Sunday, July 27, 2014

My Writing Process Blog Tour

The lovely Melody Marshall tagged me on The Writing Process Blog Tour! We met through an online writing contest and subsequently had the privilege of meeting in person at the latest NE-SCBWI Conference. Check out her blog for book reviews, author interviews, and general thoughts on writing!

Now to the questions at hand:


1) What am I working on?


My current focus is zeroed in on my YA High Fantasy Novel. After having written it once, with 16 different edited versions, I decided to rewrite the entire thing this past spring. Now, I am editing the new manuscript!
For a hint as to what it is about--the story stemmed from a couple of "what if" questions: What if cupids weren't the fluffy, lovey cherubs we have preconceived them to be? What if something bad happened when a cupid fell in love?


2) How does my work differ from others in its genre?


My first instinct with this question was to quick find all the extraordinary aspects of my novel that make it unique, because, hey, who doesn't wan to be special? The honest truth of the matter is that I think I've simply taken a bunch of tried and true tropes and reassembled them in my own voice. There's romance. There's action. There's grief and laughter. So what makes it differ? Well ... to sound perfectly egocentric ... ME. The author. I write with a perspective and voice that no other writer has and that is what makes my story separate from others in its genre. 


3) Why do I write what I write?


Fantasy is powerful. It stirs imaginations to life and colors our perspectives, if just for a little while. That is enough reason for me.


4) How does my writing process work?


I'll give you the most universal of my writing processes since every manuscript is different:

Become seized by brilliant idea.
Toss the idea into Scrivener and pound out somewhere between 50-90k.
Read the first draft and cringe.
Edit. Edit more. Edit 'til I bleed.
Rewrite loads.
Tear out hair over need for more internals (my unfailing weakness).
Employ liberal use of thesaurus and edit again while looking for overused words and phrases.
Have CPs and Betas read.
EDIT.
Repeat.

Now, I am passing the pen to Miss Kathryn Trattner, a writer from my fantastic online writing group! Her blog is full of beautifully written musings about life and writing. I look forward to reading about her writing process!

1 comment:

  1. It is refreshing to see so many YA and NA authors answer the #MyWritingProcess today. I hear you about editing and large revisions.

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