Armed for Nano

Unlike last year, I am 100% prepped and ready to get underway on my NaNoWriMo novel.  I have a number of great tools and toys to use in my quest for 50,000 words.  Let’s talk about them, in no particular order.

  • WikidPad – I’m using this wiki-style tool to organize my story world.  It would be equally great for organizing research.  The whole idea is about linking topics together in as quick and painless a way as possible.  If I’m writing about Flynn and I need to know what type of gun his mechanized battle suit uses, I can track it down: CharactersBook1>FlyNN>FlynnsMech>WeaPons, each linked to the other in sequence. (Ye, the weird capitalization is part of it.)  Cross-reference heaven.  If I want to look up other members of Willow’s tribe: CharactersBook1>WilloW>SoFari>NotableCitizens.  I confess, building it has been fun and there are a lot of avenues I haven’t developed yet.  If I get to something I haven’t fleshed out, I’ll know that too and can add as needed.  More than anything, this will help prevent those pesky inconsistencies that are so hard to drum out after the fact.
  • Scrivener – I bought this word processing program last year during NaNo, but I really didn’t know how to use it then.  I’m still no expert, but I’ve been using the index card/corkboard to organize my outline.  This is different from my world organization, which is pretty much facts, statistics, relationships.  This is a model for the order of my plot and a bit about what happens in each section.  It’s a pretty detailed outline, I must say: a chapter-by-chapter array with each chapter broken into 3-6 sub-sections.  It’s only though about 66% of the novel so far, but that should be fixed before Halloween.  The way Scrivener works is there’s effectively a separate little document for each of my sub-sections where I write as much or as little as the section requires.  It’s designed for these sub-sections to be scenes, but it doesn’t work out that way in my outline.  Anyway, these all compile into a single document in the end.  It’s got my plot poised and ready for battle.  Wat’s more, I can skip around the story pretty easily if I need to.  Perhaps I’m on a roll writing one character and I want to stay with him/her through writing another chapter despite the next chapter switching to a different scene.  I can do it without worrying about losing my place.  Also a good idea when faced with the opposite — writer’s block.
  • Dragon Naturally Speaking – Okay, I won’t get to use it as much as I might want due to weird words and names, but I fully expect to have stretches of the novel I speak into the computer instead of type.  I’m a really slow typist, so I may go so far as to whip out the headset for a word war at the local write-in, but I doubt it.  Mostly it’ll relieve me when typing gets too rough to bear.  And it’s a toy, which can make the more tedious sections (descriptions, character foreshadowing, etc.) a little easier to power through.
  • Flip Dictionary – This is one of my favorite writing books.  It doesn’t always give me the word I’m after, but it tends to help.  Yes, it’s a glorified thesaurus, but it’s layout is virtually a wiki in itself.  I’m notoriously finding myself stuck on a single word and finding it impossible to think of anything else but that word that’s on he tip of my brain but won’t come.  Flip Dictionary tends to help me get the word (or a better one) and move on.  WARNING: This is not to be used to replace perfectly good words with fancier words, just to get a word down that conveys a meaning that no cluster of wods is quite getting across.  If I need someone to “saunter” and can’t think of the word, I’ll just type “walked slowly and casually” and fix it on edit.  But when I can’t quite get into the same zip code as the word I’m after, FD gets me closer with a few cross-references.  I like it.
  • USB Keyboard – How simple can I get?  Well, sometimes this stupid laptop keyboard is hard to work with.  The computer gets hot or the keys don’t all register well (I’ve had to correct about 20 non-registered keystrokes in this post alone) and I like to have a little more freedom.  Yes, a Bluetooth keyboard would be even more freedom, but I’m cheap and I have a USB keyboard sitting around the house, so I just toss it into the computer bag and have it with me for any excursion-writing I might do.  Trust me, this makes a difference when you’re after 50k.  It’s like having comfortable shoes for a marathon.
  • Sick Day on the 1st – I’ve already put in for November 1st off work.  Let’s face it, I’ll be in no condition to work that day.  So I’ll go to the midnight write-in my local NaNo is having and get a good head start.

That’s about all the tools that come to mind.  Five days and change to go.  Good luck NaNo-ers!

NanoNanoNanoNano…

8 days and some-odd hours until NaNoWriMo (that’s National Novel Writing Month for those unfamiliar).  I’ve already blogged about it recently; this is me expressing my excitement!  I am so ready to take a bite out of the first chapter.  I am tempted to start early…but no.  I am trying to channel that energy into constructive projects like paperbacking my short story collection and powering through an old broken short story between now and November 1st.  I tell you, the anticipation is making me so sick that I might not be able to go to work on the first.  >:-)

If you are also a Nano (Nanite?), feel free to buddy me (Scott W Baker).

Call me old fashioned…

Okay, I did it.  I didn’t intend to, but I did it anyway.  I just finished submitting my e-book collection Baker’s Dozen to be a book-book.  A self-published book, but still a book.  I don’t expect the sales to be any better than the ebook version, but it’s a format I wanted.

Rewind to LibertyCon last summer.  People kept coming by the interview table asking what I had for sale.  I had nothing to show them.  Well, I had coupons and bookmarks to show, but nothing to sell on the spot, nothing to sign for them.  In consumer terms, I had nothing.  I’ve kind of regretted that ever since, and now I’m finally doing something about it.

My plan is to order a batch of 30 before ChattaCon hits in January so I can sell there.  I don’t expect to sell thirty that weekend (not ruling it out), but I’d like to sell enough to cover the price of the order.  After that, each sale will be pure profit.  I’m also considering some sort of coupon code or something so that the buyer of a hard-copy can get the ebook for free.  No sure on that quite yet, but I’m toying with the idea.

The book will be trade paperback.  It will have all the same content as the ebook (I considered bonus content but decided against) with the same cover and a few teasers on the back cover.   I’m using Amazon’s CreateSpace to print the book, a process that has been pretty easy short of the cover design.  I took the $10 plunge to list “Out of Chaos” as the publishing imprint.  So far, I’m happy with the process.  Time will tell how happy I am in the end.

 

Time Wasting on the go

What do you do when you have a few down minutes someplace random? Sure, I should probably be writing, but let’s face it, you can’t be in a constant state of writer-readiness. So me, I play around on my Android phone.

I’ve been there and done that with Angry Birds and 100 Floors. My latest obsessive game is a fairly innocuous-looking game called Flow Free.

At its base, Flow Free (probably just called Flow, but I’m cheap so mine is free) is just a connect-the-dots puzzle game, only you aren’t allowed to cross your own lines. The first few levels of free play (puzzle levels) are pretty simple, but things get tougher as you increase the size of the grid.

imageBut it’s not the free play but the time trial levels I’ve been obsessing over. It consists of a series of the easier puzzles strung together on a timer – 30 seconds, 1 minute, 2 minutes, or 4 minutes. And of course it keeps track of your records.

I can’t find other brag-posts of people touting their Flow accomplishments like I find for other games, but here’s mine.

image

Yeah, I’ve got to remember that when I complain about never having enough time to do stuff. Anyway, Flow Free is fun, addictive, simultaneously easy and challenging, and free through Google Play. What more could you want?

How am I going to resist this?

I recently blogged on my discovery of and addiction to the Writing Excuses podcast.  Well, this morning I discovered that the fine folks at Writing Excuses (specifically Brandon Sanderson, Mary Robinette Kowal, Howard Taylor, and Dan Wells) are conducting a one-week writing workshop/retreat called “Out of Excuses“.

Knowing what I know about these fine folks, I suspected the workshop would be in Utah.  It is not.  It’s in Chattanooga, Tennessee.  Yeah, that’s like an hour and a half from where my butt currently sits.

So I need to do one of two things: (a) figure out where to get a thousand bucks (give or take) so I can attend, or (b) find a sufficient excuse to explain to myself why it’s okay that I’m not attending. A roommate would make (a) a more feasible option by reducing the lower bound of the price to $750 (extras will still cost extra, of course).

Don’t get me wrong, this isn’t Clarion or the WotF workshop, but it’s a week to be a writer and to get to know writers.  And write.

Hard to say what my situation will be by June, financially and otherwise, so option (b) will likely fulfill itself via the workshop filling up before I can afford to buy in.  But it’s an option on the horizon that would be pretty frigging awesome.  I’ll be contemplating and brainstorming…

It’s beginning to look a lot like NaNoWriMo…

It’s halfway through September and I’m already looking ahead to November.  Or should I say…NaNo-vember?

November is indeed National Novel Writing Month and I for one am planning to participate.  I participated last year, but I’m actually planning to participate this year.  Trust me, friend, there is a difference.

Last year, I started writing away on a novel on a half-baked concept that I spent maybe a couple days prodding with a stick before the writing began.  Surprise, surprise, I lost steam around 8000 words and I lost interest around 12,000.  I was nowhere near the 50k I was supposed to finish that month.  It was a concept that I didn’t really have any business writing and didn’t really have any interest in writing.  It was an idea that poked its toe inside my brain at just the right time to get caught.  It should have been catch-and-release; this guppy was way too young.

This year, things will be different.  (No one’s ever said that before, I’m certain.)  This time I am writing a novel based on a concept that has been marinading in my brain for years.  I have a WikidPad Wiki for the world mapped and cross-referenced.  I have a draft of an outline (okay, 70% of a draft of an outline).  I have a deep interest in writing this thing.

In all actuality, this is a shared world concept that I have kicked around with some WotF friends but never got off the ground.  I’m still interested in sharing the world with them if they are game, but I’m just going to get the ball rolling by fleshing out the world(s) enough for a novel and leaving tons of angles hinted at but unexplored.

So why am I targeting NaNoWriMo for this instead of just pressing pen to paper right now?  Well, for one, I’m not sold on my outline.  I want to braid some of the story lines together more thoroughly than they currently stand.  I also need to spend more time developing the world for some internal consistency.  And mostly, I want a NaNo project.  There’s no way I can get this novel written between now and then, especially if any other projects are to get attention.  And this one has the market potential that I’ve been waiting for.  The clouds are parting, the stars are aligning, and the heavens point to this story as the one.  And NaNo should gave me the incentive to power through the novel with the necessary persistence.  Hopefully.

Anyway, I wanted to share my NaNoWriMo intentions with everyone.  If you plan to WriMo, start doing your planning now.  You’ll appreciate it when November 11th hits and you can’t remember where your story was supposed to be going.

Time is running out

Do you have a Smashwords coupon for Baker’s Dozen?  You know, the ones that were in the eggs at LibertyCon? Well, you better use it soon; coupon expires this Wednesday.

Don’t have a coupon?  Or maybe you’re not confident it?  Here’s the how-to. (You will need to set up an account if you don’t have one.)

  1. Go to the Baker’s Dozen listing on Smashwords. 
  2. Add the book to your cart.
  3. Type the coupon code AB49T in the coupon code box.
  4. Pay a buck.
  5. Download the book in your choice of formats.  File is easily transferable from your computer to any electronic device through your USB connection, or by any more clever method you might know.
  6. Enjoy 13 great stories. Live a more fulfilled life.

As an added bonus (in no way related to the coupon’s expiration other than by cosmic coincidence), an audio presentation of “Chasers”, will reportedly be released on Escape Pod on Thursday.

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/172183

Good news for “Leech Run” fans

I think my space pirate story, “Leech Run” may be my most widely appreciated story to date.  It was originally published in Pill Hill Press’s Zero Gravity anthology, then ran in Escape Pod episode 303.  I have received numerous comments requesting a sequel.  It’s been something I was interested in but some other project always got in the way.  Recently, though, I’ve had a fair amount of project-stall and I really needed something short to sink my teeth into.

So, I just finished outlining the sequel to “Leech Run”.  The story is as yet untitled, but those tend to come last anyway.  This new story will pick up right where LR left off, with Titan’s wounded ship approaching the nearest planet with a load full of energy-draining leeches including one bound class-four leech.  Let’s say that things don’t go smoothly.  What happens?  Well, I’ll let you know where to find the story once I get the thing written.  I’m hoping to power through a draft by he end of the month.  Yes, even with school in session.  I’m hoping the outline, which I seldom use for a short story, will help me power through.  Fingers crossed.

“Forthcoming” has almost arrived

I confess, impatience got the better of me.  So I queried the asst. editor at Escape Pod to find out whether the “forthcoming” on my bibliography was a perpetual status.  It seems not.  He confirmed that “Chasers” is slated for air later this month. 

It was February when I found out EP was going to give my 2004 story “Chasers” the audio treatment.  (That’s a story from 2004, not about 2004.)  This space operatic story has long been a favorite of at least one of my beta readers.  It’s a colonization story.  It’s a mining story.  It’s a space ship story.  But more than anything, it’s a story about Darwinian competition in interplanetary economics.  No, it’s mostly about guys in space ships going really fast.   

And yes, “Chasers” is in Baker’s Dozen.

I’ll be sure to plug the heck out of the Escape Pod issue when the time draws closer.  I can’t wait to hear it!  If you can’t wait, you can listen to the EP recording of “Leech Run” right now.