writing.exchange is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
A small, intentional community for poets, authors, and every kind of writer.

Administered by:

Server stats:

333
active users

Mar 1: How did your WIP’s premise take shape?

I tweeted (remember those?) a super short description of the line of bullshit a recruiter must tell a potential Jedi, including how the Force will drive you mad if you don't get training, and how they'll have to kill you if you refuse training ('cause you're dangerous, see?). Then, I wrote three flash fics about a kid who gets recruited/abducted, and a friend said, "Dude, that's a novel!!"

So I had just read MINISTRY FOR THE FUTURE, and I started thinking about what the world would look like if we'd avoided environmental collapse (fingers crossed), so that became the place my protagonist lives when she's abducted, and then I just started riffing, and 10,000 words/five weeks later, I ended up creating an allegory for how fucked up high school is, a critique on policing and mental health, and a scathing rebuke of STAR WARS.

No big.

Mar 2. How accurately does the first line represent your style and voice?

Very accurately. "Grace Langley had slept with her dad's kitchen knife under her pillow for months, and she didn't know why." That's the book.

Mar 4. Do your projects start with a sense of new life or new beginnings?

Yes! I ~love~ a blank page. Anything is possible. After tens of thousands of words, it all narrows down, and you can't just riff nearly as much. Endings are HARD, man.

Mar 3: How can your current writing routine be improved?

Oh, by actually *writing*. That would help immensely.

Mar 5: What writing-related tools or resources have your found most effective?

Time, space, and Scrivener.

March 6: How do you feel you can further develop as a writer?

Keep trying new things. Keep challenging myself. I learn by doing, so I have "do" more.

Mar 7: What’s the first thing you do when you sit down with a new project?

For a longer project, I write a very quick outline, just bullet points that would take up half a page. They're waypoints in a journey, and then I have to find my way from one to the next (which is the fun part).

For a short project, I write an opening line and *go*.

March 8: Happy International Women’s Day! What female author has inspired you the most?

Recently, Catherynne M. Valente. The fact she constructs a whole new narrator voice for every project is astounding. I aspire to, and will never achieve, her skill at writing. She's stunningly good at novels.

Extraordinarily close second is Martha Wells. My god.

Mar 9: Does caffeine intake influence your writing?

It used to. I used to write with pop, but I find it makes me jittery now.

Mar 10: How do you handle the physical strain of writing?

Not well, lately. I have arthritis in my hip, so sitting can be tough. It's a big reason why I'm not making progress the way I'd like to.

11 Mar: Do writing challenges spur on your progress?

Sure, if it's right for me.

March 12: Happy Plant A Flower Day! What role does nature take in your stories?

Nature is a contrast. Most of the story takes place either in a megalopolis or in space stations. Nature is the thing that's out there, somewhere. It's a refuge, and it's what all of society is organized around protecting so that we don't have another environmental crisis, but it's not where most people live, although lots do, especially Indigenous peoples on their traditional territories.

13 Mar: Are you mindful of your readers’ expectations? How so?

Yes, possibly too much so. I've had to stop arguing with the belligerent bigot reader that I imagine in my head--no really, the character named "Huang" is indeed Chinese-Canadian, just deal with it--but I do like thinking about their expectations as SFF readers: which conventions I'm messing with, which ones I'm embracing, that kind of thing.

Day 14: What are new themes you are currently exploring?

Compulsive behaviour. Learning to control anger. Learning to live with the times when you failed to control your anger. When violence is justified and when it's rationalized. Exploitation of children by adults who've formed institutional "missions" to rationalize that exploitation. It's all but anarchist.

Mar 16: What word or phrase do you tend to overuse?

My POV character is empathic/telepathic, so "she sensed..." comes up WAY too much.

Mar 17: Does alcohol intake influence your writing?

Nah. I basically stopped drinking. I started getting hangovers for the first time in my life by my early 40s, and it's just not worth it any more.

Mar 18: Happy Awkward Moments Day! What's the most awkward moment you've ever written?

I'm not much for social awkwardness. I don't find it entertaining, one way or the other, but I do have a scene where one of my characters tries desperately to find somewhere else to sit in the cafeteria, realizes no one will have him, and then slumps back to the first friends he made and *kinda* tried to ditch.

Mar 19: What’s your narrator’s sense of humor like?

In my current project, the narration has little to no humour at all. It's a dry, quiet style of writing... until the fight scenes.

Mar 20: What was the most writing related fun you've had?

My writer's group, once every two weeks. I love those people. I really *need* those meetings!

Mar 21: Share your most poetic line.

"He drew her down the alley with the promise of a kiss."

It's literally iambic.

Mar 22: What distracts you the most from writing? How do you deal?

Literally, for real, the pain in my hip from my arthritis, which is the *oldest* thing that's ever happened to me.

Mar 23: What’s the most memorable encounter you’ve had with a reader?

When one person in my new writing group announced she'd been reading my stuff all week. It was really encouraging.

Mar 24: Is there a particular reader you keep in mind when you write?

I'm trying to resist that urge because there are two: the SFF/genre reader who's three steps ahead of me bc they know all the tropes, and the BIGOT sff/genre reader who's deliberately misreading everything I do in order to avoid all the "woke."

March 25: Describe your workflow if it had to be 100% analog.

Write on paper. Write scenes as separate little units. Put scenes in file folders. Rearrange scenes in folders and fill in missing ones as necessary.

Orion (he/him)

Mar 26: About which format or style choices are you the most uncertain?

Chapter length. I really have no idea what I'm doing with chapters. I'm considering not bothering with them and just stringing hundreds of scenes together.

Mar 27: What’s the strangest situation or place where you’ve written?

I guess final exams? Sometimes, if it's a small class, I would write at the front of the room while they wrote their tests.

Mar 28: Happy Respect Your Cat Day! Who or what accompanies you when you write?

I have cats. They hang in the office. Sometimes, one of the curls up in front me, against my chest, while I work.

Mar 29:How do you handle foreshadowing?

Most of the time,I use whatever story elements I already made up earlier.

My novella hinges on one character having a really sharp knife. I gave him that knife two chapters earlier so he could cut up an apple,and I had him do that bc there was a dialogue scene and I wanted him to have some business to with his hands. It was most definitely not planned,but it looks that way in retrospect. Tee hee!

Mar 30 Do you label your works as LGBTQIA+? Why or why not?

I'm cis/het, so while there are a couple of queer characters in the book, I think it would be a misrepresentation to claim I write "queer" books. I can't represent queerness from experience, so I don't claim to, but I do have queer characters because that's just reality. I think that's what I can do.

@orionkidder

Hey now. We readers need designated bathroom or sleep breaks. 🤣 Someone like me, who just has to finish a chapter before taking a break, would die hungry and exhausted with a book like that. 😆 Although I get wanting to play around with the chapter norms. I'm doing this with my current WIP but have no idea if it will work.

@crcollins I heard someone point out that Pratchett's books don't have chapters, and it made me think: why not?

@orionkidder

He doesn't? I don't recall that. Although I've not read much of his work. The most recent was Good Omens which he wrote with Gaiman.

@crcollins I didn't recall either, but it was said by a mega super fan, so I believed him.

It's really a shame that one of Pratchett's most famous works is associated with that man. Apparently, Pratchett wrote 80% of it, but still.

@crcollins @orionkidder Pratchett's kids' books also have chapters (so parents will have a place to stop for the night) but most of the regular Discworld books are notorious for having footnotes and lacking chapters.

@elysegrasso

I am told he doesn't do chapters. I don't remember that.

@orionkidder

@orionkidder If you're gonna be a bear, be a grizzly.

@orionkidder FWIW, that's another one that's been on my mind lately. (Not as much as the stuff I actually posted about, but it's up there.)

I hope it'll help you to hear that at least some of the research I've done on it so far indicates that chapter length can be pretty flexible. I know it eased my mind a fair bit.

@kagan Yes, I know that in theory, but my personal, pathological obsession with regularity in sizing is (what's the technical term?) fucking with my head.

@orionkidder Oh. Damn. I'm sorry to have bugged you with information you already had, but even sorrier that your brain is doing that to you. I know that must really suck. 🫂

@orionkidder that's what I do. or did until I had a little too much fun with naming chapters. but I was told Terry Pratchett also does this, which is maybe where I picked it up from

@orionkidder

Those are so much better than going back and finding places to incert foreshadowing.

@NaraMoore When it works, it's glorious. I do go back and insert sometimes--I had to come up with a scene to prove that a certain character was always a mole when she was most definitely not--but I like it better when it happens organically. Improvisation is all about the illusion that it was all planned. :)