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A Decade of National Novel Writing Month

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on December 1, 2013 by JeanMarch 28, 2023

In November, I completed a decade of participation in National Novel Writing Month, affectionately known at NaNo. In my first attempt, in 2003, I wrote my first novel, Polar Bear on the Loose. I finished the first draft while deployed to Bahrain in the summer of 2004.

Here’s a brief summary of my subsequent NaNo efforts:

2004: Twilight. A secret computer network defense team defends against a cyberterrorist.

2005: Threads and Ties. An unplanned pregnancy breaks up a high school sweetheart couple with the girl leaving their daughter with the boy to raise. After twenty years, can they pick up where they left off?

2006: 30 Days to Regularity. This was a non-fiction effort.

2007: Hot Coffee. A hipster attempts to revitalize her grandparent’s 60’s activism.

2008: Parallels. Trying an alternate reality story.

2009: Something’s Fishy. My first attempt at a category romance.

2010: Fooling Mother Nature. It’s not nice to fool Mother Nature.

2011: Granite Hill. An entitled son of an influential family and his buddies impact their small town.

2012: Reunion. Six high school friends who have lost touch reunite at their 35th high school reunion.

2013: Flash for 100, Please. The plan was to do 100 flash fiction stories. I may have gotten two. It wound up being a potpourri of writing.

NaNo has been great for generating first draft material. I’ve proven I can write a first draft. I’ve not done so well at getting those drafts revised and publishable. Because of that, I believe my time for participating in NaNo may be through. I need to focus on revision and polishing. That will be a significant part of my writing plans for the foreseeable future.

I haven’t mentioned this for a little while, but have you signed up to join The RandR Fiction Club? Just add your email to the sign up form either on the top bar ribbon or the sign up box in the upper right sidebar. If you sign up before the end of January 1, 2014, you’ll be eligible for a drawing for Stephen Bagley’s Murder by Dewey Decimal, among other things.

Posted in 30 Days to Regularity, FoolingMotherNature, Granite Hill, HotCoffee, NaNo2013, Parallels, PBOTL, Reunion, Something's Fishy, Threads & Ties, Twilight, Writing

Small Steps

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on December 3, 2010 by JeanFebruary 11, 2016

NaNo is over, but now is when the real work begins.  Hubby is building framework for some concrete work, and he needs me to help with very tiny things that help help — usually something like turning the ON/OFF switch from one position to the other.

I’ve installed Scrivener 2.0 on the new MacBook Air and brought my NaNo file down from DropBox.  Now, I’m cleaning up the manuscript.  I’ve removed the words that don’t need to be there from the misguided start.  I haven’t thrown them away — they may be useful for something else.  Word recycling is a useful thing sometimes.

Now, I’m checking my timeline, changing the scene numbers to meaningful titles and summarizing the scene on the corkboard.  The split screen is coming in very handy for this.  I put one line of index cards in the top window.  I put the scene I’m working on in the bottom window.  I use the synopsis window in the Inspector to update the index card.  I use the custom meta data to update the timeline and the scene location(s).

This is just clean up work, but it should help ground me in the story.

I liked the first version of Scrivener, but version 2.0 has a lovely, clean feel to it.

If you missed it in the comments, the transmission on the truck self-destructed and will be replaced in it’s entirety.  They ordered one and anticipate getting it early next week.  I figured it would take until Wednesday, when I have to be back up there for a doctor appointment.

Posted in FoolingMotherNature, Personal | Tagged Scrivener

End of NaNo Notes

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 30, 2010 by JeanJune 15, 2019

I did win at NaNo.  I finished later this year than usual, but if you follow NaNo at all, you know that doesn’t matter. You have until midnight in your timezone on November 30 to finish and win.  What are some other notes to commemorate the end of NaNo?

I used the Beta 3 version of Scrivener for Windows on my tired, six year old Windows laptop.  Beta 1 was CPU intensive for a couple of reasons, but Beta 3 was very smooth.  If you’re a Windows die hard and don’t want to switch to a Mac just to use Scrivener, this software is for you.

I finished and uploaded my file to the NaNo counter late Sunday night.  Monday morning, I removed the first half of the book, because I switched gears midway.  I now have about 27k of words that I may be able to use.  I saved the deleted words.  They’re just not in the draft.

I had to come up to Central TX today to pick up mail and arrange to have it held for a few more days.  We’re not quite done with what we need to get done in San Antonio.  As I was making the turn to come into town, the truck beeped with an error of “Transmission Malfunction.”  I stopped at the house, unloaded the truck, and drove it the 15 miles to the Ford dealer who was too swamped with work to even put the machine on the truck to read the code for the problem.  The tech did tell it me it was probably safe to drive.  The error code did not come back on during the trip over or back.

My original plan was to wait for mail delivery on Wednesday, drive to Temple, get my blood drawn for my doctor appointment next week, then head home down I-35.  I’m going to attempt to do that.  This is where I’m thankful for two things.  First for purchasing extended warranty.  At 53,000 miles, I’m 3,000 miles into it, and if the transmission eats itself, the warranty will have paid for itself. Second, I’m thankful it’s a Lincoln.  They have a toll-free number and will send a tow truck to get it to a dealer.  I’ve already used this service twice, and it works great — right after I bought it when the transmission cable fell off as I was backing out of my driveway and earlier this year when the battery died (new vehicles become boat anchors when the battery dies).  Both fixed were covered under the original factory warranty.

Naturally, I hope it makes it back to San Antonio where I can deal with my service guy (who is fantastic) at my dealer (who is also fantastic).

Did I mention that we’re keeping this guy:

DSC00081

We’re calling him Tarzan.  Hubby said he almost killed both kittens today.  Tarzan and his sister, Mugsy,  climbed to the top of their crate (from the outside) and demolished a jigsaw puzzle we were working on.  I’m pretty sure Mugsy was the ringleader — she is most adventurous.  Hubby said pieces were everywhere.  I avoided mentioning that he encourages them to be creative, so they must have figured this was one more toy he created for them.

Since my laptop is six years old and starting to show signs of maybe not being reliable, I’ve decided to replace it with an 11.6″ Mac Air.  The Sony has 1M RAM and a 40G hard drive.  The Air has 2G RAM and a 64G solid state drive.  The only thing it lacks to be competitive with my Sony is a DVD read/write drive, and in the six years I’ve owned the Sony, I don’t think I’ve used it once.  In every other way, it’s competitive with or superior to my Sony and cost 1/3 as much.  UPS delivers it tomorrow.  I’m looking forward to trying this one out.

Posted in FoolingMotherNature, Personal, Pets, Tech Stuff | Tagged end of nano, Lady, MacBook Air, Scrivener, Sony, Tarzan

NaNo2010, Day 21: 35,079

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 21, 2010 by JeanNovember 21, 2010

Just staying on track again.  Hubby had an end of year rehearsal today with a meal to celebrate another year of playing music with the band for band members and spouses.  I always enjoy catching up with the spouses, but while the band is playing, it’s too loud to chat, so we wait for between songs to talk (very brief conversations).  I pulled out my iPad and began typing today’s words in Plain Text.  Plain Text is supposed to be configured to synchronize with DropBox and import into Scrivener.    Sure enough.  When I got home, I synchronized PlainText with DropBox, and my file was there.  I went into Scrivener on the laptop, clicked on Import, selected my file in my DropBox folder, and before I knew it, it was sitting in the proper location in Scrivener for Windows Beta 3.  I’d had it set up to do this, but I’d never done it before, and I hadn’t consciously planned to do it today.  That was almost 500 words for today that I hadn’t anticipated.

Here’s an excerpt from something I got tonight (raw first draft — may or may not ever see the light of day again):

With that in mind, I steeled myself for the worst as I opened the door to the lab and looked in. The lights were on. Someone was home. At least, I hoped it was someone home, and not a long overlooked vacant cubicle like in the history lab. I tried to shake off the cold chill I felt when I remembered that visit earlier in the day. I saw someone working. They had their back to me, but as I stepped into the lab, they turned to investigate. It turned out to be Marc, another lower level minor god I’d met in passing in the cafeteria a few weeks earlier. “Hi, I’m out wandering around trying to get a feel for how things work around here. Mind if I stop in for a few minutes?”

Marc stretched, “I’m kinda on a push here, but I also could use a break, so, yeah, grab a bench, and we can jaw a bit.” He turned his chair to face the bench beside his desk in his cubicle, blanking his data screen before he did so.

I settled in, “Yeah, you guys have been really short-handed lately. Did you know you’re due to get in a couple of new analysts this week?”

He groaned, “No. I mean, it’s a good thing, but it’s not, too. New people don’t know anything about what’s going on. Someone has to take time away from their work to show them how to do things for the first couple months, so it makes double the work for almost half the efficiencies for at least a couple of months.”

I nodded in understanding, “I can understand that. If someone could tell them or show them anything before they show up here, what would the most important thing or things be?”

Without hesitation, he said, “Besides the initiative to watch and learn, it would have to be the basics of finding their way around the HQ.”

“What if I told you were were going to take care of that second thing before you ever lay eyes on them?”

“That would help a lot. It would save us two wasted days at least, per lower level minor god reporting in.”

“Cool. What are all the duty descriptions for this lab? Do you have them somewhere?”

“Oh, sure, but they’re useless.”

“Why?”

He waved his hand dismissively, “They’re from, like, the Dark Ages or something.”

My shoulders slumped, “So they’re not even remotely useful?”

“Nah. Everything they need to know, IF they have half a brain, is in the Read File. If they have less than half a brain, well, they won’t be around here long.”

Interesting. I decided to let that comment slide and seized on the more interesting, and, I hoped, relevant, piece of information, “Read File?”

He jerked his thumb out the door of the cubicle toward a common area table, “Yeah. That thick pink binder on the table. Got everything you need to know to work in this place inside it.”

My excitement mounted, “Could I take a look at it?”

He shrugged, “Be my guest. Go ahead and let yourself out when you’re done. I gotta get back to work.”

I stood up, mumbled, “Thanks,” and headed toward the table where I sat down eagerly reaching for the large pink “Read File” binder. It had a cartoon taped to the front with different font letters glued to the front spelling “ReaD fIlE.” I paid the cartoon no mind and flipped open the binder to the first divider page, which also contained a joke. I shrugged it off and turned the divider so I could study the first section and found…Another joke. What? I quickly thumbed through the binder, looking, looking, but all it had was jokes. Years and years of cartoons and jokes. That’s when I heard a soft chuckle from the cubicle behind me. I turned in my chair and glared at Marc who was grinning at me, “You thought it would be that easy, didn’t you?”

I took a deep breath in preparation for dressing him down, then I stopped. I looked at the binder. I looked at Marc, who was still grinning, and I laughed. “Pretty silly of me, wasn’t it?”

He nodded, “I heard you got stuck with Mother Nature’s training program. I appreciate that you’re going to handle the orientation. If you like, I’ll find you when I finish this killer deadline, and we can talk about some of the things we need here.”

“I’d like that. Thanks.”

Shifting gears, it looks like Number Two kitten will be going to his new home tomorrow night.  Someone contacted me today saying they wanted a kitten for their daughter.  I called, and the daddy should be coming by the house tomorrow night after he gets off work.  His daughter is seven, and Two Cat will be a perfect kitty for a young girl.  He’s a snuggly, lover kitten (who just learned to sample things with his teeth tonight — that’s going to be fun).

Roxy went to her new home last night.  A nice young couple expressed interest in her, and when they came to see her, they fell in love.  I hated to see her go, but I know she’ll be better off where she’s the only kitty.

We’ve decided to keep Four Cat.  I’ve wanted to keep him since he was born, and that desire hasn’t changed.  Now, if he’ll just reveal his name to us.

Posted in FoolingMotherNature, Pets

NaNo2010 Day 18:30,927, TSA Groping, and More

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 19, 2010 by JeanNovember 19, 2010

The book is on track (for NaNo purposes) at 30,927 words.  About half of those words are trash — I restarted about half way through, because the book was way off base.  But in NaNo, you don’t delete words. I had a late night chat with Tammy Jones, and she … Continue reading →

Posted in FoolingMotherNature, Not Silly Stuff, Pets, Tech Stuff, Web Stuff

NaNo2010 Day 12: 20,174

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 12, 2010 by JeanNovember 12, 2010

Was like pulling teeth most of the day until the last hour and a half.  We got a little insight into why the game works like it does today. Ajax is more tolerant of the kittens.  Number One seems to have taken to Ajax.  The kitten sat next to Ajax … Continue reading →

Posted in FoolingMotherNature, Pets

NaNo2010 Day 11: 18,642

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 11, 2010 by JeanNovember 11, 2010

I was a couple hundred words short, so I introduced seventeen characters to be participants in the gay guys’ Earth Mother enclave. My characters spend too much time living life in their heads.  I figured if I’m going to have some kind of Earth Mother cult going, I may as … Continue reading →

Posted in FoolingMotherNature

NaNo2010 — Day 7: 11,805

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 7, 2010 by JeanNovember 7, 2010

Just squeaked out 1699 words today bringing the grand total for the month to 11, 805.  I no longer know where this story is going.  It just took an interesting and major change in direction today.  Are my villains part of the good guys?  Are the good guys really the … Continue reading →

Posted in FoolingMotherNature

NaNo2010 Day 6: 10,106

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 6, 2010 by JeanNovember 6, 2010

I got caught up after yesterday’s short day. We didn’t do too much else today — just cruised a few yard sales, went to breakfast, and picked up a few items from Wal-Mart.  Hubby made more dirt, and we both played with kittens for a lot of the day. The … Continue reading →

Posted in FoolingMotherNature, Pets

NaNo2010 Day 5: 7596

Philosophical Meanderings, Too Posted on November 5, 2010 by JeanNovember 5, 2010

Five hundred and four words today.  This puts me behind about eight hundred words. We got errands run and groceries bought today.  Spent time with hubby.  Didn’t get much writing time. UPDATE:  Wouldn’t you know it.  I type that I’m done, and then I get a burst of a few … Continue reading →

Posted in FoolingMotherNature

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