Monday, October 31, 2005

This Is Just A Story And It Could Be All Fiction

Only 13 hours until the start of National Novel Writing Month.

I think I will type away for about 45 minutes once the stroke of midnight hits. That is if I'm not still out (and the prospects of that aren't great). Then tomorrow at lunch I'm going to attempt maybe 500 words (if I'm lucky). My goal before I leave for New York City on the 5th is 10,000 words but I think that's going to be mission impossible so more realistically I'll probably hit 6,000 and hopefully sneak some internet cafe time in while I'm there.

If worse comes to worse, I'll be bringing the notebook and go old school writing stuff out. Though I know when I try to type the words into Microsoft Word, I'll end up editing everything.

Not that it's necessarily a bad thing to turn on the inner editor on occasion during NaNoWriMo but with the slowdown, I'm not sure I'll have time to do this. I could borrow a laptop from work, but I have to figure out a reason why I need it (since I'm not going to be able to use the database on the road and I have no actual work-related writing projects). So I'm doubting that's going to happen.

Sunday, October 30, 2005

Another Pleasant Sunday, Here In Freezy Fire Land

I got some character mapping done while I was doing laundry today. I decided that since the early part of the novel takes place in the hideout of the splinter group of the John Harper Society and with Liam being recruited I would come up with some description of the characters involved in that (with the only problem being, I haven't come up with a description of Liam).

But a description of the antagonist of sorts (there are actually a couple of antagonists with the spy being the other one) will suffice for now.

His name is going to be Ian (I was going to have an inside joke of naming another one Duncan, and a third Smithy but I'm playing NaNoWriMo seriously this year, honest).

No last names yet, but this is what I have notated for Ian:

- Early 40s, let hair go as gray as natural, no false coloring, tall stature, good build.
- Articulate at first and seems to speak the same language as Liam.
- No as racist about aboriginal tribes as the rest of the group seems to be. Explain this to Liam by explaining that you come up with a coalition where you can get one (why he puts up with the racist element withing the John Harper Society).
- Advanced college education.
- Wears the styles of the day. Upper end high fashion.
- Operates in social circles and this reassures Liam. Though Liam does wonder why he doesn't carry out the plot himself.
- Doesn't do the recruiting himself, lead the ceremony or anything. Kind of aloof. Feels a little like a puppet master.
- Obsessed with brandy or sherry. Very English drink. "Know thy enemy."

I figure Liam, being from an aristocratic background, wouldn't feel comfortable with the group if they were the bunch of thugs they eventually turn out to be. He'll attach himself to Ian and it's not until he ends up tied to a pole that he realizes Ian isn't who he expects him to be.

I'll end up adding more as well as fleshing out the other two supporting characters I wrote, Ollie (who goes by "Crommy") who does security (but won't be a stereotypical meathead type) and Colm (who goes by "Recruit") who, as his name applies, is a recruiter for the society (and in turn the subgroup planning the assassination plot) and a formed British military officer of Irish descent who emigrated to the United States to get further away from a still occupied Ireland.

Less than 27 hours until I can actually sit down and write out some real prose!

So Write Me, I'm Shitfaced

Earlier this pre-NaNoWriMo season, I made a joke about always writing sober but having a bottle of vodka available just in case. I forgot that there is an advantage to getting drunk during NaNo for real, however.

Last night's poison wasn't vodka but instead it was cider with just a crapload of rum in it. I mean rum with a little cider in it followed by an old style and four cups of keg beer. I know that's not a lot of alcohol but being the little dude that I am, that was more than enough (the term lightweight isn't used as just an insult but a general descriptor in my case).

I came home from the Halloween Party I had been attending further south in Logan Square, washed off the blue face paint (I went as a Blue Man) and went right to sleep enjoying the extra hour that falling back provides.

And I had a dream that could have provided a plot, if I didn't already have one.

At this point I don't remember it but it was a cycle of four post-modern stabbing mysteries. The layers were all listening or watching stories about these stabbings and then the crime would happen in their reality. I'm vaguely writing a crime novel, but it's not that kind of crime novel so it did me no good. I'll have to see if coming home drunk again tonight from another Halloween party actually helps with my plot.

Yes, for those of us above 21 (not that beer marketing actually, you know, tries not to aim their tallons at others), alcohol is quite a crucial part of NaNoWriMo, it's a shame to admit. :)

To the newbie, for example, I highly recommend going to the kickoff party in your Municipal Region. Some of them have already happened and if that's the case forgive me for being a little bit behind in posting this idea.

If you're not sure when it's happening in your particular region, you can check out the calendar function under the forums on nanowrimo.org under Regional Lounges - USA and clicking on your local area.

Mine's Illinois::Chicago (a kick ass Regional Lounge as can be seen in comparing the number of posts to others). :) There are also various international lounges.

Since a lot of people reading this are other Chicago types, our calendar is at http://www.nanowrimo.org/modules/piCal/index.php?cid=22&smode=Monthly&caldate=2005-11-1.

Which reminds me, I have to add the West Side Writing Group - Tuesday nights at 6:30 at Quenchers Saloon, 2401 N. Western right on the border of beautiful Bucktown and beautiful Logan Square and easily accessible from the Western or California blue line stop, the Fullerton bus, or the Western bus.

At least I can add it as soon as we officially decide on a location at the Chicago kickoff party on November 1 at Goose Island Brewery (1900 N. Clybourn) - see, it's at a Brewery. :).

Though now that I look at the dates again, I'll actually be in New York City on the 8th for the first official meeting. Oops. Well, someone else will have to take over the discussion, whatever that might be. :)

If you sign up to be in a Municipal Region and are signed into the site, you can just click on the local events tab.

There are pictures of the Houston Kickoff Party (another thing Chicago will beat Houston in, though again I'm not a White Sox fan) at the entry "And We're Off" (October 28, 2005) at the blog NaNoNuts to give the first timer an idea of what they're like.

Also from the same site I found a link to NaDruWriNi - National Drunk Writing Night.





This year, the event falls on Saturday, November 5 (which will be one of the nights I'm in New York City) and I probably won't be participating. Oh, I'll be drinking alright but I don't think my New York friends will be very appreciative of my sitting in the bar with a sketchpad writing down mad thoughts to incorporate into my speed novel.

If only I had a laptop and a nice internet connection. Or maybe I could see if the New York::New York City municipality is doing anything for this. Though, I'm sure they're not as drunk as Illinois::Chicago. :)

Thursday, October 27, 2005

And Now We Can All Go Back To Not Caring About The White Sox

My last blog entry on here actually got a comment. It's not the first entry to do so (three have) but it's the first comment that really sparks a debate.

I made the comment that I recommend notes be taken in pencil, but Sya who runs the amazing all-inclusive NaNoWriMo web site Writing Sya which includes her updates on progress divided into multiple categories and her novel had the following counter argument:

"I disagree with using mechanical pencils/any type of pencils, though. It's just jotting ideas down and writing rough drafts--if I make a mistake in pen, that's okay. I still have a record of the mistake and it might even spark another idea at a later date. Pencil tends to smear over time (my old journals in pencil are near unreadable now) and I hate erasing. Too much eraser crud."

I can definitely see that argument too and I do use pen if I know it's something that won't change. But, if there's any chance I'll need to move things around, pencil it is. I have notecards last year in pen that are illegible through all the strike-throughs of previously good ideas.

Certainly it's a good idea to use pen for posterity's sake if you want to track the mess of the process. But that's why I use this blog. :)

In the end, I'm curious about what everybody uses. There's a new poll (created by me of course) on the nanowrimo.org web site called, "What primary writing utensil do you use to plan your novel?"

---

No new general progress on the novel, but I did get some good ideas about what to call the revolutionary society from the sourcebook I bought on the War of 1812.

It's either going to be the John Harper Society or the Peter Porter Society.

Johh Harper was a Congressman who gave fiery speeches from the floor in the eary 19th century to encourage and invasion of Canada due to some sort of northern manifest destiny. His most famous quote is, "the Author of Nature himself has marked our limits in the south by the Gulf of Mexico; and on the north by the regions of eternal frost."

Peter Porter was an entrepreneur who wanted to build a system of canals through New York that would bypass the St. Lawrence Seaway. He wanted to take control of the area that is now Ontario and leave the area now Quebec as an independent nation (and hence force traders who didn't want to deal with customs to come through the great lakes and then into New York). His dream was eventually realized with the Erie Canal (without taking over Canada). But in the early 1800s, he was ahead of his time.

I like John Harper Society even though it sounds a little too much like the John Birch Society. In theory, however, my fictional group would share a lot of the same libertarian tendencies as the John Birch Society so it makes some sense.

Peter Porter Society just doesn't have the same ring to it.

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

One Sure Way To Get NANO Ready Is To Spend Money

Each year before NANOWRIMO starts, I try to watch a really, really bad movie. A movie that's so bad that I figure that no matter how terrible a novel I rough draft out to completion during November (and NANOFIMO in December), it's still better than the piece of crap that somehow got produced.

This year, I think I saw the perfect movie in the form of "The Worst Horror Movie Ever Made."

Just as the name says, it's an absolutely terrible (and to boot not at all frightening) horror movie. The reason that it's perfect for NANOWRIMO is that it was written and produced in 30 days on a dare in 2004. And it's got all the characteristics of the typical NaNo. The plot jumps around everywhere, incorporating various sidetracks to buff it up to 71 minutes. The characters are only definable by one word such as "bitch." And, in the end the plot ends up making no sense and really having no purpose except for the two protagonists running into as many monsters as they can (even if they make no sense in the context).

The only way that it resembles a movie is that there is some foreshadowing at the beginning and some of the characters are mapped out as to when they'll reappear.

In short, it looks like the writer did a little bit of pre-planning but not as much as would be required to make a real movie.

And, in the end, that's alright. Because it was produced in 30 days.

That's the attitude that every participant in NaNoWriMo needs to keep in mind. If you go into the experience trying to write the great American (or if you're not American insert your country here) novel, it's a surefire recipe for failure.

It comes down to one nearly universal fact - your Nano is going to suck regardless. Some will suck less than others and others, miraculously, will be almost publishable at completion. But there will be all sorts of mistakes in pacing, character choices, foreshadowing, and even (and this is really true for mine) spelling.

The very nature of trying to squeeze the entire creative process into 30 days isn't conducive to producing a very polished product. There are some amazing individuals (one on my LJ friends list) who can kick out amazing speed novels on a regular basis. But they're the exception rather than the rule.

So, first timers, don't get scared when your plot goes awry. Bring it back in, mark down that you really need to delete what you just wrote at some time in the near future, and move on (being sure to count the words you wrote down the rabbit hole).

Just don't make a movie out of it. Unless you really want to. Just don't ask me to watch it. :)

---

That being said, I actually did do some serious prep work today for my little rain drops into the large word puddle (filled with stuff you don't even want to know about).

The first thing that I did, that I recommend to everybody is I bought my writer's tools. Walgreens (or as I like to call it the writer's best friend) had everything I needed in the school supplies section. I bought:

  • A notebook: this is crucial (for me at least). For this years collection "bin" I chose the Mead Five Star Advance (9.5" x 6"). It's the right size in that it's portable and it's got a nice built-in spine that will handle being dragged everywhere. It also contains detachable note cards in the front (you know, for those who actually create the character note cards the writing manuals say you're supposed to - I myself just devote a notebook page or two to each). The pages are just large enough to cut and paste various maps, web pages, and the like. I have a photocopier at work that I can (sort of) use in limited quantities but I highly advise others to use that amazing tool to fill up a notebook with useful facts and inspirations.

  • A set of pens: the kind isn't important (I always use Bic) but buying a new set of pens is always inspirational to me. Not that I use them to longhand a novel but they're the sign of starting something new (I use them to write down things in the notebook and nothing else until the project is done).

  • A set of mechanical pencils: much the same as the pens but for things that I need to change on the fly. The people who map out everything in pen are the same who do crossword puzzles in ink. I don't trust 'em. They're too smart. :)

  • Highlighters: I will probably never open them but, in theory, they should be used to separate out really important novel writing ideas from the chaff of the rest of the stuff in the notebook.

  • Vodka: Well, alright, so Walgreens doesn't sell vodka and I don't write drunk but it's just an idea. :)

    ---

    I have filled up a couple of pages in the notebook already. The first page is actually a list of the top 20 male and female names in Great Britain.

    For my novel this is crucial since being from the United States, I'm bombarded every day with names influenced by Italian, German, Irish, Polish, etc., etc. heritages. However, in my alternate history, the country wouldn't have really had the same kind of immigrants (would the Irish really have flocked to a British controlled United States?) so I'm going with the popular names from the United Kingdom circa now. Not a lot of Anthonies or Michaels in my novel.

    Though I'm thinking the main female character is going to be named Hannah. I really like her name to match Liam's. #1, by the way on the other side of the pond is Emily but I already used that for the protagonist of last year's novel. #2, not surprisingly, is Elizabeth (wonder why).

    I also plotted out some of the rising action key points. I'm still deciding how much to put up here since I feel like I want to give the reader some surprises. I've only mapped out the first three chapters or so but it could go further at some point.

    As it stands, that should last me about six days into November so my stress levels are down. Back to excited to begin. Not that I didn't already know what was going to happen early on but it felt good to get it in writing with one of the new pencils.
  • Monday, October 24, 2005

    Cripes, It's Almost November And I Have Nothing Done

    So there's one week to go and I'm actually started to freak out a bit. While I still have the seed of the idea, I don't have any idea where I'm going with it. But if I outline, I'm freaked out that I won't have enough for 50,000 words without taking my characters (who are still unnamed) down random plot rabbit holes.

    This year looked to be going so swimmingly early on before all of the distractions of my real life got in the way.

    I'm pretty sure that I've tied up all of the loose ends here in October. I'm watching a lot of movies, making sure my friends know I'm about to disappear again (like they're going to miss these last two weeks when I was actually around) for a month to two months - depending on how close I get to finishing the novel in November.

    Though part of me really thinks that I should at least come up with some characters, last year it works so well to actually get into the groove and let the juices flow before I did anything. I didn't even have protagonist names last year. So I might as well do that again.

    I wouldn't recommend that to anyone else though because I think it's the reason I'm going bald. :)

    Friday, October 21, 2005

    This Work Has Got Me Drinking, Redux

    So on the plus side I finally got over to Lakeview and bought a new winter jacket at Ragstock. While I was walking down Belmont to get a burrito at Chipotle on Broadway, I suddently felt really light headed (probably from busting a blood vessel this morning or something). I managed to eat, make it to Borders to buy a sourcebook on the War of 1812 for NANOWRIMO, and went home.

    Wednesday, October 19, 2005

    Well I Was Entirely Amused By The Whole Thing

    It looks like the NANOWRIMO site has added a friends list feature to track the progress of your friends' novels.

    I know a few people have approached me directly and said they were writing but I know there are some people on my friends list who I've entirely forgotten about, so I'm just going to poll it. [NOTE: This was originally on LiveJournal so there was a poll, for the purposes of this blog, let's just say, e-mail me at displacedbeatnik@yahoo.com]

    That's all private information, by the way. If you want other people to also add you, feel free to leave the information in the comments section inside.

    Only two weeks away! The tension I'm feeling is positively palpable.

    Saturday, October 15, 2005

    Not Much Of An Entry On Not Much Of A Day

    Today I watched "Pompeii: The Last Day." This is going to sound odd, but I've never seen a documentary that made me cry before. And, I've seen a lot of documentaries in my day. The way they take the skeletal remains and tell a story makes me regret that I didn't take a few more anthropology courses. It could come in handy in my writing to know how to write a good ethnography.

    I have a confession to make. This NANO season, I actually wanted to write something about survival in a disaster zone. I'm really surprised that I haven't seen more people on the NANOWRIMO message boards who are writing that kind of novella this November (as I'm sure my mind isn't the only one that watched coverage of New Orleans and said, "these people have incredible stories"). I'm not sure what take I would have sculpted from. I would have wanted to avoid some sort of morality tale where those who behave by societal standards end up living and those who don't end up dying.

    And for goodness sakes I don't want to make government types the heroes. But I know being the green that I am, I probably would, though not cops.

    Counter productive thinking winning out, the thought actually crossed my mind of having some sort of natural disaster strike. The two competing groups could then have to come together and get out of a jam. And then they'd do a little dance or something.

    No, that's just stupid. I'm just going to put off survival stories until next year and hope that no other events happen that spur my imagination in that direction.

    That all being said, I still highly recommend "Pompeii: The Last Day" since it really shows that no matter how many centuries pass, people's reactions to natural disasters pretty much stay the same.

    Friday, October 14, 2005

    In An Alternate History I Made It To See "Green Street Hooligans"

    I'm beginning to think that perhaps the alternate history in my Nano novel may be a little too difficult to realize.

    I never knew how uppity people were about the War of 1812.

    Yesterday night after I wrote an entry on here I went over to the NANOWRIMO forums and saw there was a new post under the topic I started called "Alternate History Fiction" on the Historical Fiction board.

    Someone responded to my plot summary with the following:

    "But the United States did lose the War of 1812. Washington's war aims were stopping Royal Navy impressment of sailors and impounding of cargoes and conquering Canada so as to end the British presence in North America. London's war aims were defending Canada and forcing the Americans to stop their bothersome little war. During the war, Britain won most of the battles. The war ended with Canada still in British hands, and Britain made no concessions on naval impressment and embargoes (or anything else). The United States achieved none of what it fought to achieve; Britain achieved all of what it set out to achieve. That's how you tell who won a war. In addition, the war very nearly drove the New England states to secede (the threat of secession is largely what drove Washington to enter peace negotiations; that and losing all of the important battles).

    I'm just not sure that 'the United States ... losing the War of 1812' counts as alternate history, since there's nothing alternate about it. Still, details of plausibility aside, I totally dig your story idea."


    So, now I have to figure out a way that the United States annoyed the English so much trying to invade Canada that they decided to occupy the United States indefinitely to avoid that sort of thing happening again rather than agreeing to negotiate a peace.

    The entire reason I chose 1814 as the breaking point in the timelines was because losing the Revolutionary War has been done before and I like the idea of having a few years as a free country before being a colony again - it gives a plethora of rallying cries for the new revolutionaries.

    But maybe I'll just have an economic collapse in the newly founded United States (or some other huge crisis) have the English smelling blood to take over again.

    Thursday, October 13, 2005

    Squirming All Over The Map Like Scott McClellan

    Haven't really though a lot about my Nano recently. But tonight I typed in nanowrimo.org when I meant to type in netflix.com. So I think my trying to catch up on everything in October is slowly turning into a prep phrase.

    I actually did do a little planning. I have decided that instead of starting the novel at the rally with the shock ending to the chapter of the British flag flying, I'm actually going to follow the rules of successful writing and start with an action scene - that of the protagonist being tied to a pipe looking at the table of real thugs and realizing how they closely resemble the small college group that he came from.

    Of course then I have to figure out how to break back into the correct chronology. And I don't want it to become an overblown character introduction like, "then he thought about [x], was he the spy? Then he thought of [y] who was [adjective], was she the spy?"

    Well I guess I've got a while yet to figure out how to do that.

    Tuesday, October 04, 2005

    The Closest I'll Ever Get To A NANO How-To Article

    I just got finished watching "Weapons Of Mass Distraction" and it's not about what one might think. No, instead of being about the Bush White House's attempts to control the media, it's about two warring media barons who attempt to crush each other personally and professionally (though hardly ethically) in order to secure the purchase of a football team.

    It has Gabriel Byrne, Ben Kingsley, Jason Lee, and that good looking curly haired British woman from E.R. So, in theory it seems like it could have been watchable.

    If you ever get the inkling of doing so, however, don't. It's every bit as horrible made-for-cable movie as the other information besides the actor's list would note. I notice, and this is a rarity, that no one on my Netflix friends list has watched it yet so there's no one to share my pain. But, hey, in this case it's a good thing.

    Why does every movie or program that HBO or Showtime makes have to be a show about the show business industry?

    Well, that or war I guess.

    Seriously, it's as if they don't want to hire any writers who will actually produce something about the lives of everyday people. I thought that's what Bravo was for - actor, directors, and producers patting themselves on the back.

    Which brings me to what I actually intended this entry to be about - research.

    Being as last year the research was already done for the most part by just traveling to Warsaw, this will be the first year that I actually engage in researching something that I don't already know about (and yes, I know quite a bit about mental illness and trying to communicate with depressed people - the other theme of "Why Sleep When I Only Dream?" as well).

    While I'm starting at a point of knowing something about campus radicals, march planning, and the like (though I plead the fifth if most people ask how), the one thing I know very little about, as I've said before, is the major event in my story that makes all the divergences from the reality time line occur - the War of 1812. So, for the newbies to NANOWRIMO who may be reading this, to whom I hope don't consider me some kind of guru, here's what I do to research for NANOWRIMO.

    There's a very good discussion on the Historical Fiction board about the very topic. In this discussion, it was suggested to write first and fact check and edit later.

    Now, depending on where you're desiring the NANO to be on the scale between "historical" and "fiction," fact checking is going to be either unimportant or crucial. But either way to leave it to the editing process, especially if you're writing the book linearly, which most NANOs are written (and is horribly incorrect according to every writing manual on Earth), events build on events. Therefore, if you don't research ahead of time and you set one factoid on the wrong path, you're building a house of cards. The first correction you have to make is going to need to be corrected all the way down the line.

    Now, correcting timelines (creatively) and the like is one of the biggest joys of NANOWRIMO but correcting names, places, and the like (which find and replace are brillaint functions) is one of the biggest pains.

    And if you're writing fiction about something anyone else knows about (which is always the case unless you're writing fictionalized autobiography or fantasy world), there is going to be someone out there who corrects you.

    In my case, it's kat_chan who actually, thankfully, caught me on the fact that despite the Americans losing the Revolutionary War, the Northwest Territories would still fall inside United States boundaries. Imagine if I had set the story in Illinois (still not sure where I'm setting it) and based everything on the fact that it was a separate country controlled by the French. Every little minutae of plot point would have been wrong and needed correction.

    But it is a good point that while you're writing in November, every second is crucial to achieving 1,667 (more a magic number than 42) words a day. So, here's what to do to get your facts right before you start.

  • Have a general idea of everywhere your characters will go (or could go). If you don't plot out the story, that's not a problem but now where it might take you. In my case, it's Washington D.C. (which will be renamed Victoria or something), a mid-sized university campus, London, Birmingham (though one that isn't post-industrial). Buy maps of these places. Or, there are literally dozens of mapping web sites on the internet. There are also plane and train schedules which list such things as travel times between them. If you have someone getting from London to Birmingham in half an hour, you better have invented a time traveling device or someone's going to catch it.

  • Wikipedia.org is the speed writer's best friend. All the information of a real encyclopedia is small article form. Also, there is unlimited information on the internet if you dig hard enough. Believe it or not, last year I actually found the security procedures for Air France right on their web site. And you get the added bonus of getting your name marked in Homeland Security's threat book (I don't think that happened but I like to tell the story anyhow).

  • You can cheat source material by watching movies about a subject. This is a really weak way out but here's the thing. If enough movies portray a certain thing a certain way, it's the mental picture that most readers get when you say the words. Personally, as a realist to the highest extent, I like to give the actual reality but this is fiction and sometimes the reader will see real as false since it goes against what the media has told them.

  • Don't trust your memory, use pictures. Nothing helps the research process more than having actual pictures of a subject you're researching in front of you. Psychologically the memory plays tricks on everyone. The view you have of an object is distorted by the memories you have attached to it. Plus, as the old saying goes, "a picture is worth a thousand words." A memory, at least as far as descriptive usefullness is not very good. Having a picture of a subject helps your word count.

  • NANOWRIMO's Character and Plot Realism Q&A Message Board is not only a good place to build a police file on someone (seriously ask someone "how do I kill a character using only an egg beater?" and about six or seven people will come up with creative ways to do so - and some will describe it in such detail you think they've done it) but a valuable and quick source of research. Sure it's a cheap way to do research (having people do it for you) but it put a set of minions on a quest while you keep typing away - and trust me, a lot of people on that board care less about finishing their speed novel and more about showing off their arcane knowledge of medieval battle swords and popcorn machines of the 1920s. Words of warning though. You should still fact check whatever you read on that board - keep in mind these people are human too (see the rule about memory).

  • Take field trips - they're the perfect breaks in the middle of November. Sure you're not writing actual words when you're at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City but you need to see, smell, and feel your source material if at all possible. You can't fake the smell of a Parisian street (trust me I tried it last year) if you've never been to Paris. Now, don't go robbing a bank or anything (if you do it, I am so not responsible) but go to a bank if you're trying to write about a heist. I once wrote a short story back in high school about a comic book warehouse robbery. And you know what? I'm still not sure to this day if they exist so thankfully it never saw the light of day. "Hey it's fiction" doesn't work for certain genres.

  • Start doing book research now - October should be NANORESMO for goodness sakes - take careful notes and then you'll be ready to go and won't have to take time out in November. No one expects a speed writer to actually read 1000 page source materials but they have a great thing called an index that will tell you exactly what subjects are on which page (alright, now I'm getting too basic). Library cards are every NANOWRIMO participant's second best friend behind Wikipedia. And, if you're like me, you now have 26 days to pay any overdue fees before NANO starts. :)
  • Already Slipping Into The Strange Post-Modern NANO World

    I have such decision issues that I can't even decide if I want to listen to some stuff off of my iPod or I want to listen to Sport On Five. And most of the problem comes in the fact that I'm still not thinking straight about anything after tempting fate by staying up until the small hours of the morning two nights in a row.

    Perhaps it could be called training for NANOWRIMO or perhaps it could just be called self-destructive.

    Anyhow. I finally gave in to the seeming endless stream of people who are starting up blogs for their NANO experience and did that same thing. If you're reading this, anything that is on the blog is going to be on here (or incendiarystory).

    retentivewrimo is born. Well, I should say it's brought home from the hospital since all it is now is a collection of backdated entries.

    Though now it's becoming post-modern because as I type this, I realize I'm breaking the third wall where writing about NANO in my LiveJournal means I have to transcribe this only my NANOblog.

    My brain is now about to burst from logic as well as self-imposed stress.

    Oh, this is something I'm definitely going to cross over to blogspot. These are three other NANO blogs that are serving a similar purpose to my own. Enjoy!

    Bohemian Jedi: Novelist?

    The Madness Within (it's a LiveJournal but I'm losing the plot anyhow with this entry)

    NaNoNuts2005

    Monday, October 03, 2005

    So Very Tired And Overworked Right Now

    Here is a link that I found on nanowrimo.org. Along with the official NANO podcast, there's a participant who's promised to podcast on the progress of their novel daily (as well as provide tips) with the site Nanowrimo '05 Podcast. They already have two casts up so I guess anything possible but that's time commitment I'm just shocked about.

    I haven't even had time to listen to them yet. :)

    Saturday, October 01, 2005

    NANOWRIMO Fever Starts To Set In

    My NANOWRIMO geekiness has reached new levels. I have already signed up at the web site and although I wasn't around last October 1, if the site's useability right now is pretty exciting. It just keeps crashing due to the number of people who have signed up.

    Judging by my friends list, it also seems as though nearly all of the usual suspects are going to be back. Only squirrelgirl hasn't checked in. heidimo is dropping out but she's going to be on the chat room at least. Even rosemilk has appeared out of the ether.

    This year I'm also excited because there's a Podcast being created by guru Chris Baty (and he setting the argument right in the Podcast that it's "na-no-wry-mo") and it's hilarious. It's RSS feed address is http://feeds.feedburner.com/WrimoRadio.

    I've also already been on the chat room and added a new person to both my Yahoo instant messenger and LiveJournal, reliantfc3.

    The NANOWRIMO related LiveJournal communities are already up too in the form of nanowrimo and 2005nanowrimo.

    My internet went down briefly and it gave me a chance to briefly outline some plot points. I won't correct these for grammar (already starting NANO bad habits) but they are as follows:

    - Opening scene at moderately sized campus rally.
    - Speaking out against what seems like it could be an anti-government dissent against Iraq war, but substitute Jordan. Talks about Transjordan, Assyria, etc. Names of protectorates set up by British in 1950s.
    - Find out names of act to coerce Indians, Canadians, etc. to fight for British in WWI, WWII, etc.
    - Had 36 years of an independent nation between Revolution War and War of 1812.
    - Painting of James Madison signing some sort of treaty hangs about every classroom.

    I also just began to plot out characters. Or, well, the protagonist but I can't even come up with a name. I pencilled in Liam (if pen if that's possible) but that's gotta change in the next month. What am I going to name the main antagonist, Noel? I don't even like Oasis. :)

    Though my bigger problem is I can't even decide on a title. "Stars, Bars, And The Crown" sounds like a Coheed & Cambria song, for one. And for two it just doesn't inspire the kind of stick to it that last year's title did. Maybe something will come to me in the working of the novel.

    And, the other thing I have to get in order is the Chicago west side writing gathering. infanttyrone and squirrelgirl22 do you want to help me out? At least that way, there will be three of us west towners there guaranteed. I'm thinking perhaps the Mutiny might be a nice, wide open space to meet, drink, and talk about things.

    Or, you know, knowing us Chicago types, maybe a place without alcohol might be more productive. :)

    I'm ready. This is incendiarymind, NANO addict, checking in. :)