swan_tower: (academia)
[personal profile] swan_tower
Those of you who read [livejournal.com profile] kniedzw's journal have already heard the news, but for the rest of you: my husband's employer filed for bankruptcy today, putting him out of a job.

This brings into the open something I've been considering for a good year, maybe more. Some of you have heard me talk about it, but I haven't said anything publicly because, well, public = real. (LJ = real, apparently.) But forming an agreement with my anthropology adviser constitutes pretty real, I'd say, so I might as well bite the bullet and type the words.

I'm leaving graduate school.

Yeah. Um. I have a whole lot to say on this topic, but to spare people's friends-lists, I'm putting it behind a cut.



The plan, originally, was this: go to graduate school, keep writing, become an academic and professional writer. It works for a lot of people, and I had every expectation it would work for me. But the plan started to go awry -- in a good way -- when I sold my first two novels. Doppelganger came out two years ago this month, which happens to be right when I finished my coursework; in other words, writing moved from "hobby" to "job" right when I stopped having daily engagement with academic matters. I entered the zone that depends the most on self-motivation just as half my attention shifted elsewhere.

This could have been okay. I'm extremely good at self-motivation, as the five novels I wrote during four years at Harvard attest. Except . . . it didn't happen. For two years now I've needed to get my ass in gear and arrange for my qualifying exams so I can start writing my dissertation, and I just kept not doing it. Partly because of administrative crap -- if there's one hurdle I'm bad at making myself jump, that would be it. Partly because, well, if it came down to a question of spending my time and energy on fiction or on scholarship, fiction kept winning out.

I like teaching. I like research. I would like being a professor. It started to occur to me, though, that writing novels in my summers off was a bad road to academic success, since of course you're also expected to spend those summers working on scholarly publications that will advance you in your department. And between me and the nice tenured life stood some unknown number of years spent slaving away in crappy entry-level positions, my time and energy eaten up by teaching four courses the higher-ups in the department don't want to bother with. (Not to mention the job hunt I'd have to go through to get there in the first place.) In other words, I probably wouldn't have as much time to spend on fiction as I liked to believe. So I started to wonder if going into academia was really the right choice.

Then, this past fall, the next question occurs to me: if I'm not planning on becoming a professor, then what reason other than egotism (Dr. Neuenschwander!) is there for finishing my Ph.D.?

The precipitant for that choice was the continuation of the Onyx Court series. Y'see, at the beginning of March last year, my plan was to spend my summer reading for my exams (and writing whatever novel I was doing next), and then take the exams in the fall. At the end of March, I knew "whatever novel I was doing next" was Midnight Never Come, which required an amount of research approximately comparable to those exams. No way could I do both at once. So now it's the fall, and I'm planning to do the reading in the winter and spring . . . and I go and pitch the Victorian book to Orbit. With the intention of doing more.

I stopped and thought, before I did that. You realize you're putting yourself in a position to write a research-intensive novel every year for the next three or four years? Just when do you think you're going to do your exams and dissertation?

(Not to mention that I really really wanted to write that YA idea I had. Also in the winter and spring. My superhuman college days when I could have done both that and the exam-reading appear to have been left behind in college.)

Then I started doing the math.

Entry-level academic positions pay decently by my low standards, but I'm not there yet, am I? I'm teaching at Collins, which is wonderful but pays crap. (And I have to apply for a new teaching position every semester.) I talked with my agent about the advances she generally gets for her YA authors, and I looked at the prospect of more Onyx Court books, and I calculated that if I dropped grad school and focused on those things instead, I would genuinely have a larger and more stable income than I do right now. Those, along with health insurance, are usually the two big issues a writer has to answer if they're thinking about going full-time -- and I don't get health insurance through this job. I get it through [livejournal.com profile] kniedzw, though obviously we're having some issues with that right now.

I can project that out about three years or so, assuming my agent is able to sell the YA (she's shopping it around right now) and Orbit wants more Onyx Court books (there's every evidence that they do).

Three years is a pretty good cushion, if one is contemplating a jump.

And if I'm not in graduate school, Kyle and I can move to a city where he has actual job prospects -- that will pay more than he was getting here.

So this is the official decision: I'm going to jump through the necessary administrative hoops and do whatever thesis/project/whatever work they're willing to accept, and leave graduate school with a master's in anthropology and folklore.

What we don't have yet is a timetable. May 6th, I fly to London, and then Kyle and I go on the cruise and we don't get home until May 30th. July 10th, I have an appointment for lasik surgery here in town. October 1st, I have one of those research-intensive novels due. I have plans for a Midnight Never Come book launch at Pandemonium in Boston, and a con in Oklahoma at the end of July. Somewhere in there, I will finish my master's. In the meantime, there's the question of work for Kyle. I don't know what we'll be doing about that, and so I don't know when we'll be leaving.

But leaving will happen. It's the Great Bloomington Exodus: like a dandelion full of gamers, we're poofing out into the wild blue yonder, scattering our seeds across the U.S. For us, it seems it will be a little sooner than anticipated.
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Date: 2008-04-03 07:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jimhines.livejournal.com
Sounds like a scary jump, but it's obvious you've put a lot of thought into it. Good luck to you both!

And hey, if this means you write more books faster than you would have, then I'm behind you 100%! ;-)

Date: 2008-04-03 07:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] d-c-m.livejournal.com
You will both be terribly missed.

Date: 2008-04-03 07:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] d-aulnoy.livejournal.com
It is most *definitely* academia's loss (thus illustrating the flaws inherent in the system - if it doesn't fight/provide for the brilliant people, it doesn't deserve to have them), but academia's loss is literature's gain. Sympathies on the company bankruptcy, kudos on the decision, and best wishes for the future!

Date: 2008-04-03 07:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sora-blue.livejournal.com
Hey, grad school's not going anywhere. It'll still be there 3, 4, 5 years from now. If decide later you want a PhD, you can get one.

It sounds like your decision is what's best for you, and it'd be crazy to suggest you shouldn't do what'll make you happiest. :)

Good luck with those hoops!

Date: 2008-04-03 07:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fjm.livejournal.com
Good luck! I'm not one to insist that grad school is for everyone, and in the end the only reason for doing it is if you desperately want to, and you very much want to do something else.

Midnight Never Comes arrived in my mailbox last week. Thank you very much.

Date: 2008-04-03 07:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] danielmc.livejournal.com
it is indeed the great exodus, in many ways.
may you live in interesting times, indeed.

Date: 2008-04-03 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amysisson.livejournal.com
Not that I know anything, but it sounds like a terrific decision for both of you. So congrats! And if you decide you'd like a bit of teaching now and again down the road, plenty o' community colleges are very happy with a master's degree (and may well pay more per course than entry-level or adjunct jobs at universities). And plenty o' places are very happy to have established novelists teach some writing.

Best of luck!

Date: 2008-04-03 07:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
<g> It works mostly because I do write fairly quickly, all things considered. Doing one adult and one YA novel each year? Totally feasible for me.

Date: 2008-04-03 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
And we're going to miss this town. But the daffodil is doing its 'splody thing, and we would have been leaving in the next year to two years anyway, in all likelihood.

Date: 2008-04-03 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
The flattery is much appreciated. ^_^

Date: 2008-04-03 07:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
Indeed, and that's part of what made it possible for me to let go -- the realization that it's not like I can't ever get a Ph.D. if I decide somewhere down the line that I regret this choice. I know the odds are against it -- people who stop out usually don't come back -- but I know that if I feel strongly enough about it, I can make it happen.

And really, that's this whole thing in a nutshell. It isn't that I'm somehow not able to finish. I just don't want it badly enough anymore. If I did, I have every confidence it myself that I could do it.

Date: 2008-04-03 07:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
What makes it hard is that I really do like scholarship and the academic environment, and I have subjects I am passionate about studying. But the passion for writing is stronger.

I hope you like the book! Turns out you were on their list to receive a copy anyway, but they made sure to get it to you asap when I asked.

Date: 2008-04-03 07:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
It helps me to think of it as the dandelion. Things aren't falling apart; we're colonizing the world, instead. <evil grin>

Date: 2008-04-03 07:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
Tutoring seems like a good balance for a part-time job -- it's hard to get a lot of hours, but the hours you get pay extremely well. I have every intention of looking into that as a supplement to my income.

Date: 2008-04-03 08:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shveta-thakrar.livejournal.com
Yay for you for following your dreams. I wish you the best. :)

Date: 2008-04-03 08:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] prosewitch.livejournal.com
Oy, that's a big decision... but I have no doubt that you'll kick ass as a primary-writerly-type person.

Date: 2008-04-03 08:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sora-blue.livejournal.com
Exactly. :)

I went through something sort of similar when I taught in Japan. It became something I didn't want to do any more, and it took a while to understand that it wasn't "quitting" to leave.

Date: 2008-04-03 08:15 pm (UTC)
ckd: (cpu)
From: [personal profile] ckd
It sounds like you have a much better handle on the situation, and realistic plans for going forward, than anyone would have any right to expect after something as sudden as Kyle's employer's shutdown.

Yes, this is because (as you note) you've been thinking about it for quite some time for other reasons, but still...I think it bodes well for finding a situation and location that will suit you both. Should you wind up in the Boston area, there are many places looking for sysadmins; [livejournal.com profile] kniedzw could have several employers to choose from.

Best of luck to you both. If you make Readercon, I'll try to say hello then; if not, I should be able to make the Pandemonium book launch.

Date: 2008-04-03 08:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] unforth.livejournal.com
It sounds like you've given this a lot of thought, and you've reasoned it out. I think there comes a time in our academic careers where we suddenly realize just what we've signed ourselves up for - cause I had a similar one in the early fall - and it all becomes more real. Then it's like, wait, what are my actual goals here? What do I really want? While Dr. Neuenschwander has a certain ring to it, I think Marie has a better - you love it and your successful, you couldn't hope for more. ;)

Good luck in jumping the hoops, and of course to [livejournal.com profile] kniedzw in looking for a job - any chance of you guys joining [livejournal.com profile] sapphohestia and I on the East Coast??

Date: 2008-04-03 08:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] unforth.livejournal.com
Dandelion. Daffodil's don't explode. ;) Or at least, I really hope they don't... ;)

Date: 2008-04-03 08:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
Dude, I got it right the first time I used the metaphor. Leave me alone. <g>

Date: 2008-04-03 08:38 pm (UTC)

Date: 2008-04-03 08:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
I certainly hope so.

Date: 2008-04-03 08:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
Boston and the Bay Area are leading the pack by a mile, as both places have a wide variety of job opportunities and a concentration of people we know.

Date: 2008-04-03 08:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] snickelish.livejournal.com
I'm excited for you - since it sounds like doing both the things you wanted wasn't feasible, I'm glad you're in a situation to be able to pick the one you want the most. Good luck on all those big ventures ahead.
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