mmerriam: (Type)
mmerriam ([personal profile] mmerriam) wrote2014-01-10 02:24 pm
Entry tags:

Today, We Chose A Novel

I'm lining up my next project. It's been awhile since I've written a novel (I've been focused on novellas, plays, and spoken-word pieces) and I'm looking for a project that has the potential to get me back into a major publisher. I haven't written a novel since the late-lamented monster-hunting barista project (which never seemed to jell) and I think I've been a little reticent to tackle a novel again. I also had the problem of not having a novel project that really thrilled me. I kept poking at the Spear of Destiny novel, but I can't work up the level of enthusiasm for it I need for a longer project.

What I really wanted to work on was the rural fantasy novella. You know, the one about a haunted abandoned school, small town secrets going back two or three generations, a class reunion, interfering ghosts, and lost loves. That one.

But I really felt I needed to get back to writing novels and this was shaping up to be a longish novella. I put it aside and started poking at my ideas folder and at completed but unpolished drafts of other pieces. A couple of the ideas and bits of free writing revealed themselves to be part of the rural fantasy story. I added them to the folder and closed it again.

So you guys remember that contemporary non-HEA romance coming-of-age novella I wrote a little while back? The one I had no idea what to do with and what the hell am I doing writing a mainstream novella anyway project? I finished it and had a couple of different endings, but was never satisfied with any of the endings I'd written. There was a lot of good stuff in the pieces, but not much of a payoff.

I reread it this week and realized it was part of that rural fantasy. The damned thing is two or three interwoven novellas of various lengths that make a novel length narrative. I've already written about 30K of the novel.

I'm outlining and brainstorming and thinking hard about what I want for this story. Once I've got some good stuff, I plan go back and rework the weird west novella so I can get it to market and then jump on this rural fantasy story.

Sadly, I've already had one set back in that a fairly rare and low-print run reference/history book about the Oney, Oklahoma community from 1901 to 1980 that I wanted to buy was already sold by the dealer who had listed a copy. I've found other copies, but for about twice as much (or more) as I am willing and able to pay. I could try to borrow the book through inter-library loan (it would have to come from either the Southwestern Oklahoma State Library or the Great Plains system in western Oklahoma), but I really wanted the book at my side during the whole process.

Alas, we all know what the Rolling Stones said.

Still, I shall carry on. Because this is a project I'm excited about.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Originally posted at michaelmerriam.net. You can comment here or there.

[identity profile] cloudscudding.livejournal.com 2014-01-10 09:11 pm (UTC)(link)
I love it when that happens! I mean, except for the feeling-stupid-I-didn't-see-it-right-away part. But awesome. And that kind of novel plot structure seems like a good fit for you, Novella Man.
ext_87310: (Coffee)

[identity profile] mmerriam.livejournal.com 2014-01-16 12:41 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, things are slowly coming together. I've found bits and pieces of other things in my ideas folder that fit with what I'm going for as well, and some of my older stories explore the themes I'm looking at, so I've gone back to reread those to see what I've done before, what worked, what didn't, and what I could do better now.

[identity profile] xjenavivex.livejournal.com 2014-01-10 09:33 pm (UTC)(link)
go forth and conquer
ext_87310: (Pen)

[identity profile] mmerriam.livejournal.com 2014-01-16 12:42 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks!

[identity profile] mle292.livejournal.com 2014-01-11 12:53 am (UTC)(link)
This site claims to have your book, downloadable for free.

http://www.muebooks.com/

I have no idea if they're scavengers looking to mine personal information, or something equally nefarious. I suspect that if anyone wanted to do that, they would list more popular titles, not books about the history of an obscure community in the plains.
ext_87310: (Default)

[identity profile] mmerriam.livejournal.com 2014-01-16 12:43 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for sharing, but it turned out they were mining for credit card information. Alas. I may just have to suck it up and drop the big money for the book.

[identity profile] mle292.livejournal.com 2014-01-16 03:19 am (UTC)(link)
That really sucks. What sort of monsters would do such a thing over knowledge?