by Mary Sutton / @mary_sutton73
So, I’m looking at the date of my last post, and it was 30 August. That’s a few weeks ago. My only excuse is that I’ve started a new day job and that leaves me with less time for writing and it’s associated tasks. Mea culpa. I’ll try to be better, but no promises.
Blog Stats
I had a spike in viewers today. I have no idea why. But I am grateful. Especially since I’m still trying to figure out this stuff.
It seems like my most popular posts have been the ones I’ve done on Scrivener. I’m not really surprised on that. In fact, it seems like one of my posts (Scrivener Two Months Later) was linked to another blog on Scrivener. So way cool, so…
Scrivener Tip
In one of my very first posts on Scrivener, I talked about character and location sheets, and how cool they are. And I still think that. But what if you’re writing a series of works (novels, short stories, whatever) using the same characters and settings. Do you have to write the sheet each time? Nope. Simply open both projects and drag the character/setting sheet from Project A to Project B. You might have to fuss with the window sizes to be able to do this and you might have to relocate the sheet once it’s been dropped if you can’t get it right to the correct location. But voila! you can reused sheets over and over (and if something changes in Project B, you can propagate that change by coping from Project B to future projects).
Cool News
I inch ever closer to publication. I think my first public work is going to be the first in my middle-grade fantasy e-book series. I got a cover candidate earlier this week that really knocked my socks off. So beautiful and I think it’s really going to resonate with the target market. I cannot wait until I can share it with you – and when I can announce publication!
In the meantime, I have the first in my Laurel Highlands Mysteries series of novelettes out for submission. Unfortunately, I won’t hear until October at the earliest – and I may even have to wait until December. It’s my first real experience with how slowly the wheels of traditional publishing can turn. I knew it philosophically, but encountering it in real life is, um, different. My first submission responded much more quickly. It kind of cramps my plans for the second story, and perhaps the series in general, but so it goes.
However, more exciting news: my local Sisters in Crime chapter is publishing a short story anthology – and I’m going to be in it! As The Girl would say, “squee!” Publication is a ways off, but the acceptance means I can focus on helping/encouraging others and even more writing. And, frankly, this acceptance meant a lot to me – perhaps even more than acceptance in a magazine would because these are my peers and friends. To not have been included would have sucked.
Speaking of More Writing
I’m mulling over another short story idea, which was going to be a backup if my first anthology story wasn’t accepted. This is a story with completely new characters and would be a standalone.
I’ve finished the second book in the MG fantasy series. I’m editing/revising a romance novella I submitted to a contest back in June (wow, the POV shifts are slapping me in the face in that one – sheesh). I have a second romance novella awaiting revising.
If only I had…
Time to Write
As I mentioned, I’ve got a day job. It’s a good one, tech writing (which is something I’m very comfortable with) in a pretty flexible company. But it does cut into my fiction time significantly. No longer can I just pound out 2,000 words in a day. So I’m coming up with creative options. A lot of writing is getting done on the weekends.
Which begs the question: If you have a day job/kids/school/etc., how to do manage those demands with your writing time?
Clock image used under Creative Commons via Dalo_Pix2