Showing posts with label Challenge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Challenge. Show all posts
Wednesday, 31 October 2018
NaNoWriMo 2018 - Here We Go
So November is upon us, bring with it the end of Spring, hot days and sweat-drenched nights. And the National Novel Writing Month. It's a special time of year for writers to be even more isolated, stressed and sleep deprived than usual, for a lot of us have challenged ourselves to write 50,000 words in thirty days.
It's hectic.
Last November I competed in NaNoWriMo for the very first time, after finishing the first draft of 'Emma and the Madhouse Kids' on the 28th of October, leaving me no time to prepare. I jumped right into it with a half-formed idea, based on a question about strange lights in the sky, and wrote 50k words towards a Sci-Fi story I've tentatively titled 'The Rings of the Earth'.
And you know what? I still don't know how that one's going to end, let alone if it'll ever see the light of day. I originally hoped to work on it again this November, but it's a rather complex story and will take an awful lot of editing and revising after the first draft is complete. When I started, I had no idea what I was getting into, and at least half of my writing time I was using to research NASA, JAXA, ESA and ROSCOM, as well as the ISS, details of existing space probes and a whole lot of other sciency stuff..
So as discussed in this blog post, I'm focusing on something simpler that I'll hopefully be able to self-publish within 12 months. It's something I've tentatively titled 'Dragons of Bern' and focuses on a family living in an alternate-history Germany, so the Kingdom of Bavaria, Prussia, Hessia etc. It's a YA story, featuring German mythological creatures including Dragons (the title should have given that away). And yes - I know Bern is in Switzerland, not Germany. Basically, I'm a lot better prepared this year than last year, I'm excited about this new novel, and can't wait to get started.
But of course, November isn't just NaNo, I still have to go to my day job, be a husband and father of our Rescued Greyhounds, November also happens to be backed with work, family and social commitments, plus a book launch near the end of the month I'm going to be involved with. Finding time to write isn't going to be easy. I guess some of you are asking, "why do it if it's going to be so crazy? If it's going to cause extra stress and take up so much of your time?"
And you know what? I have an answer. Aside from the odd short story, I've literally done nothing but edit 'Emma and the Madhouse Kids' for almost a year now. I need a break from it. And without NaNo chances are I would just keep editing it for the next 12 to 48 months too. And as much as I love that story and those characters, I don't want to do that. I have other great stories bubbling away in my head that I want to write, and this is the perfect opportunity to start a new project.
Also, the writing community on both Twitter and Facebook are always great, always supportive, and that's taken up another notch for NaNo because we know how draining and exhausting it can be.
But it's also fun. We know it's mad, but we're writers. Mad is our normal.
Sunday, 1 July 2018
The 20 Best Books I Read in 2017 (Part One).
In my first blog Evidently I'm Going to Regret This I said that I'd read 52 books in 2017 as part of the Popsugar Reading Challenge. I honestly surprised myself by reaching that goal.
Anyway now's as good a time as any to share my favourite books from last year. I say 'from last year' but honestly I read more books that are 10 to 50 years old than books read the year they're published. Anyway, here are ten of the books I gave 4 stars to (in the order that I read them).
LET THE RIGHT ONE IN - Lindqvist (2004).
From the start, I am not a fan of Vampires. But I'd seen the movies (and probably don't need to say that the original is better than the remake) and really enjoyed them, so I thought I'd give it a go. and it was great. Really dark and creepy, almost Lolita levels of creepy, basically. What was great about it was how it was not the usual vampire story. The protagonist was a boy in Sweden who was bullied at school and befriends a young girl in their apartment complex. Who turns out to be a vampire. There is a lot of killings and brutality, and at the centre of it all are these sweet kids who help each other out of nothing but friendship. It's tense, it gritty, it's written really well.
THE COLLECTOR - Fowles (1963).
This was a really clever book set in England about a socially awkward clerk who comes into a large sum of money and his plans to win the affections of Miranda, a middle-class Art student he has long admired. He eventually convinces himself to kidnap her, and win her affection by being nothing but a gentleman to her. But he didn't think his plan through, nor count on the intelligence and desperation of his prey. The second part of the novel is told from Miranda's POV and is entirely compelling. It it well written, it gives one the chills, and leaves you breathless. Highly recommended.
MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN - Riggs (2011).
Miss Peregrine's is a really fun YA novel, where Jacob finds there might be some truth to his grandfather's crazy stories shortly after his disturbing death. When he has an opportunity to go to a place that was special to his grandfather with his dad, he jumps at the chance, and starts putting together pieces to a mystery lost in time.
It's a different take on the standard YA fantasy, it's engaging, and feels quite familiar all the way through. Meeting the 'Peculiar' children (and Miss Peregrine, of course) is a delight, however the further you go, the darker and scarier it gets.
PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK - Lindsay (1967).
The very first few pages absolutely transported me to my youth, growing up in country Victoria, the sights, the sounds, the scents are exactly as Lindsay described. This novel actually featured in a recent blog post of mine, Books and Movies that I Love. Basically Picnic at Hanging Rock is a superb mystery full of eerie events, curious characters and sinister undertones.
LAVINIA - Le Guin (2008).
Ursula K. Le Guin, one of my all-time favourite authors, wrote Lavinia in 2008. It is an unusual book in a sense, as the titular character is a character in Virgil's Aeneid. A significant character, too - the wife of the hero Aeneas, yet in the Aeneid she was not given a line. Le Guin gave her a voice, and made her real - but not only that, but brought her family and community of Laurentum to life, and describe's not only Lavinia's conflict with her family marvellously, but also the war between Laurentum and her neighbours and the invading Trojans, lead by Aeneas.
RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA - Clarke (1973).
This was a childhood favourite of mine, I am not ashamed to admit. The imagination that Clarke had, the skills to bring such wonders to life, absolutely phenomenal. Anyway, Rendezvous With Rama tells the classic sci-fi story of first contact with alien intelligence. An unidentified object - a massive cylinder - enteres out Solar System and slows down, and a crew of astronauts is dispatched to investigate it. The tale of the crew and their exploration of the cylinder is so clever, and the ending is just so perfect, that I can't say a bad word about it.
PERFUME: THE STORY OF A MURDERER - Suskind (1985).
Another novel that I had read after seeing the movie. This is an original story though, in that it tells the tale of a man whose sense of smell is so powerful that his perspective of the world is unique. He becomes a perfumer, one who creates perfumes, and becomes obsessed with capturing all the scents and creating perfumes to make people see him as angelic or god-like. Unfortunately, some of the scents he must capture and use he can only obtain my murder. The whole thing is very clever and really well-written.
THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY - Adams (1979).
I have to say that I used this book for the 'about an immigrant or refugee' prompt. I don't think there's much for me to say about this one. There's no dispute it's hilarious and an absolute sci-fi comedy classic.
THE KING'S JUSTICE - Donaldson (2016).
This was a very interesting fantasy story. A man rides into a town in the Kingdom attempting to solve a disturbing murder, which soon turn into a series of murders. The characters are great, the story is captivating and complex with many twists and turns, and Donaldson has created another amazing fantasy world with a brilliant system of magic.
MARTIAN TIME-SLIP - Dick (1964).
I have to say Philip K. Dick is one of my favourite authors. I have read most of his 44 novels and 120 short stories, and this is one of the ones that I think is the most under-rated. What Dick does so well is really get right into the day-to-day life and concerns of the average person in whatever insane world he comes up with. In Martian Time-Slip, the protagonist Bohlen is a repairman on a struggling colony on Mars. His relationship with his wife is on a downward spiral, his employer is taking advantage of him, but what can he do? Just get through as best he can and try keep his schizophrenic episodes at bay. When Bohlen's path crosses with Arnie Kott's, the leader of the Water Worker's Union, his life gets turned upside down. The most outstanding yet terrifying part of this book is Dick's description of what Manfred Steiner, an autistic child who becomes one of Arnie Kott's many pawns perceives.
So that's the first ten books of my top twenty.
Next week I'll summarise the top ten, and share which six books I gave 5 star reviews to.
Please comment on whether you agree or disagree with my reviews, or the best books that you read last year!
Sunday, 25 February 2018
Evidently, I'm Going to Regret This.
As you can tell, I've started writing a blog.
Why? Well, can I start by saying that I don't like that question? Well, not specifically 'why' - I have plenty of time for 'why is this so?' or 'why does this happen?' but it's 'why did you do that?' which I don't like. When someone asks me 'why did you do that?' I immediately go on the defensive, I feel they have made a judgement that my decision was not the one that they would have made, that it was the wrong decision, and that I'm obligated to explain the reasoning behind my decision-making process, which isn't something I ever really want to do.
Well, in this case I can provide an answer or three to the question 'why are you writing a blog?' Which, incidentally, is going to be asked by everyone who knows how boring and mundane I am, and will of course be shortly followed up by 'why the hell would anyone read that?' Here are my answers:
a) Because everyone needs to read about my most embarrassing stories and my unpopular opinions.
b) Between working full-time, reading, writing, spending time with my wife and beautiful greyhounds and my mobile phone addiction, I basically have zero time.
c) I have survived several encounters which could well have killed me. Was my life spared so I could go on and achieve great things? Or have I been cursed to live forever? Or is that just part of growing up in Australia? Find out here.
d) And well, everyone likes to watch a car crash, right? Whatever hopes and dreams I have are bound to be lost, my life will be turned upside down and it will all end in tears, right in front of your eyes.
I guess the real reasons behind a lot of our actions stay hidden in our subconscious and are dominated by our needs for survival, of peer/social acceptance. In 2017 I challenged myself to read 52 books, which is something I never genuinely believed I could do. And yet, I did. I read one book for each of the 52 categories of the 2017 Popsugar Reading Challenge, and also wrote the first draft of my 90,000 word novel (currently titled 'Emma and the Madhouse Kids') and I also competed in NaNoWriMo for the first time, writing over 50,000 words for a Sci-Fi novel (currently titled 'The Rings of the Earth'). And I'd not written anything aside from essays since high school. So, in short, I achieved way more last year than I ever thought possible. I surprised myself. And, as Kevin Spacey's character from American Beauty said, "it's a great thing when you realise you still have the ability to surprise yourself." Incidentally, I used to love that movie, now I don't know how I feel about it any more. I'm someone who pretty much never sees anything through, or finish projects that I start, but after last year, I'm thinking maybe I can do this, so I am challenging myself to try harder, push myself further, and who knows what might happen.
Well, answer d from above, most likely.
Why? Well, can I start by saying that I don't like that question? Well, not specifically 'why' - I have plenty of time for 'why is this so?' or 'why does this happen?' but it's 'why did you do that?' which I don't like. When someone asks me 'why did you do that?' I immediately go on the defensive, I feel they have made a judgement that my decision was not the one that they would have made, that it was the wrong decision, and that I'm obligated to explain the reasoning behind my decision-making process, which isn't something I ever really want to do.
Well, in this case I can provide an answer or three to the question 'why are you writing a blog?' Which, incidentally, is going to be asked by everyone who knows how boring and mundane I am, and will of course be shortly followed up by 'why the hell would anyone read that?' Here are my answers:
a) Because everyone needs to read about my most embarrassing stories and my unpopular opinions.
b) Between working full-time, reading, writing, spending time with my wife and beautiful greyhounds and my mobile phone addiction, I basically have zero time.
c) I have survived several encounters which could well have killed me. Was my life spared so I could go on and achieve great things? Or have I been cursed to live forever? Or is that just part of growing up in Australia? Find out here.
d) And well, everyone likes to watch a car crash, right? Whatever hopes and dreams I have are bound to be lost, my life will be turned upside down and it will all end in tears, right in front of your eyes.
I guess the real reasons behind a lot of our actions stay hidden in our subconscious and are dominated by our needs for survival, of peer/social acceptance. In 2017 I challenged myself to read 52 books, which is something I never genuinely believed I could do. And yet, I did. I read one book for each of the 52 categories of the 2017 Popsugar Reading Challenge, and also wrote the first draft of my 90,000 word novel (currently titled 'Emma and the Madhouse Kids') and I also competed in NaNoWriMo for the first time, writing over 50,000 words for a Sci-Fi novel (currently titled 'The Rings of the Earth'). And I'd not written anything aside from essays since high school. So, in short, I achieved way more last year than I ever thought possible. I surprised myself. And, as Kevin Spacey's character from American Beauty said, "it's a great thing when you realise you still have the ability to surprise yourself." Incidentally, I used to love that movie, now I don't know how I feel about it any more. I'm someone who pretty much never sees anything through, or finish projects that I start, but after last year, I'm thinking maybe I can do this, so I am challenging myself to try harder, push myself further, and who knows what might happen.
Well, answer d from above, most likely.
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