Life, Updates, Writing Process

So much happening, but not a lot of writing…

August has been a whirlwind! There's so much happening in my personal life and my work life that my brain has just not wanted to focus on my writing. I got engaged Started a new line edit side gig Product launch and trade show season at work Manuscript sent to a developmental editor Venue visits… Continue reading So much happening, but not a lot of writing…

Life, Updates, Writing Process

False starts are still starts

I made a whole big hoopla about having two new ideas for stories and being super excited to get started. Yeah, so about that...turns out starting an entirely new project is not as easy as I remember. After finishing the fourth or fifth draft of my Magick Forest novel, and then finishing up Saving the… Continue reading False starts are still starts

Updates, Writing Process

Breaking into a new project

Sometimes starting a new project is easy. You go in ready and willing to make the story the best you can do. Words fly off your fingertips like water after the floodgates have been opened. Even if it doesn't last, it feels like you're flying through the first few thousand words. Then there are the… Continue reading Breaking into a new project

Life, Updates, Writing Process

Inspiration is not the problem. I need to get back to my routine.

There's a lot of chat in the writing circle that you can't just sit around and wait for inspiration to hit you. Creativity loves a moving target. If you're already creating, the inspiration with find you. The real problem is motivation. I've had inspiration for three different projects in the last few weeks, but I've… Continue reading Inspiration is not the problem. I need to get back to my routine.

Life, Radish Fiction, Updates, Writing Process

Finishing a novel is anticlimactic

You would think that finishing a novel of 80,000 words and months, if not years, of work would be more exciting. Not usually, no. It feels like finishing a huge exam in school, or finally passing on a project at work. You get that rush of accomplishment followed by an echoing emptiness of "what now?"… Continue reading Finishing a novel is anticlimactic