gold, frankincense and myrrh

Or rather, books, toys and puzzles.

I love buying gifts for kids. Between my family and my sister-in-law’s, I have six kids to buy for, ranging in age from my nephew at 8 all the way to my baby at almost 5 months.

Books, of course, are always a safe bet. But I also like to give creativity-inspiring and (yes, that’s the homeschooling mom in me talking!) educational gifts. This year, I hit upon the idea of paper dolls for my nieces and these Dover historical dolls make me wish that I were that age again. Heck, I’d still get a kick out of Regency-themed dolls.

I also discovered some cool activity books from Klutz. The Husband picked up a book-that-is-really-a-castle for the Firstborn who is greatly into armor and knights and whacking bad guys with swords.

Can I just say how much cool fun stuff (as opposed to the cheap junky kind) there is out there for kids? Luckily, I’m a miserly frugal person with a self-imposed spending limit or else all the kids in my family would be buried under presents!

How ’bout you? Did you find any gifts that you are impatient to see unwrapped by the recipient?

and that was story #3

Exposure, 1637 words, written in one sitting. Brutal. Emotionally draining. But I couldn’t let it linger too long. The mental prep for it was helpful in achieving some emotional distance so I could actually write it, but was still full of a kind of horror.

This is not a story I want to spend too much time in.

I don’t know if I can make myself ever look at it again.

But once I had the idea, horrific as it was to me, it needed to be written.

On to the next story.

words

Broken, another Elinor story, is complete at 6242 words.

Two down, two more to go. One will be short and brutal (to write), the other will be just weird.

Then, then, then it’ll be time to start another novel!

placeholder christmas tree

We don’t get a tree until the second weekend in December (that’s tomorrow, yay!), so the kids and I made this substitute earlier in the week:

(Notice the orderly row of presents, five on each side, courtesy of the Firstborn who has that kind of mind.)

It’s snowing tonight. I walked down to the hairstylist’s this evening, trudging through soft powdery snow and admiring the Christmas lights in the shop windows. I love that hushed feathery silence the world gets when it snows.

My fingers are crossed for a white Christmas.

wordage, fueled by hot chocolate

Got 2253 words on the new Elinor story (working title Broken), most of them today. *pant pant*

I decided to forego waiting around for motivation to come calling and Just Do It. It’s been a long time since I got almost 2K words in a day and it feels good.

Amusing typos: Therefore, it didn’t take long for the burning smile to rouse me from my half-asleep state. (Ah, yes, those burning smiles do it every time!).

Words I love:

Then he left, leaving me in the dim interior of the shed, alone save for a commonplace thuggish guard-for-hire outside the door.
In case I had friends who would come for me.
Ha.

So, the goal stil is to finish four stories this month. Broken is story number 2. The Xenobiologist is story number 1 because it was finished in December (even though I started it in November). The Husband thinks that’s cheating, but if I don’t count Xenobiologist than I have no hope of writing four shorts this month. And, yanno, four stories in four weeks is a lot snappier and catchier (4 in 4!) than three stories in a month.

Xenobiologist stands as story number 1.

phonics lessons

Five or so years of writing practice have culminated in my latest series: The Exciting Adventures of The Red Fox. In part one, we were introduced to The Red Fox (“The fox is red”). In part two, we learned of The Red Fox’s latest toy:

The red fox has a box.

Hit the box, red fox!

The red fox hit the box.

Part three was The Red Fox Fell Into a Pond and Got Wet.

Next up, The Red Fox Can Run.

state of the industry roundup

Wow, a lot have posts about the state of the publishing industry have been hitting my Google Reader recently.

Agent Jennifer Jackson has a rundown of which houses are announcing layoffs.

Agent Kristin Nelson expresses confusion over HMH’s “acquisition freeze“.

Susan Wise Bauer, co-author of the classical homeschooling bible, The Well-Trained Mind, is on the verge of a nervous breakdown (her diagnosis, not mine!) over how all of this is affecting the latest edition of that book.

On the plus side, Amazon announced their 2009 Breakthrough  Novel Award for unpublished novels. Contest opens February 2009.

On a personal level, I came back from Thanksgiving to the good news of a check in the mail from the sale of a short earlier this year. This was especially nice because this month I received two “good, but not quite there, send more” rejections for the one story I’m currently shopping around. Back to Ralan and Duotrope, I guess.

we’re writers. we like metaphors.

According to my friend Jo, revising is like eating a huge chocolate cake.

Jodi thinks that revising is like moving a river.

Me, I think revising is like renovating a house. I’ve spent the last four years living in a fixer-upper. When we moved in, the dining room was floorless and the living room was floorless and wall-less. The kitchen was a disaster of mismatched countertops, cabinetry and appliances from the first days of the Industrial Revolution. The back part of the house was closed off until this summer on account of being a disgusting and dangerous place for kids to wander into.

So, yeah, I know about old houses that need fixin’. And first drafts are a lot like those houses. Some of the changes are merely cosmetic, like rearranging furniture or painting over the hideous orange in the bathroom. Other changes start off cosmetic, like stripping off wallpaper but then you realize that the walls underneath are a nightmare and you end up ripping them out and starting anew. Before you know it, you’re gutting the bathroom and rearranging the plumbing.

As fun as all this may be, renovating means that you’re working with limitations. For instance, you can’t really move your colonial from New England to, say, the American Southwest. Or turn your novel from a space opera into something literary and contemporary. You may be able to knock down the wall between the kitchen and dining room, but you may not have the space to build an addition. When you wrote the story, you set certain constraints for yourself, from choice of genre to world to theme to point-of-view characters. If your changes are going to be so drastic as to make the original nigh on unrecognizable, do yourself a favor and write another book. From scratch.

And this does not even begin to take into account the time and wordcount limitations that pros labor under.

Anyone else care to share other revision analogies?

blog readability test

(Hat tip PBW)

blog readability test

TV Reviews

Is my kids at play category dragging down the intellectual level of the blog? Unsurprisingly, one need only have an elementary education in order to read my LJ. I talk about my kids a lot on there.

I wonder if posting snippets of my college papers (resource dependency in Mongolia anyone?) would improve the intellectual tone around here? Perhaps if I’m really, really stumped for blogging ideas. Not.

finished

It seems so long since I actually accomplished a writing goal that I deem it worthy for a blog mention.

The Xenobiologist story is first-draft complete at 4,410 words. And it was like pulling fingernails to write it, too. The plan is to not look at it until next year.

I was toying with the idea of writing a (short) story every week this month. Is that too ambitious? And does the Xenobiologist story count for Week 1, or am I supposed to come up with something else?

What’s next? Another Elinor or a Beauty and the Beast retelling? If you have an opinion, leave me a comment.