Categories
Writing Tips

“Finding” Time

blogcircle
I know it’s still June and I just did one of these, but I’ve missed several. So, I want to catch up. Plus, they’re good topics! So I’m going to work my way backwards through them for the next few weeks.
May: Life is busy, sometimes often insane. How do you find the time to write within your life?
Here’s the thing — life is always going to be insanely busy, especially as we get older and we start to build our own professional careers / families. And if we, as writers, don’t figure out ways to manipulate our schedules in order to “find” the time to write? The book we keep saying we’re going to write, will never be written. And we’ll have no one to blame at that point but ourselves.
And that, my friends, is why I keep saying “find” time in quotes. Because the time is there; we all have the same 24 hours in every single day. You can’t magically think more minutes into your day or more days into your week. Thus, you need to prioritize the time you do have and make time for the things that are important to you. Which, hopefully, will be writing.
I’m sure there are articles and videos and books written about how to maximize your time and be your most productive you (in fact, I know there are because I have one on my shelf called The 4-hour Work Week). But, that’s not necessarily what I’m looking to do. I’m just trying to make myself find time for writing. So, with that in mind, the first thing I would recommend would be to sit down every evening just before bed for a full week and map out your time that day. Hour-by-hour. Honestly. If you sat on your couch staring at the wall for two hours? Chart it. If you took a six-hour nap on Saturday, two hours after waking? Put it on the graph. The more honest you are, the better your information and new schedule will be in the end. Then after those seven days, analyze what you’ve found. My schedule is weird right now since it’s summer vacation. But, I did this the first week that I was not at school (with students), but had 4 days of training to attend on campus. There are several reasons why this was not the best choice for me, since I don’t have a consistent day-job to attend, and I was exhausted from the last two / three months of school and was sleeping much more than normal to make up for it. But, I took what I saw from my schedule that week and set my rough idea of an “ideal week” up with the knowledge that I do not currently have a consistent day-job to attend. It’s just a vague outline that would get me more on the right track towards writing more and maybe not spending so much time on YouTube without doing something else at the same time.
IMG_0180
I honestly learned a lot by looking at my schedule critically like this. Like the fact that I work every day. Even over the summer. That isn’t healthy. And that was JUST time working on things for school. I figured in anything for my Etsy shop into the “planning” category. Also, that I spent a lot of time that week sleeping. But, as mentioned above, it was me just enjoying my first week of summer and not really typical of my normal sleeping habits (which are usually 10pm – 5am over the summer and no sporadic naps throughout the day (so 12 hours less normally than I slept the week I was tracking). I wasn’t really surprised to see how much time I spent on YouTube / Gaming without multitasking… The green category, however? That was surprising to me. I consider that time my “essentials” time. That’s when I would shower, cook, eat, clean, tend my garden, and take care of my dogs. The fact that I’m spending almost as much time on that during the week — and most of it is nonnegotiable! — as a second full time job was astounding. And… it made sense why my apartment is always messiest during the school year. But, unless I get rid of my dogs, my garden, or become independently wealthy enough to hire a cook / cleaner, that isn’t time I can change.
You can see my rough “outline” of an ideal week for me in the black there. I tried to be realistic. It’s summer. I don’t want to “chain” myself to work (be it school, Etsy, or writing) during every waking moment. I want to be able to lay on the couch and read a book if I want to. I want to be able to get lost in a video game for 4-6 hours if I feel like it. I’d like to be able to sleep until 6a… Because those are things I don’t have the opportunity to do when I’m back to working 10-12 hour days again. But, at the same time… Summer is my main time to write. So, I do want to make sure I get some quality time in my universe during June and July. I’ve included a few places there where I might be able to fit it in, but I also did something else this summer in order to make sure I am actually writing, and that is to create a challenge on WriYe relating to this exact topic. Every week this summer (and even my first week back at work in August), I am encouraging myself and all the other WriYe people to follow a different professional author’s established writing routine. Yes, this was a very selfish challenge, as I struggle to figure out how I want to incorporate writing into my own life. But, it has definitely been an enlightening one for me… And hopefully others as well.
At the end of the summer, I should have an idea of a few things — first, what my “ideal week” would look like as a full time writer, and second, how to make time in my life to continue being a “full time” writer alongside my day job. And, even if what that boils down to is waking up at 4am daily to get an hour’s worth of words in before work every morning and spending a few hours every weekend to get “the rest” in on my days off (and stop working 7 days a week!) in order to make time for my writing.
Categories
Author Info

30 Questions for Authors

Just a few questions about my writing life for this fine Monday morning!

 

1. Tell us about your favorite writing project/universe that you’ve worked with and why.  My favorite is, hands down, Lazy Tequila Afternoons. I feel like I’m kind of cheating with this answer though, because I’ve been working on novels / shorts within this universe for the last twelve years. The majority of the fiction I write exists within this universe. So, while I do feel like it’s cheating, I also know that there’s no other potential contender for this space. As for why? Well, it’s definitely the most well-developed and alive, which is always nice to play in. But I think it’s also the most dynamic of any of the projects I have outside of the LTA universe. Maybe because it’s set in real locations that I’ve spent a fair amount of time in, or maybe just because I have spent so much time working on different pieces of the LTA world? It’s hard to say.

2. How many characters do you have? Do you prefer males or females?  In the LTA universe? There are well over 100 characters, maybe closer to 200 at the point, I’d have to count. Some are just walk-ons and meaningless, but I have probably at least 50 that hold some sort of significance at some point within the series. In the novel I am working on right now? There’s 4 main characters — only 1 POV character, though. As for male vs. female, I definitely prefer writing from a female POV, but I tend to like my male mains’ personalities better. So, I guess both?

3. How do you come up with names for characters (and for places if you’re writing about fictional places)? My places are all real and researched, so I don’t come up with the names so much as do the research for them. Character-wise, it’s a little more arbitrary and they kind of just come to me… And often change throughout drafts (for example, Audrey, the FMC from the Sky of… trilogy started as Ashley, changed to Tiffany, and then Amber before finally settling on Audrey. And it is definitely the best fit for her. I don’t usually give my characters names with meanings. At least not in this universe. (Though there are a few that are inside jokes — Nick and Aaron, for example.)

In my elemental mermaid quartet that I’m planning, those names all have meanings and took a lot of time to come up with.

4. Tell us about one of your first stories/characters! My first character was a girl named Jamie Anderson and I tried to use her to write a serial / blog-style story before they were even a thing / I knew what I was doing. One day, maybe I’ll get back to that story — it was very much a boy-next-door, cheesy romance and Jamie was a very by the books girl-next-door as well. Tropes all over the place. In some ways, I’m telling her story through Lindsey in Static Lightning Skies, but very, very differently at the same time.

5. By age, who is your youngest character? Oldest? How about “youngest” and “oldest” in terms of when you created them? I can’t officially talk about the youngest here because that would be spoilers for later books. But, outside of those spoilery babies, the first third of Barefoot Blues Nick, Alex, and Kyle are in the 8-10 range. Oldest is Rhys. Always. That’s not technically true because I’m sure parents and such are older than him. But it’s a running gag throughout the series that the characters are always giving Rhys a hard time about being super old (he’s really not that old, but he is a handful of years older than the rest of the “main crew”). And, he is the character that kind of “caps off” the entire series if you were to line all of the books up and read them in chronological order, according to the plot.

Creation-wise? The whole thing started with Nick. He came about in 2007 and Audrey wasn’t far behind, obviously, since her trilogy was the start of this entire saga. Newest in terms of creation is a quirky tour guide named Brandon who I just introduced in Static Lightning Skies this week. He’s a temporary sort of love interest for now. We’ll see where he evolves to be from here.

6. Where are you most comfortable writing? At what time of day? Computer or good ol’ pen and paper? Lately, I’ve been doing all of my words before noon because of a crazy challenge I’m hosting for WriYe called Write Like a Pro. I’ve been doing well in a variety of ways — either on my desktop with all of the blinds open so I can watch the sun come up, or by hand in a notebook while sitting out on my balcony in the garden. But, that is dependent on how damp it is outside in the morning and what time my crazy challenge has me up. If I’m up before the sun, I can’t do that because there’s not enough natural light, and there are mosquitoes everywhere, especially if I turn on the artificial light. And if it’s too humid the paper feels all damp and gross feeling, and then I end up sweaty just from existing. Those are the days I write inside on the computer instead. But honestly? I can write just about anywhere.

7. Do you listen to music while you write? What kind? Are there any songs you like to relate/apply to your characters? Not usually music, no. But I do tend to have a Twitch stream or some YouTube videos playing in the background. If I am writing to music, it honestly just depends on what I feel like listening to for the day. I like to put on a Spotify Daily Mix and just see what they throw at me sometimes, too.

8. What’s your favorite genre to write? To read? To write, I definitely feel most at home with Contemporary Realistic Fiction (New Adult Women’s Fiction if you want to use the genre labels that make me cringe, but fit what I write best) with a heavy focus on character relationships / romance. To read, either horror or YA. My favorite authors are Stephen King and John Green — both of whom are very strong pillars / exemplars of what genres I enjoy reading.

9. How do you get ideas for your characters? Describe the process of creating them. Back when I worked in the service industry, I would pull a lot of inspiration for characters based on interactions I had at work — both positive and negative. Now, I can’t say I’ve ever based any of my characters off my students (they aren’t adult enough yet to have a character based on them!), so coming up with characters now is a little harder. Sometimes I base them off of YouTube personalities or combinations of other people I know… But those are all just the basic building blocks for them. All I put in the character sheet for them initially is their name, what novel they appear in / their role, and if I give any physical description initially. From there, I just keep working / writing them until I have a solid feel for their personality. After I’ve finished the first draft and am going through for my first editing pass / read-through, I’ll fill in the character chart at that point, based on what I decided in the writing and make sure everything matches up / fits.

10. What are some really weird situations your characters have been in? Everything from serious canon scenes to meme questions counts! I used to actively write short vignettes for a community called Runaway Tales and some of the prompts generated there put my characters in very strange, non-canon situations. The weirdest, however? Definitely has to be Zombie Lobsters. And I honestly don’t think I will ever top that for weirdest situation.

11. Who is your favorite character to write? Least favorite? Favorite to write is by far Erika because she’s a little bit reckless and a lot a bit wild and just doesn’t care who’s listening, her opinion will always be heard. And sometimes her opinions are a little… out there. But I love her so much. I like writing from the POV of all my characters, otherwise I wouldn’t be focusing on them, so… I’m going to answer this in terms of who I struggle to write the most? Because that’s as close as it’ll get to disliking. In those terms, it would probably be Jordan. And I think that’s because I just haven’t done enough to flesh out his story / background yet to really have a feel for his voice, so it’s harder to keep it consistent.

12. In what story did you feel you did the best job of world building? Any side-notes on it you’d like to share? World building is not my forte, but I think that almost goes without saying? I write realistic fiction, set in real places. I don’t have to create a world because it’s been given to me already. But, I would have to say that the world I am most proud of myself for coming up with on my own is my video game universe for All the King’s Men.

13. What’s your favorite culture to write, fictional or not? Since I write realistic fiction and don’t want to portray someone incorrectly, I tend to write the cultures I know more than anything. Also, there’s a fine line between having a diverse cast of characters and using diversity as a crutch to sell books. I never want to be someone who has done the second one.

14. How do you map out locations, if needed? Do you have any to show us? All the time! Maybe not the fancy ones you’re thinking of, but I draw out neighborhoods and pull city maps / public transportation maps all the time. I also love to draw out house blueprints, which are a kind of map, right?

15. Midway question! Tell us about a writer you admire, whether professional or not! This is a relatively new development, but Sarra Cannon. She’s an indie author who’s published 25 books and made an insanely amazing career for herself between writing and offering courses that she is actually qualified to offer / teach. Plus, she runs an incredibly helpful, positive, candid YouTube channel about self-publishing and being an indie author that I absolutely adore.

16. Do you write romantic relationships? How do you do with those, and how “far” are you willing to go in your writing? Well, considering one of my most prominent sub-genres, and sometimes even my main genre is romance, I would say yes, yes I do include those sorts of relationships in my writing. They tend to feature pretty prominently and I do typically go into a fair bit of detail developing the whole thing — including the naughty bits! That being said, there is a difference between a romance novel and an erotica novel. I stand firmly planted on the romance side of things 98% of the time.

17. Favorite protagonist and why! I mean, I’ve already talked about why Erika is my favorite to write; she is also my favorite protagonist. So, I’m going to pick a different one. Other than Erika, my favorite protagonist is probably Kyle. I like him best because he’s just so different than the majority of the cast. He’s from a truly broken home, both before he’s adopted and then his adopted family also isn’t the best, and his personality really reflects that. He’s also one of the few characters I have who isn’t just figuring out the fine details of his life, but still trying to figure out who he is and how he fits into the world and that’s a fun new perspective to explore.

18. Favorite antagonist and why! Rhys. He’s the textbook definition of corporate greed and taking advantage of anyone he has to in order to get ahead. But at the same time, when he decides he cares about someone? He will also fight to the bitter end for them, too. He’s like the distant, blunt father-figure that no one wants, but everyone really needs.

19. Favorite minor that decided to shove himself into the spotlight and why! COLIN! He was supposed to just be a random walk-on to be a coworker for Erika. There was an entire new book introduced to the LTA universe because of him, so… He’s just a charming little dude.

20. What are your favorite character interactions to write? Erika / Colin, Alex / Kyle, Audrey / April, and Tammy / Jimi, if we’re going specific characters interacting. If we’re talking generic types of interactions — anything heated. Either full of innuendo, sarcasm, arguments, or super, super sweet and sappy.

21. Do any of your characters have children? How well do you write them? Sure, because the parents of my mains are still my characters, right? [Read as: mostly you see parents through the eyes of their children, rather than children through the eyes of their parents] However, later in the series, there are books where children are a thing. And the first 1/3 of Barefoot Blues is when Nick, Alex, and Kyle are elementary school aged. I think I write from their perspective pretty well. At least, that’s what anyone who’s read my stuff from their POV has said?

22. Tell us about one scene between your characters that you’ve never written or told anyone about before! Serious or not. I won’t say who / how. But there’s a major death that happens. There’s a handful, really, but there’s one that’s on-scene that I’ve never talked to anyone about and is one of the few things I won’t tell people for “spoiler” reasons. Births and deaths.

23. How long does it usually take you to complete an entire story—from planning to writing to posting (if you post your work)? This is a loaded question. If I’m able to sit down and just write full time? Planning takes 2-3 days, writing would take about 3 weeks (including my initial read-through to fill in details I missed / left placeholders for and fix any glaring errors). 2(ish) weeks for betas. 1 more week for my edits and then a final read from a friend (+1 week). So, best case scenario with me not having to work? 6 weeks. Realistically with work happening and life? I’d say about 7-9 months.

24. How willing are you to kill your characters if the plot so demands it? What’s the most interesting way you’ve killed someone? I was talking about death a few questions ago, so definitely willing. I don’t really consider any of the ways they die to be “interesting,” though. I suppose that’s the downfall of realistic fiction — there’s no crazy monsters to come do your bidding. I did have a character die from an acromantula in my 3rd Harry Potter fanfic novel, though. I guess that was pretty interesting?

25. Do any of your characters have pets? Tell us about them. Nick and Audrey eventually get a dog. Both Tammy and Tiffany have cats. Kyle at one point in his life has 5 dogs — though I’m not sure if that’s actually seen in the novel, since that book hasn’t been written yet.

26. Let’s talk art! Do you draw your characters? Do others draw them? Pick one of your OCs and post your favorite picture of him! I “borrow” photos from around the internet of people who look like my characters and use those in their character profiles, but would never post them because… Well, they’re real people and that’s weird. I can’t draw for anything, though, or else I would draw them. I also sometimes have Sim recreations of them, which more or less works. No one has drawn my characters yet, but I would be stoked if anyone did!

27. Along similar lines, do appearances play a big role in your stories? Tell us about them, or if not, how you go about designing your characters. Simply because of genre expectations, yes. That’s not to say everyone is perfect and flawlessly beautiful by Hollywood’s standards or anything like that, but I definitely focus on it a fair amount throughout the books.

28. Have you ever written a character with physical or mental disabilities? Describe them, and if there’s nothing major to speak of, tell us a few smaller ones. Mental illness is a commonly reoccurring motif throughout my novels. They’re realistic fiction and I feel like being true to life is important. Things that you’ll see in some shape or form in my novels are anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, anorexia, and bulimia.

29. How often do you think about writing? Ever come across something IRL that reminds you of your story/characters? Basically constantly. I’m always thinking of new ways to explore my universe and the characters within it. Maybe I’ll overhear and interesting conversation and want to adopt that into the books somehow. Or see a person who looks like they’d be interesting, so I make up a story for them in my head… Suddenly, they’re a side character in one of my novels, who eventually spins off into their own novel! When I’m not thinking about plot, characters, or the series itself, I’m thinking of plans and goals and ways to be a better writer in general… So basically, any time I’m awake, I’m thinking about it.

30. Final question! Tag someone! And tell us what you like about that person as a writer and/or about one of his characters! I tag K. A. Wyles! This almost feels like cheating because she’s been my writing Partner in Crime for almost as long as I can remember. The thing I appreciate most about her is her dedication. Even on the days when writing is hard or life gets in the way, she still finds the time to do what she needs to get done. And, a bonus thing I love about her, is the way she always convinces everyone else that they should also be writing. It’s very motivating. ❤

Categories
Uncategorized

Nom de Plume

blogcircle
June: Real name vs pen name: is one better than the other? Why or why not? Which would you use and why?
It has certainly been quite some time since I updated here and I don’t have excuses or explanations for you about it. It happened and it deserved being addressed… But that’s all I have to say about it. Especially since this post is meant to be about pen names!
You might be able to tell by my website / social media handles, but I am a person who does not use a pen name. As long as I’ve been writing and publishing things on the internet, I have always gone by some iteration of (at least) my first name. As I started taking a more “professional” route with my writing — or at least attempting to — I began switching over fully to my “author persona:” Erin Foster Books. Could I have transitioned into a pen name at that point? Probably, but I didn’t see the point. In fact, if I had made that choice, it might have actually had negative affects on my yet-developing platform.

Back in college, I had to complete a short story project for one of my creative writing courses and the outcome was a fully-edited, ready-to-publish (essentially) short story collection. And since this was back in the day of free proof copies for NaNoWriMo winners, I decided to go ahead and publish it. Why not, right? And I did so using my real name. Then I entered a Harlequin contest and did decently well (top 12 — so not placed or anything, but still a huge success in my mind), using my real name. All of the self-published short stories in the AugNoWriMo Compendium Milestone: under my real name. I was already starting to establish my name as my author brand, even before ever thinking about it. To then start over with a pen name? Not something that really appealed to me, personally.

Now, if I were to decide to write… say a fantasy quartet about elemental mermaids instead of my normal romance realistic fiction, would I consider a pen name? Absolutely. Because if someone had read a handful of my other fiction and picked up a fantasy book, thinking it would be in a similar feel / genre because I wrote it… They would be very confused. And the last thing I want to do to my readers is confuse them.
As for which one is better? Well, neither. I don’t think you can make a sweeping generalization like that with something that’s such a personal decision. For me, my real name worked out and was the right choice for my situation, but that might not always be the case for someone — or even for me. I think that as long as the person behind the name is intentional and consistent with their use of whatever moniker they choose, then that is the “better” decision.
(Stay tuned. I am promising a minimum of one blog post per week for the rest of the year. Always Wednesday mornings at 10am EST. There might be more than that, but there will definitely never be less. If there’s something you’d like me to talk about / address, feel free to leave a comment here or reach out to me on twitter at @erinfosterbooks!)
Categories
Uncategorized

My Editing Space

One of the things I have always found most interesting is taking a look into other writers’ spaces. My writing space looks nothing like my editing space, mostly because when I edit, I need to get rid of any potential distractions and background noise so I can really hone in and focus on how specific words sound and figure out if they’re really the perfect one for the situation. Sometimes that takes reading things aloud to figure out pacing and rhythm, so I like to be away from my computer / the abundance of noise and videos that come with it. Sure, I can always just turn those things off… But if they’re there? And super convenient? It’s hard.

Plus, when I’m editing, I tend to do it for hours at a time. There’s so much more time that goes into editing for me than I ever commit to writing, so sitting at a computer chair, motionless, hunched over things I’ve written, or squinting at a screen? That sounds simply miserable.

I prefer to print my document, grab a clipboard and an Inkjoy Gel Pen in the color of choice for that particular manuscript, and curl up in the cozy corner of my couch with a few pillows, a fuzzy blanket, and a puppy.

 IMG-9716That’s my editing partner, Laika. She refused to look at the camera and pose.

Categories
Uncategorized

#editnfriends: An Introduction

March in the WriMo community has traditionally been reserved for editing as long as I have personally been a WriMo participant. From what I can tell, the logic is you write your 50k in November, finish your plot with a 30k dash in December and then pretend the writing jaunt didn’t exist for two months while you recover and try to put some distance between yourself and the novel… Before diving back into it and polishing up the draft in March.

Piggybacking off of that, as well as the fact that part of #Pub2020 is editing our novels to perfection before sending them out to seek representation for publication, my friend Liz over at her blog Words N Books, decided to host #editnfriends this March. And I, being a sucker for a community challenge, have joined. I mean, I need to edit regardless… Might as well use this as the kick in the pants to get me going, right?

Let’s meet the novel that I am going to be diving into, shall we?

Title: Sky of Light
Genre:
Women’s Fiction / New Adult
Current Word Count:
113,489
Word Count Goal:
85,000 – 95,000
Place in my Universe:
SoL is the middle book in Audrey’s Trilogy, preceded by Sky of Dust and followed by Sky of Stars
Summary:
For once, Audrey Laurent is keeping her clothes on as a runaway runway-model. Fleeing from France and an abusive boyfriend, she finds herself in the sun surrounded by new friends, new adventures, and new romance. After a series of misadventures including a courtroom wedding, a maid of honor, and a secret divorce, will Audrey finally get the happy-ending she ran to find?

How do you plan to edit? / What are your goals for this draft?
This is the final draft I am editing by myself. I have the entire draft printed out and am going through with a fine-toothed comb and scribbling all over the manuscript by hand. I think the middle is still a little squishy from where I split the original novel into a trilogy back in 2010 / 2011 or so. If I need to do major content changes still, I’ll create a chapter-by-chapter outline and then put all the pieces together again within the manuscript before poking at things like word choice. As you can see above, I have about 20k that needs to be cut from this novel at the moment so that it is a feasible fit for the genre / market when I start shopping it around for publication, so I’m definitely looking for places to tighten up my prose. From there, I’ll be seeking out detailed, nit-picky line edits from crit partners or potentially even hiring someone to really beat the novel into submission.

What’s your update schedule / editing plan?
This novel currently has 37 chapters and I’ve already edited 4. So basically, I’m looking at a pace of 1 chapter per day, and then 2 on a few incredibly productive days, if I want to get the entire novel finished within the month of March. Realistically? I know that won’t work in my schedule with work and class and a memorial family trip. So, my goal is going to be 2 chapters per week. That will bring the edited chapters up to chapter 12, which will put me in a good place to continue along that pace and finish the edit by the end of June to start sending it around for others to read and keeping that ball rolling!

I plan on updating weekly on my #editnfriends progress — posts will go live every Sunday — to share my tips, tricks, successes, and woes of the editing process. If you would like to keep up in real time, check out my Author Twitter. I promise I’ll try not to whine too much. 😉