I know I've been very quiet - for almost two months, in fact - but I've been busy. Summer MustEnd is in the final furlong. I'lll finish it by next weekend.
When I started this book on September 6, 2009, I'd already been composing in my head for months. I knew how it would end. I always know how my books will end, like Stephen King, with whom I share that particular approach. I don't start a book until I have the ending. But getting to that end is the thing - that's where all the exciting, unplanned things occur.
When I write (and I've mentioned this before), I quickly work on each chapter, getting down everything I feel I need to say at that moment, and later - the same day, or the next morning, whenever - I carefully edit the draft, and move on to the next segment. When that chapter is complete, I go back to the very beginning, because ideas and dialogue are constantly coming to me during the time that I'm not physically writing, roughly scribbled on scraps of paper, and they now need to be inserted. Another careful proofread (well, as careful as any normal person manages) and I'm on to the next chapter. And so on. So what started out as (say) a 10-page chapter becomes 14 pages, perhaps, and the manuscript is becoming the final draft with each re-read and tweak.
The point today is that I'm about to start that final chapter. This one is the payoff - this is what writing all the other 90,000-plus words was leading to, and I'm both excited and relieved. There will be more inserts, of course, before this thing is ready for an agent. No doubt I'll even be tweaking it after I've made my move from Canada. But it will be ready for my trusted critics, those dear friends who again could take the time to give me their own opinions on it. I can only hope they love it as much as I do. It's my homage to Ontario. It's my farewell to Canadian rural life. I leave here at the end of September.
Sometimes when I'm deeply immersed in the work (or is that submerged?), I find myself wondering if my un-writerly life is going okay. I work on average 5 hours a day, skipping some days to do the usual chores, and then I feel as if I've just returned from a trip, because writing the story, being surrounded by all these characters, genuinely makes me feel as if I've been away. I look at my cats, and wonder if my occasional cuddles in the evening have been enough. Are they feeling neglected? Baby and Jeevesie, I promise I'll make it up to you. (And soon you'll be chasing lizards together.)
I'll continue my blog, of course - more regularly, I hope - after my move to Sydney. For those of you who have hung in there with me, despite my long absences, I wonder if you'll detect a difference in my demeanor. The light is so different there, and it makes me different. Being so geographically remote, you tend to feel less involved with the world than you do in Canada. My thinking becomes lighter, less introspective and intense. What kind of novel might that produce?
What I haven't mentioned over the last little while is that two- yes, two - lovely agents are presently looking at my first two manuscripts, respectively. They both seem very upbeat about them, and the fact that they communicated this to me is, in itself, a wonder to behold. We all know how very mysterious most agents appear to us, so this is almost miraculous - this one-to-one contact. I am practical enought to realize that It could come to nothing, which is my usual experience, but one never knows.
Summer must end, but perhaps we'll have an Indian summer. I always live in hope.
I finally heard
back from that agent who
had a full
submission of mine for
six months. I nudged her
twice before getting her
reply. She didn't say the
work wasn't for her, but
said, "I am not the
best agent for this..." A
new way of ...
I mentioned last week
that there were still a
couple of chunky
submissions out
there...well, heard back
from one. She was under
the impression she had
already told me she was
declining the opportunity
of representing me.
Believe me, if such an
email ...
I boldly followed up with
a couple of New York
agents this morning. One
has had one hundred pages
of Summer Must End for
over seven months. The
other asked for and
received the full
Strachan's Attic
manuscript five months
ago.
Now I know this would
s...
I know it's been ages
since I've blogged. For
those of you who have
followed me, it's been a
rather long haul,
listening to my general
frustrations. I hope my
basic optimism shone
through, all the same.
I'd hate to be accused of
ending the year with ...
Overcast, muggie,
17º, light
NNW. A walk around
Lollingdon and the Lees
produced very much the
same as last week, a lot
of insects about but few
butterflies.
Quite a few Stock Dove
noted and one seen in
display flight, a
â...
Sunny spells,
17º, light
WSW. A visit to
Lollingdon hill this
afternoon proved
quietish, five singing
Corn Bunting, three
Yellowhammer and two
Whitethroat, two pairs of
Linnet present, a
Great-spotted
Woodpecker and a
couple of Swa...
Sunny spells,
14º,
negligible wind. A visit
to Cholsey marsh early
morning saw the mist over
the river and a slight
frost at 04:15, then a
sunny morning with cloud
moving in later and a
couple of rain showers
later in the day.
The marsh...
Sunny spells and
showers. 10º,
fresh SSW. Another cool
and windy day but back in
Cholsey this time, a
brief visit to Lollingdon
hill produced zilch but a
heavy rain storm.
Back in the garden a
fairly well grown
juvenile Rook had turned
...
Sunny spells,
10º, fresh W.
A quiet week by Portland
standards for May, also
windy and cold, however a
good week and thanks to
Martin Cade, the Prof and
Joe and the other guests
at the Obs for making it
an enjoyable week, Ta!
Left aroun...
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— ml PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD
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Blog: Teens with Social Anxiety Engage in Earlier Alcohol, Marijuana Use by Conor N.
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—
http://inthenews.springhi
llgroupcounselling.com/20
13/05/14/teens-with-socia
l-anxiety-engage-in-earli
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According to a study
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