Category: Writing

Mourning Marie – Short Story Sunday

Mourning Marie – Short Story Sunday

This is another short story I wrote as a character’s backstory, and it’s even sadder than The Dust Thief, so be prepared. (Change in tenses was intentional. Don’t throw me under the bus for that, please.)

 

“Alick! We’re going to the hospital!”

Alick recognized his father’s voice and his eyes widened. It was time! His mother was in labor!

He dashed through the halls, not even bothering to put on shoes, and threw open the door, nearly forgetting to close it behind him.

The car was already pulling out Continue reading “Mourning Marie – Short Story Sunday”

Farewell to September

Farewell to September

Another month is done, and NaNoWriMo is only a month away. Hooray! But before we get into prep for NaNoWriMo season, let’s backtrack and see what I did in September.

September’s Writing

Over the course of September I’ve written 46,865 all totaled, 20,621 of which was on The Last Assassin, my current WIP. I also wrote Continue reading “Farewell to September”

Weekly Writing Update – September 24-30, 2017

September 24 – Word Count: 481

Well… That’s a lot of words. I wrote a couple of blog posts that day (and apparently didn’t copy them into the program that I use to track my words. Oops), but I did about nothing on drafting my novel.

September 25 – Word Count: 535

Another blogging-centric day. I came up with a list of blog posts to schedule and liked some people as my Facebook page, and that was all. Although I did figure out a couple of trouble spots to fix in my novel, which is always good to do.

September 26 – Word Count: 606

Hey, two palindromes in a row! At least that’s cool. On Tuesday I replaced the images for the majority of my blog posts and pinned them to my Pinterest account. (I apologize for the disarray of my boards. Pinterest decided to experiment with something and then didn’t clean up the mess it left behind. I’m working on hopefully getting it fixed.)

September 27 – Word Count: 448

Wednesday I started working on editing my Pinterest account, adding descriptions to my boards, secreting the ones that I didn’t want public, changing my account name from Autumn Meadowlark to R.M. Archer, and changing my profile picture so that everything matches my Facebook page.

September 28 – Word Count: 445

Wow. I did… absolutely nothing on Thursday. Except emailing Pinterest to get their mess fixed.

September 29 – Word Count: 465

I wrote a scene of The Last Assassin yesterday! Hooray! I doubt anyone would understand a triple rhyme, but someone may. (Sorry, booknerdiness. Don’t mind me.) I also copied a lot of worldbuilding information for The Dark War Trilogy into my binder for easier access and made myself a NaNoWriMo prep checklist. My hand was sore afterwards.

September 30 – Word Count:1,931

Hey! I actually wrote something of substance! Specifically, almost a chapter of The Last Assassin. I’m glad to finally be being productive again, and hopefully that’ll continue. This week has been massively unproductive.

 

Guest Character Interview: Emma White

Guest Character Interview: Emma White

Emma is the main character from my friend Mandy’s book Echoes, which is coming out on October 16th. I highly recommend it, because it’s awesome and her writing style is beautiful and you should totally read it. It’s just spectacular and I need to know what happens next! *coughs a bit sheepishly* Anyway, I should probably stop fangirling and get on to the actual interview…

 

Emma: *Slips silently into chair and fidgets with her shirt sleeves, looking jittery and nervous as she waits for the questions*

Interviewer: How are you?

Emma: *Tugs her sleeves down over her fingers and twists the material as she blinks at the floor* …am okay. *Oddly paused/timed*

Interviewer: Shall we get started?

Emma: *Keeps her gaze down on the floor and just blinks silently, not answering, since she figures they’re going to start if she says yes or not*

Interviewer: What is your name?

Emma: …Emma… White.

Interviewer: How old are you?

Emma: *Twists her sleeves a little tighter around her fingers, hands trembling a little and not lifting her eyes from the floor* …I…don’t know. Natan says… maybe sixteen…

Interviewer: Do you have any siblings?

Emma: …Daniel.

Interviewer: What is your job?

Emma: *Shifts on the chair, blinking a little faster and pulls her arms closer to herself* …work…on ranches… anywhere can…

Interviewer: Are you an introvert or extrovert?

Emma: *Lifts her head a little to look at him, obviously not knowing what those are or what they mean*

Interviewer: What is your favorite food?

Emma: …anything is…okay.

Interviewer: What is your favorite color?

Emma: *Arms are shaking a little more now and she draws back into the chair a little more* …don’t…have one.

Interviewer: Do you prefer movies or books?

Emma: *Shakes her head and twists her sleeves tighter*

Interviewer: What is your favorite animal?

Emma: *Mouths more than actually says* Horses…

Interviewer: Why?

Emma: …kind…

Interviewer: Is there a job you’d rather have than the one you have now?

Emma: …no…

Interviewer: What are your hobbies?

Emma: …hobbies? *Obviously doesn’t know what that is either*

Interviewer: What traits do you look for in a potential husband?

Emma: *Stares blankly at the floor*

Interviewer: Which of these is most important to you: Kindness, intelligence, or bravery?

Emma: *Lifts her head a little to peek at him, a tiny flash of confusion passing over her face* …are all…the same…thing.

Interviewer: And honesty or selflessness?

Emma: *Forehead pinches a little and she shakes her head* …are…the same.

Interviewer: What is something you can never leave the house without?

Emma: *Shifts on her chair, pulling arms close to herself and not looking like she understand* …what… house?

Interviewer: *looks rather concerned* That’s the last question. Thank you for your time.

Emma: *Holds her arms against her stomach, wrapped in her sleeves, as she slowly gets up and slips out*

 

Related Posts: Book Review: Echoes by Miranda Marie

Writing Resource Roundup

Writing Resource Roundup

So I’m going to do something a little bit new and put together a roundup of online writing resources that I’ve found helpful, and hopefully you will too. All of the following are free unless marked.

Brandon Sanderson’s lectures at Brigham Young University. I’ve linked the first of twelve YouTube videos. I’ve only watched the first three so far, but they were very good. He talks about the main aspects of writing – characters, setting, and plot – and what he calls “the box,” which I haven’t gotten to yet.

ShaelinWrites. This is a writing YouTube channel that I follow. She uses occasional cuss words, but not enough that I’m super uncomfortable recommending her videos. I would warn you that in the videos featuring her brother, her brother drops an F-bomb in at least one of them, so I would warn against those (which is unfortunate, because the one in which I distinctly remember he used that was a really good video aside from that.) She talks about a lot of different writing topics, and I’ve found almost all of the videos I’ve watched to be helpful.

Fighter’s Block. This is a writing sprint website. You set the number of words you want to write and it’s set up in a game format so that if you stop writing your health points decline. The monster’s health points are the words you want to write.

myWriteClub. This is a good goal-tracking site. It has graphs a bit like the NaNoWriMo one, and you can set your own deadlines and word counts. You can also measure chapters, scenes, to-do items, pages, percent, or lines. There’s also an “other” option that you could use for hours, paragraphs, etc.

WriteDeck. This is another writing sprint website, but instead of racing yourself you’re racing others. I find this one really motivating because you can see your opponents’ progress up at the top of the screen. At one point I sprinted with a friend of mine and was literally winded at the end because I was trying to keep up with her. (Which I did do, by the way. I felt very accomplished. XD) This one also sets word count, as opposed to time. (Update: This no longer exists)

NaNoWriMo goal tracker. NaNoWriMo has a new goal tracker on their website that’s accessible through either the “My NaNoWriMo” dropdown or as one of the tabs when you’re on your profile. It works roughly the same as myWriteClub, but can only track words and hours. On the other hand, if you click on “stats,” it gives you your average per day, target average, average needed to make it on time, and projected finish date, which myWriteClub does not. I tend to forget that the NaNoWriMo tracker is an option and thus use myWriteClub instead, but that’s just me.

4thewords*. 4thewords is the only item on this list that charges. However, I’ve found it an extremely helpful tool. It’s set up as an RPG, but the monsters HP is words, as with Fighter’s Block. There are different zones, quests, and for some holidays there are also events in which there are special zones or monsters and additional quests. There’s also a forum, a customizable avatar, and it will store your files. However, the majority of the monsters have really long times (I think the smallest regular monster is 200 words in 30 minutes), which isn’t the greatest if you want to challenge yourself through a fast battle, and it does charge. You pay for subscription through things called core crystals, which you can buy in bulk. The smallest set is 44 for $4, which is a month’s worth of subscription, and the largest pack is almost 21 months worth. I believe if you don’t have your subscription for a bit then you can still access your files, you just can’t fight monsters or anything until you renew it. You can extend your subscription as far as you have core crystals. There’s also a streak calendar on your dashboard, and you win in-game prizes for specific milestones. The minimum word count for a day’s streak is 444, so 4thewords is great for consistency, as well as motivation. And if you use my referral code – CCXLG41162 – then we both get a bonus.

 

Hopefully you find a few of these helpful. :)