How I Write

How I Write: Idea Creation

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on June.16.2010

How I Write

For the next 10 or so weeks, I’m participating in a “HOW I WRITE” series every Wednesday with several writers, where we all discuss how we approach writing a book. Every writer has a different process and this project gives us a chance to share and compare ours. Click on the “How I Write” image to find a list of the participating writers and links to their blogs.


A note about me:

  • I write sci-fi / futuristic, fantasy, paranormal and contemporary romance.
  • I’ve written 2 novels, 4 novellas, several shorts and have a few more works in the beginning stages. I’ve also written a few YA novellas when I was teen, and may revisit that genre sometime in the future.
  • My writing  ranges in length from as short as 750 words (3 pages) to as long as 115,000 words (over 450 pages)

This week’s topic is Idea Creation: Just how do I come up with ideas to write about?

One way I come up with ideas is by engaging in the things that interest me. I can become inspired with characters, settings or plots from even my most basic interests: books that I read, movies, tv shows, video games, fairy tales, being in love, raising a family, imagining the future, as examples. Do you really like to skate? Perhaps that could find its way into a plot. Are you friends with a vegetarian who’s attracted to a meat-lover? What an interesting idea for characters. (Oooh, I have to write both of those new ideas down!)

Another way I come up with ideas is by thinking of twists on ones that I already like. Ever wonder what would happen if Luke Skywalker was a wizard instead of a Jedi,  lived in a medieval era, wasn’t able to get a cybernetic or prosthetic arm to replace the one he lost, and if his powerfully evil father had of lived? Bam, new story idea!

Yet another way I come up with ideas is by thinking of things I don’t see as much of as I would like to.  I’d read lots of stories and even seen movies that were inspired by “Snow White” and “Little Red Riding Hood”, but few that tackled Rumpelstiltskin, so I wrote Say My Name to try to fill that void.

I made a spreadsheet which I call my Idea Database where I capture notes for a potential story on each row. I have columns for me to include the genre or genres the story would fall under, a general idea of how long the story idea would be (short story, novel or novella), a title if I have one in mind, and a sentence or two describing the idea. Whenever I have an idea for a story, no matter how vague, I capture it in my Idea Database. If my spreadsheet isn’t available when the lightning strikes, I jot it down with pen and paper until I can enter it into my spreadsheet later. There are currently 117 ideas in my Idea Database right now waiting to be further explored.

Coming up with things to write about is the easy part. It’s actually deciding which story to write next that’s my biggest challenge!

Don’t forget to visit other participating blogs to see how other writers generate ideas. See ya next week for Character, Plot & World Building!

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NaNoWriMo is Over!

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on December.2.2009

December’s here (boy did it arrive fast) and thus November has ended and so has National Novel Writing Month. Here’s how it went for me:

MY STATS
Average writing speed: 600 words per hour
Average hours spent each day: 1 hour
Goal: 50,000 words written
Actual Words Written: 39,700 words and ~14,000 words edited
Result: 1 Novella rough draft completed and editing begun

** Some challenges I faced in NaNoWriMo **

  • Not revising what I write. I can see that resisting the urge to self-edit will be like kicking a nail-biting habit.
  • Writing the same amount of words everyday. My time spent writing was very inconsistent. There were days that went by where I wrote 0 words towards the target story, and days where I wrote 6,000 words. I noticed though that I was a lot more productive on weekdays that I took off work and weekends where I didn’t work before than I was trying to write in the evenings after work. I already suspected it, but my job is taking a lot of my juice it seems.
  • Getting in the mood. Trying to write romance while in a bad mood is like trying to paint a wall while blindfolded. You can slap something down to cover the blank slate but don’t expect it to be anywhere near your best work in creating romantic contract. In fact it may actually suck.

** Some benefits I obtained through NaNoWriMo **

  • Faster Drafts. Mastered the art of drafting out a full page in 30 minutes or less! By the second half of the month, I was sometimes able to spit out a full page in 15 minutes, which had before now been non-fiction speed only for me – never for fiction writing. I feel like I’ve grown some wings!
  • Finding my voice. Turning down my logic and allowing my muse to freely speak, my writing turned out more raw and natural on the first try than usual. This was a great exercise on finding and developing my writing voice.
  • I Got a Prize! I now have a new manuscript ready to be edited, polished and submitted, and a head-start on another one! Okay, so that’s not really a prize but just the product of my efforts, but it feels like one.

So although I didn’t actually reach my target number of words written, I still feel like I’ve won. I also feel that I would have achieved my goal and then some had this not been SUCH a super-busy. I’m proud of what I managed to accomplish with the time and energy I had. And just because National Novel Writing Month is over doesn’t mean that I have to stop setting my writing goals high. Who knows – just maybe I’ll reach 50k words this month.

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Last Week of NaNoWriMo

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on November.24.2009

This is it, the last week of NaNoWriMo! By no means has it been easy, but it has been fun and enlightening. We’re supposed to have around 40,000 words written by now, with just 10k more to go to hit our target of 50k.

Although I am only at around 30,000 words written, I’m feeling pretty good because out of those 30k I now have a full rough (and I mean ROUGH) draft of a new novella. I plan to put the other 20,000 or so words I have left to meet my goal towards another story. That’s bending the rules a bit I know, but hey in my mind, 50k written is 50k written, and I consider it a bonus if I get more than one story out of it!

Gotta go – errands to run, children to attend to and more writing to do!

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How Tatiana Got Her Groove Back on NaNoWriMo Day 11

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on November.12.2009

There’s this piece of advice that is constantly given to aspiring writers, that goes something like “Make yourself write every day”. Or “Just keep writing” they say, and that there’s no such thing as a writer’s block or needing to be in a creative mood to write.

Well, I beg to differ.

For a while there, I seriously lost my mojo. I’ve been dragging, cranky and sleepy. Basically just burned out, and needed a mental break from everything. My daily word count has been seriously slacking. I took some time off from my side gigs and relaxed with my family, had a date night with the husband, caught up on some much needed housework and personal tasks that needed attending. Basically, I allowed myself to rejuvinate for a bit.

But after DAYS of 0 words written or too few words written to bother to track, I finally got my groove back yesterday. And with yesterday being a work holiday, I managed to get almost 5,000 words written yesterday. Not just 5,000 crappy words either like the few sad ones that I did force myself to squeeze out earlier this week while I was in my slump, but good stuff! Well as good as an initial rough draft can get, anyways. The point is, I made a note to myself to stop crying in front of a blank screen. I’m more productive if I actually give myself a chance to relax every once in a while and then get back to work.

So it’s 3:40 am, and I’m finally going to call it a night. A long, tiring night, but a good one.

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Finally Friday and Day 5

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on November.6.2009

At last it’s Friday, and I’m so happy I could cry. It has been a long, daunting week of non-stop work and missing my family.

What is interesting to me though is the fact that some people look forward to the opposite: getting away from their family. I’m not talking about your typical I-need-a-break-to-spend-some-me-time kind of getting away, though. That I can relate to. But the people I’ve been meeting with this week all have to travel to do their jobs, easily around 75% of the time. When I casually asked some of them how do they handle family life when they’re always on the go, some of them said that being away from home actually makes it easier for them to deal with family life, because if they had to be at home with their spouse and children every day they’d go crazy. One even went so far as to say that if it wasn’t for the fact that he was mostly only home on the weekends, he and his wife would probably be divorced by now, since spending more than 2 or 3 days together straight is painful for both of them.

I think that is so sad.

But my spouse is also my best friend, I adore my children and I love my house. To me there is no place like home and I am so glad that tonight I get to return to it. I also look forward to not having to get up and get dressed, put on makeup, make sure my hair looks luxurious and drive to an office every morning before starting work like I did this week – since that’s usually when I get most of my productive writing time done. These past 5 days of doing NaNoWriMo during a week when I ONLY had free time to write at night after long, 12 and 13 hour work days were really painful, but I did manage to get a total of 3,246 words written. That’s about half of what I’d hoped to have written by now, but I still have the rest of this weekend to try to pick up the pace.

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NaNoWriMo Day 3

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on November.4.2009

Day 3 was a painful one. I returned to my hotel room mentally and physically drained at 9:30 last night. I did manage to write one page of 302 words before I lost consciousness.

I hope Day 4 will be much more productive. We shall see, eh?

END GOAL: 50,000 words
GRAND TOTAL SO FAR: 1,603 words
TIME LEFT: 28 days

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NaNoWriMo Day 2

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on November.2.2009

So I’ve started NaNoWriMo with an extra challenge: I am out of town this first week of the month on a business trip. This event for work has me super busy from 6:45 am until around 9:00 pm each day this week. I will only have about an hour or so each night this week to get my words in.

Day 1: I only wrote about 204 words last night before I feel asleep right on my key
board after typing for about 15 minutes. But hey, 204 is better than 0, and considering that I wrote them after packing driving for hours, I’m going to claim those words with pride!

Day 2: *Whew* this meeting is going to be a beast. It’s only Monday, and I’m already whimpering and ready to go home. I wrote from 9:20 pm until 10:50 pm tonight, and I got 1,117 more words written today. I want to write more, but I can barely keep my eyes open.

END GOAL: 50,000 words
GRAND TOTAL SO FAR: 1,321 words
TIME LEFT: 28 days

Have you started yet?

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NaNoWriMo Time!

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on November.1.2009

November is here, which means that it’s time for NaNoWriMo! That stands for National Novel Writing Month, and the participants aim to write 50,000 words of a novel in 30 days.

National Novel Writing Month is meant to encourage people to focus on writing lots of words in a relatively short span of time. Because it is all about quantity over quality, I’ve never been interested in participating before. But looking at how long it took me to write the 2 novels and the 2 novellas I’ve finished so far, I thought it might be interesting for me to join in this year. I figure I could gain a number of things through this exercise, such as:

  1. Explore my writing voice. Even though I have a few finished works behind me and lots of blog posts, I still feel as though I am still only in the beginning stages of discovering my voice. It’s easy to choke the natural storyteller in you with the (sometimes conflicting) information from writing workshops, author and editor tips, style guides and expert advice. A full month of writing fiction fast without agonizing over every single word I put down on the page for a change may be just the thing I need to reveal my true, unadulterated natural writing voice.
  2. Establish a new writing routine. Considering how I’ve been falling behind in my personal writing goals past few weeks, I could certainly use a new schedule. This will force me to get even more serious about my writing regime. Breaking down the numbers, 50,000 words in 30 days = 1,667 words a day (if writing 7 days a week). That’s about 6 pages a day. It’ll take some discipline, some creative time-management and changing my wake/sleep times and my chatting /reading / tv-watching / video-game playing habits.
  3. Get a productivity boost. Having 50,000 words written by the end of this month will definitely help me make up for some of my slack! Getting a story down on paper is always a good thing in my book – even if it is only in a SUPER-rough rough draft.
  4. Have fun. I love writing. It is a release, a hobby as well as dream profession for me. And allowing myself to FREELY write fiction without all of the professional voices in my head saying things like “What those adverbs!”, “Oh no, you wrote that sentence in passive voice instead of active!” and “Are you head-hopping again?” will only up the fun factor.
  5. Inspire others to write their story. Just casually mentioning my intention to participant in this to a friend made them want to get in on it, too. Who knows – maybe others will want to join us. Some things are even more enjoyable with company.

Every day this month I plan to post my daily progress. If you’re playing too, please stop by and let me know how you’re doing!

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Life Lessons

by ** Tatiana Caldwell ** on August.20.2008

I recently celebrated my birthday.  Another year lived.  Another year of lessons learned.  I’d like to take a moment to share a few:

ON LIFE

  • The easiest way to break a bad habit is to replace it with a new, good one
  • Those that don’t believe in karma are usually hit the hardest by it
  • You’d be amazed by how many people’s days you could brighten if you would just smile … even your own crappy ones

ON LOVE & RELATIONSHIPS

  • With true love, the affection and attraction increases – instead of diminishing - over time.  I fall more in love my fat-head husband each day
  • There is no such thing as hiding anything from a significant other.  Eventually it WILL be brought to light
  • A lot of people out there are really struggling to find and hold onto love

ON FAMILY

  • People often treat strangers better than than they do their own family
  • Children are living reflections of their parents.  Watch what you do in the mirror …
  • Children really do help keep you young.  Our kids have us running, hopping, jumping, bike riding, dancing, singing, skating, skipping, swimming, spinning, sliding, learning (I just learned that sooo many fun things to do start with the letter ‘s’!), teaching, visiting amusement parks … and constantly smiling and laughing

ON WRITING

  • I love writing even when it earns me $0
  • There’s no such thing as not having enough time to write.  Write a page, write a paragraph, write a sentence.  As long as you write something everyday, you are making progress.

ON MYSELF

  • I used to think that being an independent woman meant that I shouldn’t depend on anyone but myself.  Now I believe that being an independent woman means that I can make it on my own if I have to … as a lady in love, I don’t have the need nor the want to
  • Every year I look back on the previous one and say “Boy was that DUMB of me!” about at least 1 thing
  • I really hate hate

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