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Writing Excuses 15.08: Q&A on a Ship
 
 
Q&A Points:
Q: What have any of you learned in the past year that has improved your craft?
A: Talk to your editor early in the process. Use an outboard brain. Do the hard thing. Take a chance, make mistakes, and do something because it might be fun. Go watch Lindsay Ellis Three Act Structure. (Maybe this one? https://youtu.be/o0QO7YuKKdI)
Q: My question is when you're having trouble, how do you know if it's a "I don't feel like writing today" problem or there's a structural problem that your mind is trying to ignore because it would be difficult to deal with?
A: Look at the problem, what is the barrier to moving the story forward? Make yourself a checklist, an inventory of things that can go wrong. Trust your instincts.
Q: As published professional authors, how far ahead do you plan the futures of your careers? Do you know what genres, series, or even specific books that you'll be working on in five years or in 15 years?
A: Committed idiot. Plan ahead, but publishing is volatile. Strategy, planning, but be ready to drop it. Be ready to jump in a different direction. Have a roadmap, and build a new one if you need to. Diversified income. Make plans for multiple scenarios, for whatever happens at cost points.
Q: How do you tell when a fight or a battle or a climactic final showdown is going on for too long?
A: When you wonder if it's gone on too long.
Q: How do you continue to learn and improve on your writing craft, now that you're further in your career? Have there been any times that you felt like you've plateaued and what do you do about it?
A: Learn by teaching. Externalize and explain, talk through the process.
Q: When you're working on multiple projects, how do you manage or prioritize yourself such that you don't get too disconnected from one project while you're working on another?
A: Identify different phases, and avoid doubling up on phases.
Q: If you've got multiple characters with very strong voices, how do you feel about having multiple first-person perspectives? Horribly bad idea or just really difficult?
A: Try it. See how it reads.
Q: What are the most important elements to include on the last page of your book?
A: The end is a frame, matching your beginning. Show who the character is now, how things have changed, and give the reader the emotional punch you've been aiming at.
Q: What are some things we can do to work on developing and strengthening voice when writing in the third person?
A: Rhythms that are linked to the character's personality, idioms, metaphors. Make the character feel specific and vivid.
Q: How do you decide who works best as an alpha reader and who works better as a beta reader?
A: Experience and personal preference. What are you looking for in readers, how are you using them?
Q: My question is in secondary world fiction, can you talk about how to decide between calling a horse just a horse or something unique to the world?
A: Does it connect to your story? If a horse is just a horse, call it a horse.
Q: How much leeway will an agent generally give a new writer if they like the idea or concept of a story or see promise in it, but it isn't quite there yet?
A: Agents work with people, not projects. If they believe in the person, they get lots of leeway.
 
[Mary Robinette] Season 15, Episode Eight.
[Dan] This is Writing Excuses, Q&A on a Ship.
[Mary Robinette] 15 minutes long.
[Dongwon] Because you're in a hurry.
[Howard] And we're not that smart.
[Dan] I'm Dan.
[Mary Robinette] I'm Mary Robinette.
[Dongwon] I'm Dongwon.
[Howard] I've been on this ship for several days now.
[Chuckles]
[Dan] Which is a lot longer than 15 minutes. We are here at the 2019 Writing Excuses Retreat on a cruise ship in the Caribbean Sea. Actually, right now we're in the Gulf of Mexico. We have a live audience in front of us. Say hello, live audience.
[Whoo!]
[Dan] Awesome. We have asked them to ask us some questions. Our theme this whole year is the questions of the audience. We've been trying to answer them, we'll continue doing that throughout. Now, we have some live ones. So, our first question. Tell us your name and your question.
 
[Caleb] This is Caleb. I'm wondering what any of you have learned in the past year that has improved your craft?
[Mary Robinette] What any of us have learned in the past year that has improved our craft? I actually learned the value of talking to my editor really early in the process. One of the things that happened to me this year was that I had a number of events that derailed me from writing. I was working on a novel, and my usual process did not work. So… When I say editor, what I guess I mean is using an outboard brain. My usual process was not working, because I kept having life things go wrong. There were some family members at hospitals, then we were moving, and it was just a lot of things. Going to someone else and saying, "I cannot hold this story in my head. Please help me focus." was immensely valuable and actually got me back on track.
[Dongwon] That's convenient, because the lesson I learned this year was to talk to my clients early in the process.
[Chuckles]
[Dongwon] To make sure that everything's on track. I think one of the things that I learned that kind of lined up with that is to not be afraid to push people to do the thing that is hard. Right? In that sometimes when you're giving editorial feedback, because you're working with somebody who puts their heart and soul into a manuscript, into a book, you want to be… You want to be nice, right? You want to go easy on them in certain ways because you like this person, you work with this person. For me, one of the things I had to really learn in this past year is to get involved early and don't be afraid of saying, "Is this really the right choice? Is this the best way to get where you're going?" Sometimes, breaking it down and doing the hard work is the most important thing. Whether or not that's going to make someone upset.
[Howard] For me, it was when I joined the TypeCastRPG role-playing game and decided that, you know what, for fun, I think I'm going to try to live sketch things that happen during the game. The pressure there being I need to turn out a… What is ultimately a single panel comic strip that depends on the context of the game in a minute and a half. Then we did a live show at [FanEx] and they set up an Elmo and I… To borrow the metaphor, screwed the courage to the wall and said, "I'm going to make terrible, terrible mistakes and I'm going to do it when my arms are 10 feet long on this screen behind me…"
[Chuckles]
[Howard] "But I'm going to do it anyway because it might be fun." It unlocked a piece of my brain that allowed me to visualize more quickly and draw faster and draw things I've never drawn before.
[Dan] Fantastic. Just, really quick for me, I talked about this in one of the classes that I taught here on the retreat, the Lindsay Ellis's episode about three act structure and the way that she explained it made three act structure work for me in a way that it never has before. So everyone go watch that. It's brilliant.
 
[Dan] All right. We have another question.
[Allison] Hi. My name is Allison. My question is when you're having trouble, how do you know if it's a "I don't feel like writing today" problem or there's a structural problem that your mind is trying to ignore because it would be difficult to deal with?
[Mary Robinette] I wish I knew the answer to that one.
[Chuckles]
[Mary Robinette] That's a really super common problem. The way I evaluate it is whether or not… Is to interrogate the quest… The problem that I'm having. I look at the problem and I'm like, "Okay. What is the barrier between me and moving this story forward?" If it's… If I can't identify a barrier, that means that it's probably me, it is not actually the story. If it is… Sometimes it is… There is actually a problem with the story that is really difficult to diagnose. That's when handing it to someone else to look at becomes useful. But most of the time, if I ask just what is the barrier that is between me and moving forward, or the character and moving forward, that will unlock what the problem is.
[Howard] I've found that, for a lot of people, by the time you reach a point in your writing career where you're comfortable answering this question, you may have moved beyond actually writing down the equivalent of a preflight checklist. But having a preflight checklist, having a way to take inventory of the things that can be wrong… They might be diagnostic tools like pacing, three act structure, character arc, conflict, seven point whatever… The sorts of things that we talk about here on Writing Excuses all the time. When I'm writing jokes, I have this sort of checklist. I've internalized it. But what I found is that when I'm stuck, I have to take inventory. A lot of the times, it's me. I haven't had enough sleep. I haven't eaten correctly. I'm exhausted because of an emotional thing. The temperature in the room is wrong and it's making me grouchy. This character is at the wrong point in their character arc for me to write the scene that I want to write, therefore, I don't feel justified in writing it. By the time I'm able to articulate these things, the unlocking starts moving really quickly. I can see where the problems are, and where the problems aren't.
[Dongwon] I think it's probably the most frustrating advice I give, and also the most important advice that I like to give, is that you need to learn to trust your instincts. Right? But this is a case where it's very hard to tell where the line between your conscious thought and your instinct is. So, the thing I think about a lot is what Howard was just talking about is the ways in which your conscious and subconscious mind are connected to your embodiment, right? So, a lot of things that can help you are really core mental health and mindfulness techniques, right? Meditation, yoga, go for a run, go take a shower, go take a break. Find something that uses up part of your brain so that your subconscious can chew on it. Then come back to it when you're feeling calm and relaxed and centered, and try and get in touch with what is your core emotion here? What is your instinct telling you, versus what is your fear telling you? Right? If that instinct is saying, "Actually, it's a structural problem here," then focus on that, and do that hard work. On average, if you're having that question, you're probably right, that the problem is bigger than I don't feel like writing right now. On average.
[Mary Robinette] I forgot that I have an entire blog post on this that we'll put in the liner notes. Which is… For those people who never go to look at the liner notes, you can search for it. It's called Sometimes Writer's Block Is Really Depression. I talk about how to diagnose the kind of delays that you are having and the kind of… Like, if your drowsy, it's probably that your story is boring. If you are restless, it's probably that you don't actually know the next thing that's going to happen or you don't believe it actually, I think. But, anyway, Sometimes Writer's Block Is Really Depression. It includes how to diagnose it, and then a long list of tools for when it is… The problem is not with the manuscript, but external to the manuscript, to your own life. Some things to help you move forward.
 
[Dan] Awesome. Cool. Next question.
[Matt] Hello, my name is Matt Chambers. My question is as published professional authors, how far ahead do you plan the futures of your careers? Do you know what genres, series, or even specific books that you'll be working on in five years or in 15 years?
[Howard] 10 years ago…
[Dan] Now I'm just depressed.
[Laughter]
[Howard] 10 years ago, I could have told you that 10 years from now, I would definitely still be doing Schlock Mercenary. Five years ago, I could have told you when the major Schlock Mercenary mega arc was going to end. Two years ago, I could have, but wouldn't have, told you how it was going to end and what all the book plans and plot plans were around that. This year, I am re-thinking all of that, because I was probably an idiot, but I'm committed, so I'm sticking to it in a blind panic.
[Laughter]
[Dan] Committed idiot is actually a great thing to put on my business cards. Six years ago, I had the very best year of my career up to that point, and since.
[Howard] Oh, dear.
[Dan] I thought at the time that I knew I would be doing six years later, and had no idea that one of my publishers was going to dry up completely, that one of my series was going to tank abysmally. So, kind of my answer to this is that it is very smart to plan ahead, but that this industry is very volatile. A lesson I did not learn early enough is how to plan around that volatility. The good news is we're going to have one, and possibly two, episodes on this exact topic later in the year with Dongwon about how to plan out your career and how that career can change and how to reboot it when it falls apart.
[Dongwon] Yeah. I love talking to my clients about strategy. A lot of times, what most of them are planning three, four… Not even books, like 3 to 4 contracts out, right? And a contract can be 2 to 3 books. So it's what are we doing here, what's coming after that, what's coming after that? The important thing, as Dan kind of touched on, is that you have to be sort of ready to throw all of that out at the drop of a hat, right? Publishing is extremely volatile, you have no idea what's going to happen when that book hits the market. So you have to be kind of ready to jump in a different direction. Sometimes you have backup plans, and sometimes you don't. But always have something… Some roadmap of where you want to go. Then be ready to build a new one when you need to.
[Mary Robinette] Yeah. I… Much like everyone else, my plans change. The things that… For me, the metrics that have been working is that I have… I have kept my income stream diversified, so that's why I have three different careers running simultaneously. So that when one of them is not doing well, I can fill in the gaps with one of the others. I also think about the shape that I want my career to take. That, generally, is that I want to be able to turn down the gigs that I don't want to do. Which means that if a really lucrative contract comes in, and I'm like, "That looks… I mean, the money looks really great, but I don't want to be pigeonholed into doing that kind of work," that's not… That is something that I can think about turning down, and that I can decide in the moment. I have a giant list of novels that I want to write. I won't get to write them all, probably. But I keep them. Then, I think, the last piece of advice that I was just given this past year… I was in an enviable position, which is that I had just won the Nebula and the Locus, and we were looking at the Hugo. I was like… People kept saying, "Well, you're going to win it." I'm like, "You can't think that. That's not healthy. Certainly not healthy for me." Then my agent, Seth Fishman, said I should think about it like applying to college. That you don't know whether or not you're going to get into college, but you make plans for both scenarios. You make plans for well, if I get into college, I'm going to need to be able to put these things into place. If I don't get into college, then these are the backup plans that I have and this is how I'm going to occupy my life. So I think that that's one of the things that is very useful, is to think about the possible cusp points in your career, and to think about positive outcomes for either cusp point. So that's… That has been very helpful for me. Fortunately, I did get into college, in this particular scenario.
[Chuckles]
[Mary Robinette] But it was also… Even the positive things can rock you if you are not prepared for them.
 
[Dan] Awesome. I want to pause right now for our book of the week, which is also Mary Robinette.
[Mary Robinette] Yes. I want to talk about a book called Jade War, which is the sequel to Fonda Lee's… Wait. Yes. The sequel to Fonda Lee's Jade City. I just had this moment of thinking that I had them backwards. So, I blurbed the first book, and the second book is every bit as fantastic. It is the Godfather meets like a Kung Fu wire film. It's secondary world fantasy, but it feels like 1960s or 70s Earth. But there are people who can use jade and they can do magic, except they don't think of it as magic, it's just part of an… It's just completely woven into the world. It feels so real that I am surprised that it is not. The relationships are compelling. If you are someone who likes a well-written sex scene, it is not the entirety of the book, but there are a couple in there that are some of the hottest and… Like, really beautifully drawn consensual sex scenes. The consensual parts is the part that I find appealing. But the…
[Chuckles]
[Mary Robinette] Just the entire thing, it's great. It's Jade War by Fonda Lee.
[Dan] Cool. Thank you very much.
 
[Dan] Now, we still have several questions to get… Left. We want to try to get to them all. We're going to let this episode run a little long. But we're going to call this the lightning round, okay? So ask your question, and then one of us will answer it instead of all four. So, go.
[Cameron] Okay. Hey, guys, my name is Cameron. I was wondering how do you tell when a fight or a battle or a climactic final showdown is going on for too long?
[Dongwon] When you wonder if it's gone on too long.
[Laughter]
[Dan] [Haha!] Excellent answer. Next?
[Chuckles]
 
[Caitlin] Hi, I'm Caitlin. How do you continue to learn and improve on your writing craft, now that you're further in your career? Have there been any times that you felt like you've plateaued and what do you do about it?
[Mary Robinette] I learn by teaching. When I was a pup… Getting trained in puppetry, what my instructor had me do is he would have me learn everything with my right hand, he would teach me with my right hand, then he would have me teach my left hand how to do it. What he said was any time you have to externalize and explain what you're doing, even if it's to yourself, that it causes you to hone your craft and to get rid of the parts that aren't important. I find that when I am teaching students, even if it's someone that is a peer and just saying, "Hey, this is the thing that I've learned today." Even if they don't necessarily need to know it, but I'm talking through the process, that it makes me better at my craft.
 
[Jessica] Hi, I'm Jessica. When you're working on multiple projects, how do you manage or prioritize yourself such that you don't get too disconnected from one project while you're working on another?
[Dan] My answer to that has always been that I will identify the different phases that each project has to go through, and then make sure that I'm not doubling them up. So I'm never writing two things at a time, but I could be writing one while revising another or outlining another or editing or proofing or whatever it is. That way, it makes it much easier for me to keep them in my brain, because they're all in different parts of my brain.
 
[Kevin] Hi. I'm Kevin. If you've got multiple characters with very strong voices, how do you feel about having multiple first-person perspectives? Horribly bad idea or just really difficult?
[Howard] I love the way POV use changes in our culture over time. I think that that could work. I don't know that I've seen it done, but I've thought about doing it myself. I think that 20 years from now, that could end up being the rule rather than an exception, because these sorts of things are cultural. If it's what you want to do, go for it.
[Dongwon] I just want to jump in with one little note, is the thing I run into a lot from writers and in the writing community, is people think about POV really, really rigidly. So, like, if I start in third person limited, I have to stay that way all throughout. Whereas, I think, we're seeing a lot of things that are really pushing back against that. N. K. Jemisin's Fifth Season is a really great example. Even Robert Jackson Bennett's Foundryside, you'll see POV jump around from first person to third person, you'll see tense shifts, things like that. So feel free to really sort of experiment with the different perspectives and the different POV's that you have. You can drop into one just for a chapter or a scene, and then they can never reappear again. So, feel free to try different things and experiment and see how it reads. I think writers and crit groups are very focused on consistent POV. I don't think readers even notice.
 
[Emma] Hi. I'm Emma. What are the most important elements to include on the last page of your book?
[Oooo]
[Howard] Your Patreon.
[Laughter]
[Mary Robinette] So, what I think about when I get to the end is it is a frame. I am framing something that I set up at the beginning. At the beginning, I made promises to the reader. One of the things that I promised them is that they would feel a certain way when they get to the end. So when I look at that last paragraph, I think about it as the beginning in reverse, the inverse of that. I try to make sure that I'm showing who my character is now, where they are now, and the ways in which things have shifted. Doing that in a way that makes the reader have that emotional punch that I had been going for through the whole thing. Like, if I had been wanting them to have a sense of dread all the way through, and then the catharsis of relief, then that last thing needs to contain relief. If I want them to still feel dread, then that last thing still needs to have dread in it. So it's a… For me, it's the frame, it's the button, and that's what I look for at the end.
 
[Jess] Hi. I'm Jess. What are some things we can do to work on developing and strengthening voice when writing in the third person?
[Mary Robinette] I can take that one.
[Dan] Do it.
[Mary Robinette] So. Coming from theater and audiobook, the thing about third person and the way… Is that it is actually still very much first-person in this real simple way. The narrator is telling a story to the audience. The narrator is sometimes very closely linked to a third person character, but even so, there is a storyteller who is speaking to the audience. What you're looking for with the voice are rhythms that are linked to the character's personality. If it is a tight limited third person, you want to use everything… You want to make sure that the idioms that you're using, the metaphors that they're using, that these are all linked to how they self define themselves. All of that is going to make the character feel specific and vivid in ways that aiming for the so-called transparent prose will not.
 
[Morgan] Hi, I'm Morgan. How do you decide who works best as an alpha reader and who works better as a beta reader?
[Howard] Sad, sorry experience.
[Chuckles]
[Dan] Yeah. I mean, that really is the answer. I know Mary Robinette and I, for example, have very different criteria as to who we count as an alpha and who we count as a beta reader. That… It all comes down to experience and personal preference, I think.
[Howard] For my own part, an alpha reader… When I've handed it to an alpha reader and gotten it back, I want to feel energized about doing the things that need to be done to fix it. I want my offer readers to energize me. My beta readers I want to be a little more critical and help me fine-tune things. But I'm fragile that way.
[Mary Robinette] Yeah, I'm… Just to demonstrate that we are sometimes counter. The thing that I'm looking for in a beta… In an alpha reader is someone who is asking me the right questions to help me unpack it a little bit further so that the beta readers are getting something that is closer to the story that I'm trying to tell. The beta readers, I am using them as a general, but the alpha reader… For me, the alpha reader in this case is Alessandra Meechum [sp?], most of the time, and she is… She's what is sometimes called the ideal reader, which is that she represents the core audience that I am writing for. So when I'm writing, I am specifically writing to see whether or not I make her go, "Oh, I love this," or "I hate this so much."
[Chuckles]
[Mary Robinette] That often pleases me a great deal.
[Laughter]
[Mary Robinette] So it depends how you're using them. I'm using her to shape the story. I've spotted… Sometimes I'll spot someone in beta and go, "Oh. You also sit in that ideal reader category." There are some stories that I'm going to write at some point that she will not be the ideal reader for, and I'll switch out alphas for that story. But that's what I look for.
[Dan] It's worth pointing out that Alessandra is in the room, and beaming like the sun to be referred to as an ideal reader. So.
 
[Nick] Hello. I'm Nick. My question is in secondary world fiction, can you talk about how to decide between calling a horse just a horse or something unique to the world?
[Oooo]
[Dongwon] I would say only rename things if there's a big sort of… If it connects to the core of your story, right? If the question you're asking is about, I don't know, national identity, for example, then it can be very complicated to use an existing country or an existing sort of language structure. So… If… Unless you're asking the question of what is the meaning of horse, then I wouldn't rename it, right? But if you're trying to disrupt ideas of like what do we consider animals, what do we consider our relationship to them, what are beasts of burden, then that's a case where maybe playing with it would give you an opportunity to really do a lot more there. But, in general, if it's a horse, call it a horse.
 
[Matthew] Hello, my name is Matthew. How much leeway will an agent generally give a new writer if they like the idea or concept of a story or see promise in it, but it isn't quite there yet?
[Dongwon] I wonder who's going to answer this one?
[Laughter]
[Mary Robinette] I don't know. Well, I'll take… No.
[Dongwon] The thing that I talk about a lot is that I work with people, not projects. Right? I sign a client, I don't sign a single book. So, the answer is if I believe in the person, then all the leeway in the world, right? That's something that we'll work together to make it right. What goes into that decision is hard to articulate in a lot of ways. But I have to be excited about this person's potential to do something really interesting… Even if they're not quite there yet. So there are clients I've worked with for years and years and years, and we haven't gotten out with anything. But we're still working together, we're still honing in on what the right project is… Or how to do X, Y, or Z. So, the answer is, it depends a lot on the person. The right circumstances, it's okay if that book isn't quite there, so long as I can see you're doing something interesting and I can see that you are someone who has all the chops, all the drive, all the ambition to get to where you need to get to.
 
[Dan] Great. So, that is all our questions that we have. I'm sure that there are many more burning in your hearts right now, but… Thank you for listening. We have a piece of homework for you. So, once again, we're throwing this to Dongwon.
[Dongwon] So, I think that the openings of novels are really, really important. It's a great opportunity to hook your reader. More than that, it's an opportunity to get someone to say, "Yes, I'm going to spend $20 or whatever it is to buy this book." So what I would like each of you to do is take the first line of your work in progress or something that you've finished and rewrite it three separate times. Make sure that when you write each one, it's not three variations on the same sentence. Try and shake those up as much as possible, right? Try a different voice. Try a different style. Try different… Even like points to start the scene and see what jumps out at you. What is the most exciting, what grabs you, what are you excited about to keep going with. I think that will tell you a lot about how your opening scenes should work so that your pulling the reader into your story as forcefully as possible.
[Dan] Perfect. Okay. This has been Writing Excuses. You are out of excuses. Now go write.
 
mbarker: (Burp)
[personal profile] mbarker
NaNoWriMo 2018 Bonus Episode, with Mercedes Lackey
 
 
Key Points: There is no such thing as writer's block. Usually, it's your subconscious saying "Stop! Something is wrong!" Caveat: Sometimes what we think is writer's block is actually depression -- see a professional! Sometimes you should stop and figure out what's wrong. Other times, you should keep going for a while, even though you know it is wrong, to find out what's wrong. If you are stuck because you are bored -- your reader will be bored, too. Find a new path, insert new action, "Two guys bust through the door, guns blazing!" To identify what's wrong, back up, and ask the next question. What if I did something else? What if... Back up, put the old stuff in a scraps folder, and try again, making different choices. Lack of confidence? You've got a million bad words you have to write. Don't let the cursor intimidate you! Try writing on a notepad, and fixing it when you type it into the computer. When you recognize that you could do better, you have level upped. If you are going to screw off, set a timer and do it. Then go back to work. Sit down six times a day and write at least two sentences. If you want to have written, you have to do the work of writing first. Don't just ask yourself, "Why don't I want to write?" Ask "Why do I want to write?" And then do it!
 
[Mary] Season 13.
[Howard] Bonus Episode Three.
[Brandon] This is Writing Excuses, Writer's Block with Mercedes Lackey.
[Mary] 15 minutes long.
[Dan] Because you're in a hurry.
[Howard] And we forgot how to write.
[Brandon] I'm Brandon.
[Mary] I'm Mary.
[Dan] I'm Dan.
[Howard] I'm blocked.
[Brandon] And we have Mercedes Lackey.
[Mercedes] Hello.
[Brandon] Awesome writer of many, many excellent books. Thank you so much for being with us.
[Mercedes] Thank you for having me. I enjoy being had.
[Laughter]
[Brandon] We are live at GenCon.
[Whoo! Applause.]
 
[Brandon] So. Misty, you pitched this at us. You said you want to talk about writer's block.
[Mercedes] Absolutely.
[Brandon] Do you remember why or are you blocked on that?
[Chuckles]
[Mercedes] No. I am… I definitely remember why. Because there's no such thing.
[Brandon] Okay. Expand on that.
[Mercedes] Writer's block is when you have got to a point in the story that you have decided, no matter what this is, the direction it's going to go. Your subconscious is saying, "No, it isn't." You're doing something wrong. You've chosen an illogical path for this particular character or this particular story. You're doing… You're making your character do something out of character just because you want the story to go in that direction. Your subconscious knows more about storytelling than you do. Because you've been imbibing storytelling since the time you were born. Your subconscious is saying, "No. Stop. I'm not going to let you do this."
[Mary] I'm going to agree with you. I'm also just going to add a caveat for our listeners. Because I have always held that position as well. But. There are times, listeners, when writer's block is actually a sign that you are dealing with depression.
[Mercedes] Yes. This is true.
[Mary] So I am completely agreeing with her that writer's block is a signal that something is wrong. One of the things that you're going to want to try to identify is whether the problem is with something that's going on in your own head or within the story. So in this podcast, what we're going to be focusing on is when something is going wrong within the story and the writer's block is a signal about that.
[Mercedes] But if it happens to be depression, you'll have other signals and it's time to seek help from a professional.
 
[Howard] What I've found is that if I sit down and I am ready to write, I want to write, and I'm stuck and I can't figure out why I'm stuck, it's my subconscious telling me you are stuck because you made a mistake two or three pages back and you need to step back and figure out how to fix it.
[Brandon] Every time I've had writer's block personally, it's been what Misty just described.
[Mary] Absolutely.
[Brandon] It's something is wrong now. The trick for me has been, sometimes the answer to it is not to go back and fix anything. Sometimes it is to continue the story in the wrong direction for a little while. At least for me. So that then, my subconscious can see me having failed. Right?
[Laughter]
[Brandon] Like right now.
[Laughter]
[Brandon] No, seriously…
[Mercedes] No, I know what you mean.
[Brandon] As a writer, as soon as something's wrong, I tend to lock up and start looking for the problem. But that can lead to writer's block for me where I'm searching and searching and searching for a problem, and I can't find the problem. For me, a lot of times if I… Now, I'm not saying go on forever on this. But for me, if I finish that day's writing, and I go in that direction, I say, "Okay, I know something's wrong here, but I'm just going to keep going with what I was doing." If I have that scene in hand, then it's during that night or over the next day, 99% of the time, my subconscious can then fix that and say, "You tried it wrong. Good job. You failed."
[Chuckles]
[Brandon] "Now let's try it this other way to fix it."
[Mary] I find that it's like that thing where you do the eeny meeny miny moe because you can't decide between a couple of options, and then you land on one and you're like, "Oh. But I really wanted this one." Well, you've answered that question. That sometimes continuing to go down the wrong path can do that for you, that it can allow you to identify Ooo...
 
[Howard] Misty, have you ever been stuck because you got to a part of the story and then… And you realized you were bored?
[Mercedes] Yup. And that means that I… If I'm bored, my reader's going to be bored, and it's time to do something… Either go back and find a new path or insert new action. Just like old Dashiell Hammett said, "Two guys bust through the door, guns blazing…"
 
[Brandon] But what do you do when you're facing writer's block? When your subconscious has said, "Something's wrong." How do you identify the problem?
[Mercedes] Well, I've got 140 books out.
[Laughter]
[Brandon?] Okay… You've internalized a lot of these techniques.
[Mercedes] It's a lot easier to do… To identify the problem now than it was back then. What I used to do is an old exercise from Theodore Sturgeon that he had actually made into an emblem which was a Q with an arrow coming out of it, which means ask the next question. So I'd go back into my writing about five pages, and when I came to a branching point in the plot or something of that nature, I would ask the next question. If I didn't go this way, what other way would I go? With that answer, you then ask the next question. Well, where does it go from there? With that answer, you ask the next question. Well, what does it need? You just keep following the chain of questions. Usually, that locked… That brought… Bleh. Usually that kicked me right out of the problem.
[Mary] Nancy Kress says a very similar thing, which is that… When she's… Because she's a complete pantser, she does not plan at all. She says that when she runs into this, she will back up to the last point that she was excited about…
[Mercedes] That's a good place.
[Mary] And then put everything else in kind of a scraps folder and then write forward from there, making different choices.
[Dan] That scraps folder is really important.
[Mercedes] Oh, yeah. Never throw out anything.
[Dan] Even if you never use it again, it's a nice way to kind of trick your brain into saying, "Don't worry. I'm not throwing this away."
[Mercedes] Right.
[Chuckles]
[Dan] "I'm totally coming back to use this again. Look at the flowers, Lizzie."
[Laughter]
[Mercedes] Look at this shiny thing over here.
[Mary] But it… I do find for myself that it's important for me to actually take the words out of the page. Because otherwise what I will try to do is to try to fix the words that are on the page instead of making different choices.
[Mercedes] That's generally fatal.
[Mary] Yeah.
[Brandon] Once in a while, I have a student that I'm talking to, because I teach creative writing. I get the sense that they don't actually have writer's block. People call writer's block many things.
[Mercedes] Oh, yeah.
[Brandon] What they do is, they lack confidence to tell their story. Meaning they have started writing, they have realized they are not as good a writer as they want to be. What is coming out on the page does not match their perfect vision of a… This idealized Platonic version of a story that's going to bring world peace.
[Chuckles]
[Brandon] They look at what's on the page and their skill level. They get really discouraged. Their confidence goes away and they stop writing and they go back to something else, world building somewhere.
[Mercedes] Then you tell them what Ray Bradbury told my husband. Every writer has a million bad words in him, and he just has to write until they're all gone.
[Laughter]
 
[Brandon] Do you have any strategies for getting people to do that? Because we talk about that, and that's absolutely the right thing to do. But sometimes it still just really difficult.
[Mercedes] Stop letting that cursor intimidate you with its single finger…
[Laughter]
[Mercedes] Flashing at you.
[Howard] For those of you not benefiting from the video feed, she has imitated a cursor with one of her fingers.
[Laughter]
[Mercedes] Seriously, that's it. You give them something… You tell them that, you show them that, the blan… With the flashing finger and it generally gives them a laugh, which will unlock their fear and turn it into something comedic.
[Mary] One of the…
[Dan] I like this new plan of just flipping off aspiring writers when they're having…
[Laughter. Garbled.]
[Dan] In Writing Excuses. For everything.
[Mary] That's not intimidating at all.
[Chuckles]
[Mary] So one of the things that I do sometimes is that I remind them that what they're doing right now is that they are comparing their work in progress with other people's finished drafts.
[Mercedes] That's also true.
[Mary] One of the things that I will also see happen to writers… Especially writers who have written something and sold it, and then cannot sit down to write the next thing, because they're afraid that they're going to fail at it, is that they are comparing their own finished draft to the thing that they're working on, and they've forgotten how many layers it goes through before it finally sees publication.
 
[Brandon] I've found… Oh, yeah. I found success in taking, particularly discovery writers, the pantsers, among my students who are having this problem and sending them out with a notepad instead of a computer and saying, "Don't worry. It can look ugly on the page. You'll fix it when you type it into the computer." That actually ends… Has worked for a few of them because they allow themselves to just let it look sloppy, and they'll tell themselves it's not really until it's in the computer, so it's okay, if it's bad right here.
[Dan] Which is basically just tricking them into learning how to revise something. Which is the real answer to that problem.
[Laughter]
[Mercedes] One of…
[Howard] It's often useful to remind people that there is a point… There was a point at which you would write and not recognize that what you are writing is not as good as you want it to be. You have level… You have level upped. Now that you are seeing this, congratulations. You've leveled upped. Writing has gotten more difficult. There are more leveling ups to do, and it's going to take some work.
[Mercedes] There's one other thing. You mentioned pantsers. They might not be pantsers.
[Brandon] Yeah.
[Mercedes] I pantsed my first novel and realized I was an outliner.
[Mary] I was just on a panel in Helsinki with a debut author, Erika Vik, who's Finnish. One of the things she said… It was actually another one about writer's block. She said that she reminds yourself to write "just for myself, not for others." I think that can be one of the things that can lock us up the most, is when we start trying to second-guess our own writing. It's like just remember why you're actually writing is actually because you are writing for yourself. I mean, that's…
[Mercedes] If you don't like what you're doing, no one else will either.
[Mary] Exactly.
 
[Brandon] Let's go ahead and stop for our book of the week. Misty, you're going to pitch to us the Secret World Chronicles?
[Mercedes] Secret World Chronicle, by this time, number five, Avalanche, should be out. It's a series of superheroes fighting space Nazis. What's not to love?
[Laughter]
[Brandon] That's a pretty good pitch.
[Mercedes] I know.
[Brandon] Is there anymore or just superheroes fighting space Nazis, that's all we need to know?
[Mercedes] Superheroes fighting space Nazis mostly in Atlanta.
[Brandon] Okay.
[Laughter]
[Brandon] Okay, yeah. There we are.
[Dan] Even better.
[Howard] In marketing terms, if that doesn't get people to go look up the book and read the blurb on the back…
[Dan] It's not for them anyway.
[Howard] Those people are just broken anyway.
[Laughter]
 
[Brandon] All right. Let me ask you this question. When is writer's block just goofing off?
[Sigh]
[Brandon] Does that happen to any of you?
[Howard] When there's a new Xcom release.
[Laughter]
[Mercedes] When you're trying to figure out how to get Benny to not kill you in Fallout 3: New Vegas.
[Laughter]
[Brandon] So that does happen to you. Even professional writers, once in a while, writer's block is there's a new game out.
[Mercedes] Oh, shoot. It's not really writer's block at this point. I recognize it's the fact that I want to screw off.
[Chuckles]
[Mercedes] Which is completely valuable. It is.
[Brandon] That's right. That's right. It's very important.
[Mercedes] So allow yourself an hour and put it on a timer.
[Brandon] Oh, okay. So do you actually do this, do you time yourself and say…
[Mercedes] Absolutely. It's on a timer. I go exactly however long I think that I am allowed to have. And then I stop.
[Mary] I just learned a really cool trick from a… Not from Roger Zelazny because he and I obviously can't hang out.
[Chuckles]
[Mary] He's dead. Which is why we can't hang out.
[Mercedes] Unless, of course, you're a medium.
[Mary] Well… Okay…
[Chuckles]
[Mercedes] Madam, I'm not a medium. I'm an extra-large.
[Laughter]
[Brandon] You'd drop the mic, but it's attached to your forehead.
[Mary] Anyway, apparently the bargain that he had with himself was that he had to sit down six times a day and write two sentences, figuring that at least one of those times he was likely to catch fire, and that if he didn't, then at the end of the day, at least he had 12 sentences. But that if he caught fire earlier in the day, like in session 2, he still had to sit down the other times, the other six times and write those two sentences. Which sounds suspiciously like your timer thing.
[Dan] It is embarrassing out easy it is to trick ourselves.
[Mercedes] Oh, yeah. You gotta learn not…
[Dan] And drive ourselves.
[Mercedes] You gotta learn not to lie to yourself when you want to screw off.
[Chuckles]
[Mary] Or to lie to yourself if that will get you back into the chair.
[Mercedes] Yeah.
[Laughter]
 
[Brandon] No, I often say, like, "Becoming a professional writer is really just about learning your personal psychology, of what makes you productive." It's why writing advice is so hard to give. On this very podcast, we've mentioned, yes, there is writer's block where your subconscious is causing you to realize something's wrong. There is writer's block where you're just not confident enough, and you should keep going. There is writer's block when you really just want to play the videogame, and you really need to come up with some strategies to force yourself to do what you want. Like, these are all things that we lump under the umbrella of writer's block.
[Mercedes] There's one other writer's block that I have absolutely zero patience for. It's the people that don't really want to write, they want to have written. They want the benefit without the work.
[Brandon] I'd say that's very commonly kind of part of all of this. Writing is actually hard. Looking at your story and seeing that it's messed up and realizing how much work it's going to take to fix it is really hard. In fact, that's the part I hate the most out of this whole thing.
[Howard] I won't lie. There are times when… There are times when looking back at something I have written or something I have drawn, I am getting far more pleasure at having finished it than having worked on it. But there are also times when I just delight in the work. So, understanding that that's a balance, that's a thing that's going to happen. If I keep going, I will get to enjoy having written, having drawn all of these things. A lot of them I will enjoy while I'm actually making them.
[Mary] One of the things that I think is useful is to flip the question. So if you're sitting down and you're like… And asking yourself, "Why don't I want to write?" Is not fixing it for you, flip the question and ask yourself, "What would make me want to write? Why do I want to write?" See if you can fulfill those questions to sit down and write.
 
[Brandon] Well, we are out of time on this episode. Misty, you were going to give us a writing prompt.
[Mercedes] I would like you to try writing a lover's quarrel. But the difference in this one is they really don't want to have the fight. They really want to reconcile. But it's almost as if they're having the fight for the sake of having the fight.
[Brandon] Awesome. Well, thank you so much for being on the podcast with us. Thank you to our GenCon live audience.
[Whoo! Applause.]
[Brandon] And, especially true with this episode, you are out of excuses, now go write.
 
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses #17: This Sucks and I'm a Horrible Writer

http://www.writingexcuses.com/2008/06/01/writing-excuses-episode-17-this-sucks-and-im-a-horrible-writer/

The podcast started with a vocal flub that I won't try to reproduce, except that it led to the theme being "15 minutes because you're in a hurry, and we're apparently all high."
oops . . . )
Consider this as the first line of your piece.

Barry knew his mumbling was going to get him killed someday.

Go, write.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 16: BIC HOK

High points:
BIC HOK means put your Butt In the Chair and keep your Hands On the Keyboard.
Figure out what is blocking you -- writers block comes in different flavors.
Figure out what motivates you. Schedule pressure, writing the ending first, whatever it is, use it.
From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2008/05/25/writing-excuses-episode-16-butt-in-chair-hands-on-keyboard/
Notes )
Writing Prompt
Write a story about something unusual stopping a novelist from finishing his or her book.
Back next week.

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