I’m so late.
With the edits on Home Away Home, that is. Some time ago K. had expressed interest in the manuscript—she’d liked The Unexpected Neighbor*—and I said, Ah, yeah, okay, as soon as I give it one last go around.
And then I did nothing.
K. bugged me, and I said Yeah yeah—I know, how awful that someone wants to read your work!—and did nothing. Repeat. And then I thought, Huh, I should get this done.
I made it easier by editing it section by section and sending those off to K. Some sections required sanding, others, sawing, but edits for one through five went pretty well.
And then I got busy with ghosting and grading and in the meantime K. was reading what I’d sent and then she finished and said, Hey. . . and I said Two weeks. And then did nothing.
Well, not exactly nothing: I started with the edits and again with the sanding and sawing and then I hit a point at which I realized Oh, crap, I’m gonna need a bigger saw, and stepped off.
I’ve stepped back up, proceeding bit by bit, but MAN do I have to dial it back. Both The Unexpected Neighbor and Home Away Home are dialogue-heavy and both suffer from the same defect: my tendency to make the characters too knowing.
Actually, it’s not just that they’re too knowing; it’s that this knowingness gets in the way of realistic dialogue. Now, were I writing a mannered piece, this wouldn’t be an issue, but the characters of both of these novels inhabit worlds I’d like readers to recognize; thus, they have to sound like real people.
I don’t mind that I over-write on the first draft; what I do mind is that it’s not until many drafts later that I manage to pare it back. I don’t know what I’m doing on those other drafts—it’s not as if these two works are plot-heavy—but apparently I can’t see the over-knowing dialogue until after I’ve worked everything else out.
Presuming, that is, that I’ve worked everything else out. . . .
~~~
*Click on that link and it’ll take you to Smashwords, where you can buy the novel for the princely sum of 3 bucks! Half the cost of a pint of Guinness! Less than a latte! Totally worth it!
some interesting comments by will self on the over-knowing of authors of their characters:
http://will-self.com/2013/05/21/writers-centre-norwich-podcast/
“I’m so late” for a second I thought this post was heading in a very different direction…
https://archive.org/details/deleuze-and-politics
Hey, wishing u all the best for ur book. Writing can be, at times, tiring and strenuous task:)
re: so late. Ah, no. No no no no no no no. No.
@Vishalbheero: Thanks! Yeah, most of the time I’m jazzed by it, but there are moments when it deflates me.