Frenemies

November 13, 2010
As I writer, it's cringe-worthy when such dubious buzzwords are inducted into the dictionaries like McJob and soul patch while other words, albeit archaic, whither away into extinction such as tudiculate, which means to pound or bruise. Now see, tudiculate is a descriptive word with a purpose! The working breed of vocabulary. What we have now our ridiculous words that seem to be hallmarks of are hallmarks of a pop-culture saturated society. 

But there is one word that I've come to love and hate. I think that is its very embodiment: Frenemies. We all have them. Those 'friends' we have in our gaggle who we wouldn't trust with a secret of our heart, but we'd trust to engage in gossip. Those 'friends' we have that are more fair-weather than true-blue. They'd be that person who would get us into trouble, but certainly wouldn't be there to bail us out of jail. They aren't the friend we'd call at 2:00 am when we're knee deep in tissue and crisis, but they're the friend we'd call because we know they'll have the scoop on why Jane is no longer returning our email. 

It's toxic.

But yet, and especially with women, we continue to surround and even partake in such a legacy. 

What have I been doing all this time? Along with doing last minute revisions and private query writing, I've been undertaking a bit of a project. Cataloging and observing the Frenemy. 

There are different types of frenemies and intricate relationships, as well as toxic friendships (because at times they are mutually exclusive), and as part social case study and another part morbid curiosity, dissecting this strange phenomenon and writing a compilation in ode to this. 

In this study, I've examined personal hurts, looked inward and surveyed friends in this little experiment and found that while we may opine this type of relationship--we continue to nurture the behavior. I feel it is because we are creatures of opportunity and while no one wants to discuss it, take full advantage of exploiting our relationships for personal gain. So the question comes down to, who is the frenemy, you or them?  I also feel we need these types of relationships in our lives so that we may cherish and recognize true friendship.

Writers are some of the best observers in human behavior--it's what allows us to create realistic characters and absorb humanity.  It's an interesting look out...and in, if you're brave enough. 

 Who's the frenemy in your life?  

 

Prepping for Year of the Query

October 3, 2010
So, I'm giving some manuscripts--those I'm planning on selling hard next year--one final read through and spit-shine polish before I start crafting my queries. I read somewhere that as some part of a New Years resolution, agents get slammed with queries at the beginning of the year and during the holiday season. It's often contributed to that age-old ritual of "this will be the year" mentality and just having enough time to breathe during Christmas vacation to send of a query like a shot in t...
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What I did on my Summer vacation - a year in redux

September 16, 2010
This year my writing world has been productive. More productive than it has been in the last 3 1/2 years (basically since I started & finished my bachelor's program). This summer I made it a point to get more involved in the industry. 

 I read from the genre I love to write in and completed the entire Sigma Force series, the entire Millennium series (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo series), and tried as best I could to get through Oryx and Crake. I'm all for a apocalyptic stories, whether the ...
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well, then

September 6, 2010
Would you believe I was caught in another brain storm for yet another story idea? Well, I was. Proving this has been one hell of a lightening rod of ADD resulting in creativity. Someone must have given the muse some coffee. I'm not complaining. The only thing I'm complaining about is that along with the Day Job keeping me well occupied during the day, my side business venture (a hobby of mine--gasp! One that doesn't involve writing!) is taking off and taking up most of my other spare time. 

Wr...
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Maelstrom

August 20, 2010
Love that word, maelstrom. The Scandinavian word maelström was introduced into English by Edgar Allen Poe, and anyone who knows my love for things dark and on the outskirts of mainstream, Poe has got to be a favorite of mine. But maelstrom is defined as a powerful whirlpool. And that's what my muse has been dragging me through as new story ideas and plot enhancements to WIPs have been taking me by storm. 

I have yet another story that has yanked my attention away from Tree of Life. It's a fan...
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My muse has ADD

August 13, 2010
And when I say "muse", I mean me. I was in the middle of story editing and doing further research for Tree of Life when an idea struck me. 

I've been playing around with an idea about cult deprogramming for a while and the plot smacked me so hard and out of the blue that I had to stop what I was doing and get an outline started for it. After a few hours of cursory research on the subject I developed characters and story line. What if a deprogrammer realizes who he's attempting to debrief is tr...
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Tree of Life: Sprouting Imagination

August 4, 2010
For every writer, the process of creation is different. What inspires us is unique. The birth of a story, the whispers of a character, all come to us in a potpourri of ways. I recently attended a mini-writers conference with a fellow writer and good friend, Eisley Jacobs. The meetup was free--Sacramento Writers Who Mean Business, hosted by these lovely ladies (known as the Michel(l)es) --and the key note speaker was an author of a middlegrade book, Karen Kostlivy. She spoke to us of her journ...
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Call of Bone: To the Boneyard

July 28, 2010
A dirge of bloated brass and gut-rattling bass is playing as I march a quasi funeral parade with Brandt Bogue to the Boneyard Bayou. Call of Bone is going to purgatory until I can figure out how to better make use of the story line. 

I'm not being lazy.

I promise.

I'm not blaming writer's block on the unwillingness to focus harder on the story. It's just that it simply isn't going to work the way I want it to. And if I'm going to keep up with my "make as many manuscripts marketable" for my Query...
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The Muse's Summer Vacation

July 21, 2010

School ruined me.

Once prolific, my creativity dried up into a bitter jaded raisin. After the pressures of writing 500 - 1100+ papers on the monotony of such entertaining subjects like organization communication, that blank page syndrome became more of a psychosis when I sat down to write for fun. The pressure and anxiety of having to purge out some type of acceptable drivel full of buzzwords such as paradigm shift, drilling down and thinking outside the box killed all innovation or hope to mu...


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Oops

July 10, 2010
So, yeah. About that novel. Ahem. Supposed to finish it, I thought. This last weekend. Writer's block and all. Well, that wen't...badly.

I didn't even crack it open. For one, I don't have a lap top {an aside: in fact, I just bought one of these in almost perfect working condition (just needs grease) and according to its serial number, it's a 100 year old typerwriter--and no, I'm not an anti-tech person, quite the opposite, we just don't have the funds for a lap top}, and finding a print place ...
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The Writer


My daily rantings and ramblings on the epic journey of becoming published.
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