05-29-2009, 11:06 PM
This platypus should be considered the equivalent of DM's albatross, except that instead of hanging around my neck and causing neck problems (like for DM), the said platypus is secreted elsewhere on or in my person.
As a favor, don't ask what you're currently wanting to ask.
On April 15 Lady Cranefly reminded me that she had signed me up for a novel workshop and the first 50 pages were due in a week.
Yep, I'd plumb forgot, and hadn't a clue what the novel would be. But I took the matter seriously and wrote something.
Of course, that was just the beginning. The novel needed to be done by May 29. If you check your microwave, you'll see that that's today.
Well, I delivered it just minutes ago (which is to say I uploaded it to the workshop group), a big bouncing 319-page thing.
I'm feeling very good about it right now, maybe just because it feels so good to finally take a break. But 319 pages in a month and a half isn't something to sneeze at. True, when you write that fast, you're usually delusional, and anything you believe about what you've done is delusional. But, well, those pages now exist when a month and a half ago they weren't pages at all but precious living trees growing deep in the rainforest.
What's the novel about? Well, it's science fiction. And you know how there's been a lot of science fiction novels and movies about going to Mars. Well I decided to write a novel about NOT going to Mars. The title of my novel is Anti-Mars. See? Pretty fucking clever, eh?
Here's my proposed tag line for the cover:
What do you do when your wife goes to Mars?
You go to Anti-Mars.
I hope to hell they don't use that, because it's a horrible tag line.
Lady Cranefly stumbled across one of my novel notes on the opium couch this morning. She came into my room while I was madly typing away and asked, "Are you writing a science fiction soap opera?"
You're probably wondering what type of notes I leave around. A calculus of combinatorial partnering, eh? With stereoisotopic configurations in 9 dimensions. Anyway, it does give me an idea for another tag line.
In space, no one can hear your soap opera moan.
Sometimes it's best not to have a tag line at all...
Or even a title...
--cranefly
As a favor, don't ask what you're currently wanting to ask.
On April 15 Lady Cranefly reminded me that she had signed me up for a novel workshop and the first 50 pages were due in a week.
Yep, I'd plumb forgot, and hadn't a clue what the novel would be. But I took the matter seriously and wrote something.
Of course, that was just the beginning. The novel needed to be done by May 29. If you check your microwave, you'll see that that's today.
Well, I delivered it just minutes ago (which is to say I uploaded it to the workshop group), a big bouncing 319-page thing.
I'm feeling very good about it right now, maybe just because it feels so good to finally take a break. But 319 pages in a month and a half isn't something to sneeze at. True, when you write that fast, you're usually delusional, and anything you believe about what you've done is delusional. But, well, those pages now exist when a month and a half ago they weren't pages at all but precious living trees growing deep in the rainforest.
What's the novel about? Well, it's science fiction. And you know how there's been a lot of science fiction novels and movies about going to Mars. Well I decided to write a novel about NOT going to Mars. The title of my novel is Anti-Mars. See? Pretty fucking clever, eh?
Here's my proposed tag line for the cover:
What do you do when your wife goes to Mars?
You go to Anti-Mars.
I hope to hell they don't use that, because it's a horrible tag line.
Lady Cranefly stumbled across one of my novel notes on the opium couch this morning. She came into my room while I was madly typing away and asked, "Are you writing a science fiction soap opera?"
You're probably wondering what type of notes I leave around. A calculus of combinatorial partnering, eh? With stereoisotopic configurations in 9 dimensions. Anyway, it does give me an idea for another tag line.
In space, no one can hear your soap opera moan.
Sometimes it's best not to have a tag line at all...
Or even a title...
--cranefly
I'm nobody's pony.