Changing the Story
"You should write a mystery," my daughter advised, "you read so many of them." But somehow, I got started on a fantasy. And bogged down.
Then yesterday I got a new lease on story, found myself writing about two real and present characters that came out of the woodwork. I thought they would be peripheral to my story -- spear carriers, so to speak.
But I'm beginning to realize that one of these may, in fact, turn out to be the main protagonist.
Follow the story, follow where it leads. In the end, I may have a mystery and the fantasy part may just get cut.
But that's all okay. The only rule is to finish the 50,000 words in the time allocated, the month of November.
I'm catching up, too. I think I've survived week two. Nearly a quarter of the way through the 50,000 word count, and I have two weeks to go. I'll just have to do the rest in double time.
Then yesterday I got a new lease on story, found myself writing about two real and present characters that came out of the woodwork. I thought they would be peripheral to my story -- spear carriers, so to speak.
But I'm beginning to realize that one of these may, in fact, turn out to be the main protagonist.
Follow the story, follow where it leads. In the end, I may have a mystery and the fantasy part may just get cut.
But that's all okay. The only rule is to finish the 50,000 words in the time allocated, the month of November.
I'm catching up, too. I think I've survived week two. Nearly a quarter of the way through the 50,000 word count, and I have two weeks to go. I'll just have to do the rest in double time.