Jellyfish

Jumping into Murky Waters

After a year’s worth of immersion in what L. M. Montgomery, author of Anne of Green Gables, called “spade” work, I am about to jump into the murky waters of writing the first draft of a new tale for young readers. As an incentive, I have signed up to participate in NaNoWriMo: National Novel Writing… Read More


Rabbit notebook

Preparation

Today, in preparation for NaNoWriMo, I created a working notebook for the 45,000 words I hope to write in the 30 days of November. Because I know that my best, first-draft work happens when I write longhand, I now have a 3-ring binder filled with 300 blank, college-ruled sheets of paper, for an average of… Read More


Day #1 morning

National Novel Writing Month starts in three hours, at 12:01 am on Thursday, November 1st—a little too late (or too early?) for me to start writing. But my alarm clock is set for 6 am, my coffee maker is set and ready to turn on, and my favorite coffee mug is waiting to be filled:… Read More


Day 1 monkey

Day #1 end of day

Last night I couldn’t sleep. I’d set my alarm for 6:00 am in order to begin my first day of participation in National Novel Writing Month 2018. Still wide awake at one o’clock in the morning, I tried to talk myself out of getting up to write a mere 5 hours later. But I did… Read More


Day #2

In the “Write a Novel in a Month” class that I’m taking at the Loft, Abby Cooper spoke about writers riding the horse of self-doubt. And even though I’ve had two middle grade novels published, I finally realized that I’ve been ruled by self-doubt ever since December, 2016, when my agent turned down a major… Read More


leaves

Day #3

Infinite possibilities … that’s the challenge of writing fiction. Face it: all fiction is made up; lies, in fact — fickle dalliances of an author’s imagination. In truth, sometimes infinite possibility is inspiring. Sometimes infinite possibility is overwhelming. This morning, near the end of my three-hour writing chunk, I found inspiration. A new scene visualized in… Read More


Dead End

Day #4

One thing I’ve realized while drafting my last three middle grade novels is that writing the first 30 pages is “easy.” I’ve heard other novelists say the same thing. And then, you run smack dab into a DEAD END. You realize that, at its deepest level, you don’t know what your story is about. You… Read More


reading

Day #5

Today I was thinking about Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Written by Lewis Carroll and published in 1865, it was not a book that I read as a child. Recently I bought a copy of my own because, after all, it is a rabbit who sets the events of the plot in motion: “Alice started to… Read More


The Last Report on the Miracle at Little No Horse

Day #6

“Coming to Light” is a documentary film about the incredible life and photography of Edward S. Curtis that a friend and I saw at the Film Society of Minneapolis-St. Paul on Sunday afternoon. After learning about Curtis’s creative journey, there was no doubt that he paid an enormous price personally, financially, and emotionally for his… Read More


Day #7

Encouragement came in a number of different forms on this last day of the first week of National Novel Writing Month. For the first time I didn’t reach my daily writing goal by late morning, a habit I knew I’d have to maintain if I were to successfully write 45,000 – 50,000 words during NaNoWriMo.… Read More