The mega-fantastic Laura Salters has tagged me in this blog tour (check out her process here!). So, this morning I will be answering some fun questions:
1. What
am I working on?
My
current WIP is an as-yet-unnamed YA urban fantasy. When I first started rolling
the idea around in my head it was as Veronica Mars meets Narnia, if the traffic
flow through the wardrobe was going in the other direction – and if Veronica
was descendant of Chugach
shamans and Irish Aos Si.
I
finished the first draft the week before last, twirled around in excited circles until I
threw up and am currently wrestling with the first round of editing.
2. How
does my work differ from others of its genre?
This story takes place in a New York where humans are very aware,
although nowhere near fully accepting, of the fantasy creatures with whom they
share their city. The fantasy creatures in this world are born from various
American lore. From lumberjack folklore, argopelters, cactus cats, jackalopes
and jersey devils all make appearances. There are also azebans, chickcharneys,
fastachees and thunderbirds (to name a few), which hale from Native American
folklore.
3. Why
do I write what I do?
I’ve always enjoyed reading a lot of different genres.
Because of this, I frequently have many different ideas for a whole variety of
stories popping into my head. However, my fantasy characters are always the
ones who yell the loudest. They are so persistent in their demand for my
attention, I just don’t have the heart to refuse them. That, and when I try,
they don’t let me sleep. I really love sleep.
4. How
does my writing process work?
Generally, I start with a character – one person who really
interests me. From there I build out into the people who surround them and
start looking at their relationships. After I have an idea as to whether or not
certain people get along (and why), I expand to the world they’re living in.
As I write fantasy, this step involves the most research. In
my WIP, there’s a large focus on folklore in the United
States , with particular concentrations on that of the northeast
(creatures) and Alaska
(creatures and shamanism). I’ve not yet mastered the art of being organized in
my research, so information I find ends up in notebooks, Word files and the
not-so-occasional napkin.
Once I have a decent understanding of my world – both large
scale and individual to my MC – it’s time to figure out what’s about to make my
MC’s life go sideways. I like to sketch out the inciting incident, the midway
point, the climax and the ending. Then I just write, even on the days where it
seems as though every word coming out of my mind is going to end up on the
scrap pile.
By New York Zoological Society [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons |
For me, drafting is all about powering through. Revisions
are where I have my fun. No more terrifying blank pages, instead I get to play
with a bunch of characters I already love until I make their lives the best I
can.
So, that's how I approach things. How about the rest of you writerly types? What's the method to your madness?
Thanks to Kelley Harvey for kicking this all off!!
TAG, YOU’RE IT!
Lauren Grimley
Lauren lives in central Massachusetts
where she grew up, but her heart is on the beaches of Cape
Cod Boston University she became a middle school
English teacher.
where she spends as much time as possible. After graduating
from
Her loves are lounging on quiet beaches, laughing with good
friends, and curling up with the cat and a great book on a rainy day.
As for her first novel, she has her seventh graders to thank
for starting her on this path. A few years back, they convinced a skeptical new
teacher vampire stories were worth reading. She now spends her time writing
them when she should be correcting papers.
Website: http://www.laurengrimley.com/
Twitter: @legrimley
Megan Just
Megan is a freelance and fiction writer living with her
husband and toddler daughter on California ’s Central Coast .
She’s horribly long winded so her fiction writing is
naturally of the full-length-novel type. Sometimes, when she’s feeling ambitious,
she’ll attempt a short story. On the freelance side, her favorite assignments
are features with a sociology edge and personal essays. She occasionally takes
on copy editing jobs and writes book reviews.
Website: http://meganjust.com
Twitter: @meganjust
Jack Lewis Baillot
She is not a king or queen of Narnia, though she would be if her wardrobe was working. She is Spartacus. She was not born on another planet though when she retires she is moving to Mars, or the Moon. She can wear a red shirt because she is Scottish. She sleeps in a bed because her hammock developed a fault. Also, she has never kissed a frog, not sure what she would do if it turned into a prince.
Website: http://www.jacklewisbaillot.com/
Twitter: @MsJackLBaillot
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