a queer werewolf teenager's love life in a world where being the werewolf is the norm. This is going to be my second attempt at keeping a schedule with a chapter-by-chapter story, aiming for a weekly to biweekly release on Fridays.

Here's the premise:

Collin Thomas is a high-schooler living in a society where being a werewolf is the norm.

A junior in school, he’s the new wolf in town, moving from the small backwater of Sulphur Springs to the sprawling urban center of Garden City. Attending East Garden High, his survival instincts drive him to blend into the crowd and find a new pack as quickly as possible.

As he mulls over his options, Collin keeps running into classmate Simon Lovett. Simon’s a loner, and as intrigued as Collin is in the boy’s enigma of behavior, every time Collin tries to get close he slips away. Nobody knows if Simon’s part of a pack, and if he is, it's a mystery who they are. No one's even seen him shift before.

Collin knows better than to give chase when he’s got safer choices in front of him. The more often the two meet, the more things seem to go wrong. Yet, of all the lessons Collin's got on his plate, staying away proves to be the hardest one to learn.

You can find Part 1 posted here. Occasional story updates will be on my Twitter--follow if you want to keep up with every part released.

Also, happy Pride Month guys :))))

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Writing Progress: September 2021

 There are times where I like to remind myself progress is progress, even if its a couple sentences written over the course of an entire week. This is, uh, one of those times.

Each project is followed by a word count in the title, if applicable.

CURRENT PROJECTS

Super Cool Cat Mech Fighting Short Fiction Story Hells Yeah! (0)
Some short story having to do with cats. Intended for Felis Futura. Deadline 31 Dec 2021.

Progress: Brainstorming Stage
Primary To-Do:
  • Outline
  • Come up with a damn title
The Prince Who Married a Lake (3,306)
Styled after folk tales, a prince tries to evade getting married, despite the efforts of the king, queen, and the kingdom's royal advisors.

Progress: 970 words this month (3200 words total). Probably around 45% into the rough draft.
Primary To-Do:
  • Finish outlining the second half
  • Come up with 3 trials
The Squid Wife (3,306) Draft Complete!
A tale about two lovers and a cursed sea beast.

Progress: Draft completed. 3,306 words this month (3,306 total).
Primary To-Do:
  • Finish first round of editing
  • Beta Read
Death has Grown Noble (25,768)
Summary:
    The kingdom of Radelle has finally reached a golden age of peace--its rival country to the north has been left in ruins, the wildlings to the west have given up the Old Ways or been culled, and the free guilds of the East are shackled to the Crown through a series of diplomatic marriages and armed threats. The throne has never held so much power before. In its long shadow, however, hides new enemies; enemies not at the gate, but within, and growing. The heart of the kingdom rots with greed, pride, and hubris.
    A thane by the name of Byrnie has been sent west, far away from growing turmoil in the hound's homeland, carrying secrets sought by the kingdom's Courts that will either save or forsake the realm. A mouse noblesse seeks out the truth of her family, only to fall into the maws of danger during a delicate dance between usurpers and her own court. And, an unwilling blacksmith's son is caught in a growing uprising spreading across the Collar; the horse is given the choice to either escape with his family and live another day as a coward, or fight with his countryfolk who fervently pursue reckless, honorable deaths.
    Either the Stars will save them, or leave them to the same fate their country has long deserved.

Draft: Google Drive: DGN Folder. Due to the nature/size of the draft, I'll upload the most recent PDF/word file in the linked, shared folder.
Progress: 25,768 words total. About 60% of the way thru Part 1.
Primary To-Do:
  • Get up to the current point beta-read
  • Edit and polish Chapter 8
  • Figure out where I misplaced the current outline
  • Write more in-depth character sheets, including for characters not introduced until Part 2
  • Finish Chapter 8, where Blanca forms a better relationship with Morose, and her cousin Macare becomes more involved in her life.
  • Start on that poster board for planning.
  • Have cover art commissioned by a friend (friend contacted, waiting in queue).

Amaretto
A story about an identified-as-male college student who uses VR to express themselves as a popular female persona known as Amaretto. Super rough in the works. Will probably end up as one of those stories I throw up online without a care about the grammar or worry about the quality--this'll be a project I finish for the sake of finishing a story. Also practice outlining and finishing a novel-length work

Progress: ??
Primary To-Do:
  • Rewrite in 1st person
  • Outline better
  • Find some beta readers (if possible)

PLANNED PROJECTS

  • A third story to go with my Senja and the Sea Hound, and The Prince Who Married a Lake works. I want to have a mini little set of folk-style stores. It's called "The Squid Wife," and the first draft is complete!
  • A scifi story that'll fit in with a fur scifi anthology I came across. Something about aliens and species-ismmmm.

FINISHED PROJECTS

  • Senja and the Sea Hound (unsubmitted)--consider submitting to Pirating Pups. Submissions open October 1 to Nov 30, 2021.
  • Elksbridge (unpublished)
  • (un)Life is Hard (accepted for publishing, waiting to be published)
  • Biscuits (accepted for publishing, waiting to be published)