What I learned from writing the 1st draft of SOL

1) I am a writing drama queen


Wait. Let me back up.

I first have to tell you a little bit about the process of writing the Speaking of Love (spin-off of Playing at Love) draft.

I wrote the first three chapters over two months ago, got the “okay to move forward” from my editor, then got busy with other writing projects (such as editing both P@L and Abby Road and writing numerous guest blogs and interviews for P@L), knowing that I still had loooooads of time to get back to SOL. Then it came time to do the actual manuscript writing. I sat down with my laptop, cracked my knuckles, then checked Facebook. And Twitter. And pretty much anything else that falls under the title of “time suckage.” After about a week of this, I started to worry. Therefore, being the good little author I am, I sent an email to my editor explaining that it may behoove us both if she gave me a due date for the first draft . . . .because, obviously, I wasn’t getting it done on my own.

She did as asked.

And I freaked out.

Because it seemed very soon, only one month away. Additionally–since I simply CANNOT allow my editor (who, let’s face it, thinks I’m perfect. . . .) to see a first draft without it first going to my critique partner for a blood-drenched edit–I had to move up the completion date in time to send it to her in time for her to read it and send notes and then for me to have time to fix those before the looming due date. AND, since my crit partner is participating in NaNoWriMo starting at the stroke of midnight on November 1st, I needed to get my draft to her even sooner, since she would be completely out of pocket come 11/1.

Sooooo. . . .needless to say (but since I’m so long-winded, I’ll say it anyway), my writing time went from one month to two weeks and I was completely freaking out. Then (heh-heh) came the “writer’s block”–which often comes when I put undo pressure on myself. 🙂 After another few days of falling into the “time suckage” vortex, I was really panicking. My writing sucked, I lost focus, I didn’t know who my characters were or what they wanted or what they sounded like, and I basically started rethinking my skill as a writer and my reasons for being born.

Very productive.

Despite the fact that I was woefully behind my self-inflicted schedule, I took an evening off….not able to face that blank page. I watched a movie that I loved and pulled a book off my shelf that I hadn’t yet gotten to. I read that book and the first half of another. It was pretty amazing what that did. If nothing else, it reminded me what an actual book is supposed to look like and feel like and sound like. The books weren’t amazingly great, but they took me away from my own story long enough for my creativity to rest and reboot.

And then I wrote.

For three days straight.

My characters were back conversing in my head and driving me crazy, and the muses were smiling. It’s what we call a breakthrough. I finished the first draft just shy of two weeks. Which, for me, is pretty dang fast. It’s not perfect, it’s got loads of problems, but. . . . for a rough draft. . . I think it’s quite fab.

But I digress. . . . .

2) writing a good “hunky guy chopping firewood” scene can snap me out of a writing funk
3) I need to cut myself major slack
4) writing is easier when my mother is in town and cooking for me. Just knowing I have a freezer full of potato soup is soothing
5) it doesn’t help my writing to watch Vampire Diaries, but it sure is fun
6) I am productive under pressure, but I fear it ages me and drives those around me to want to run and hide
7) for a time, it’s okay to think that I don’t have any writing talents or marketable skills or reasons to be living. Obviously, that will all pass. If I can learn something from it (and then blog about it a week later), maybe those moments of panic aren’t in vain
8) I really need to read THIS
9) cupcakes can save the world (but I kind of already knew this)
10) a support system and friends who ask about my projects mean the effin’ world to me
11) Taylor Swift’s new album is really good. I like THIS one best.
12) I should give up Diet Cokes but I can’t
13) a good crisis of faith is healthy–but only if short-lived
14) I want/need a new office chair. One of those ones with the mesh back. Or a recliner. Or a private island.
15) Gwen Stefani totally gets me
16) always laugh. Find balance. Enjoy the moments. Even the stressful ones. Everything is fodder.

Now–my creative types–time to dance to Gwen. The first two minutes, you know you totally relate to this! 

(“tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock”)

What I learned from writing the 1st draft of SOL

1) I am a writing drama queen


Wait. Let me back up.

I first have to tell you a little bit about the process of writing the Speaking of Love (spin-off of Playing at Love) draft.

I wrote the first three chapters over two months ago, got the “okay to move forward” from my editor, then got busy with other writing projects (such as editing both P@L and Abby Road and writing numerous guest blogs and interviews for P@L), knowing that I still had loooooads of time to get back to SOL. Then it came time to do the actual manuscript writing. I sat down with my laptop, cracked my knuckles, then checked Facebook. And Twitter. And pretty much anything else that falls under the title of “time suckage.” After about a week of this, I started to worry. Therefore, being the good little author I am, I sent an email to my editor explaining that it may behoove us both if she gave me a due date for the first draft . . . .because, obviously, I wasn’t getting it done on my own.

She did as asked.

And I freaked out.

Because it seemed very soon, only one month away. Additionally–since I simply CANNOT allow my editor (who, let’s face it, thinks I’m perfect. . . .) to see a first draft without it first going to my critique partner for a blood-drenched edit–I had to move up the completion date in time to send it to her in time for her to read it and send notes and then for me to have time to fix those before the looming due date. AND, since my crit partner is participating in NaNoWriMo starting at the stroke of midnight on November 1st, I needed to get my draft to her even sooner, since she would be completely out of pocket come 11/1.

Sooooo. . . .needless to say (but since I’m so long-winded, I’ll say it anyway), my writing time went from one month to two weeks and I was completely freaking out. Then (heh-heh) came the “writer’s block”–which often comes when I put undo pressure on myself. 🙂 After another few days of falling into the “time suckage” vortex, I was really panicking. My writing sucked, I lost focus, I didn’t know who my characters were or what they wanted or what they sounded like, and I basically started rethinking my skill as a writer and my reasons for being born.

Very productive.

Despite the fact that I was woefully behind my self-inflicted schedule, I took an evening off….not able to face that blank page. I watched a movie that I loved and pulled a book off my shelf that I hadn’t yet gotten to. I read that book and the first half of another. It was pretty amazing what that did. If nothing else, it reminded me what an actual book is supposed to look like and feel like and sound like. The books weren’t amazingly great, but they took me away from my own story long enough for my creativity to rest and reboot.

And then I wrote.

For three days straight.

My characters were back conversing in my head and driving me crazy, and the muses were smiling. It’s what we call a breakthrough. I finished the first draft just shy of two weeks. Which, for me, is pretty dang fast. It’s not perfect, it’s got loads of problems, but. . . . for a rough draft. . . I think it’s quite fab.

But I digress. . . . .

2) writing a good “hunky guy chopping firewood” scene can snap me out of a writing funk
3) I need to cut myself major slack
4) writing is easier when my mother is in town and cooking for me. Just knowing I have a freezer full of potato soup is soothing
5) it doesn’t help my writing to watch Vampire Diaries, but it sure is fun
6) I am productive under pressure, but I fear it ages me and drives those around me to want to run and hide
7) for a time, it’s okay to think that I don’t have any writing talents or marketable skills or reasons to be living. Obviously, that will all pass. If I can learn something from it (and then blog about it a week later), maybe those moments of panic aren’t in vain
8) I really need to read THIS
9) cupcakes can save the world (but I kind of already knew this)
10) a support system and friends who ask about my projects mean the effin’ world to me
11) Taylor Swift’s new album is really good. I like THIS one best.
12) I should give up Diet Cokes but I can’t
13) a good crisis of faith is healthy–but only if short-lived
14) I want/need a new office chair. One of those ones with the mesh back. Or a recliner. Or a private island.
15) Gwen Stefani totally gets me
16) always laugh. Find balance. Enjoy the moments. Even the stressful ones. Everything is fodder.

Now–my creative types–time to dance to Gwen. The first two minutes, you know you totally relate to this! 

(“tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock”)

Playing at Love – musical giveaway!

Hey everyone. This is so cool. I’m hosting a giveaway to celebrate my first book 
PLAYING AT LOVE.

(eep!)

(I’m still so in love with my cover. Let’s take a sec to stare at it.
 Okay. Thanks. Moving on.)


Prize: 
a brand spanking new iPod loaded with . . . get this . . . 
the playlist inspired by the book!
So fab, yeah?

Entering is way easy. Check it out here:

a Rafflecopter giveaway 

All you bloggers out there, go crazy, grab the widget code HERE. 

Playing at Love – musical giveaway!

Hey everyone. This is so cool. I’m hosting a giveaway to celebrate my first book 
PLAYING AT LOVE.

(eep!)

(I’m still so in love with my cover. Let’s take a sec to stare at it.
 Okay. Thanks. Moving on.)


Prize: 
a brand spanking new iPod loaded with . . . get this . . . 
the playlist inspired by the book!
So fab, yeah?

Entering is way easy. Check it out here:

a Rafflecopter giveaway 

All you bloggers out there, go crazy, grab the widget code HERE. 

Meet the "Playing at Love" peeps!

Here they are!
The beautiful Tess Johansson: looking for love, finally in all the right places…
 
Jack Marshall: football coach and all around dream boat…
(hubba hubba) 
Ooh-la-la. Go for it, Jack!
Mackenzie: Tess’s faithful pal, always willing to seduce a hot guy if necessary for “the cause”
 
Rick: hipster newspaperman or sexpot in disguise?
 
Penny: Franklin High’s little song bird who can belt out Nirvana with the best of them!

Charlie: Tess’s soldier brother, and dreamy enough to earn his own spin-off…
It’s enough to make me want to read my own book. Again! 
*swoooooon* 
Find “Playing at Love” at amazon.com & barneandnoble.com
You’re welcome. 🙂

Meet the "Playing at Love" peeps!

Here they are!
The beautiful Tess Johansson: looking for love, finally in all the right places…
 
Jack Marshall: football coach and all around dream boat…
(hubba hubba) 
Ooh-la-la. Go for it, Jack!
Mackenzie: Tess’s faithful pal, always willing to seduce a hot guy if necessary for “the cause”
 
Rick: hipster newspaperman or sexpot in disguise?
 
Penny: Franklin High’s little song bird who can belt out Nirvana with the best of them!

Charlie: Tess’s soldier brother, and dreamy enough to earn his own spin-off…
It’s enough to make me want to read my own book. Again! 
*swoooooon* 
Find “Playing at Love” at amazon.com & barneandnoble.com
You’re welcome. 🙂

"Playing at Love"

Tuh-duuuuuuuh! 


Show choir teacher Tess Johansson loves three things: music, her job, and sharing that passion with her students. But when a school budget crisis forces funding to be pulled from either the sports or music programs, she finds herself going head to head with Jack, the gorgeous new football coach who broke her heart fifteen years ago.
Jack Marshall wants two things: to be closer to his young daughter and to make his mark as a football coach. Taking the new job, with the promise that he’d have time to build a solid team, gave him both. But now he must win the season with a group of boys who aren’t anywhere near ready or he’ll lose everything he’s worked so hard for. Being pitted against Tess, the summer love he never forgot, is like being fourth and long with only seconds on the clock.
On opposing sides of a fierce battle and with everything at stake, Tess and Jack find themselves torn between doing what it takes to win and doing what it takes to be together.

 

To read LOTS more, go here: 
amazon.com 
barnesandnoble.com

"Playing at Love"

Tuh-duuuuuuuh! 


Show choir teacher Tess Johansson loves three things: music, her job, and sharing that passion with her students. But when a school budget crisis forces funding to be pulled from either the sports or music programs, she finds herself going head to head with Jack, the gorgeous new football coach who broke her heart fifteen years ago.
Jack Marshall wants two things: to be closer to his young daughter and to make his mark as a football coach. Taking the new job, with the promise that he’d have time to build a solid team, gave him both. But now he must win the season with a group of boys who aren’t anywhere near ready or he’ll lose everything he’s worked so hard for. Being pitted against Tess, the summer love he never forgot, is like being fourth and long with only seconds on the clock.
On opposing sides of a fierce battle and with everything at stake, Tess and Jack find themselves torn between doing what it takes to win and doing what it takes to be together.

 

To read LOTS more, go here: 
amazon.com 
barnesandnoble.com

things I’ve learned from the second pass of edits

(and I’ve had two of them now, which makes four passes in all)

 I use these words too much:
     “continued” (we’re talking 123 times, but I managed to cut it down to 44. No easy task.)
     “scoffed” (I fear I use it incorrectly, as well)
     “paused” (my new go-to is “hesitate.” I might be deleting that one during the third pass.)

I expect people to be mind-readers. They’re not. Not even my editor. Who should be, right? 

I am absolutely rubbish at the proper use of the em-dash.

Speaking of punctuation and over-usages, I also overuse (and misuse) ellipses. We’re all shocked. . . . .

I can’t count – if the way I numbered my chapters is any indication.

Cutting word count is effing hard. I’m much too long-winded for that. Ask anyone.

Evidently, it doesn’t faze this writer when I use the same word four times in one paragraph.

Oh well. Moving on. Here’s to Round Three!

things I’ve learned from the second pass of edits

(and I’ve had two of them now, which makes four passes in all)

 I use these words too much:
     “continued” (we’re talking 123 times, but I managed to cut it down to 44. No easy task.)
     “scoffed” (I fear I use it incorrectly, as well)
     “paused” (my new go-to is “hesitate.” I might be deleting that one during the third pass.)

I expect people to be mind-readers. They’re not. Not even my editor. Who should be, right? 

I am absolutely rubbish at the proper use of the em-dash.

Speaking of punctuation and over-usages, I also overuse (and misuse) ellipses. We’re all shocked. . . . .

I can’t count – if the way I numbered my chapters is any indication.

Cutting word count is effing hard. I’m much too long-winded for that. Ask anyone.

Evidently, it doesn’t faze this writer when I use the same word four times in one paragraph.

Oh well. Moving on. Here’s to Round Three!