Not *again*.
Aug. 11th, 2010 09:33 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Dear Book:
I hate you.
No, really. We've gotten to that stage of the writing, the stage where I really just want to light you on fire. It happens almost every book (except for the rare ones that just sail straight out of my head -- of which you are SO not one), but this time, I really, really mean it. Why? Because I just figured out that I could solve about 90% of my pacing problems . . . by moving your start date back three months.
This falls into the category of "annoying change" rather than "major seismic upheaval," since most of what I have to do is change the dates on scenes. But that's about 100K worth of scenes I have to re-date
FUCK I just realized that doesn't work.
Because there's a scene that has to happen on a specific date, and that specific date is before what I thought would be the new start date. But there are other events that have to happen on other specific dates, and SON OF A BITCH I HATE YOU.
<beats head into desk>
Never again, people. Never again. I am so very done with this historical fiction thing, where I can't just decide when stuff happens because history says otherwise. I've been doing this for four books, and I will never subject myself to it again*.
I'm sure I'll find a way through this. But it is going to cost a lot of pain and suffering along the way. (It already has.) And right now, I kinda want to light the book on fire.
No love at all,
Your Writer.
*Of course I'm lying. It's like childbirth. In a few years, when I've forgotten the pain, I'll probably decide this is a good idea again. But right now, I mean it.
I hate you.
No, really. We've gotten to that stage of the writing, the stage where I really just want to light you on fire. It happens almost every book (except for the rare ones that just sail straight out of my head -- of which you are SO not one), but this time, I really, really mean it. Why? Because I just figured out that I could solve about 90% of my pacing problems . . . by moving your start date back three months.
This falls into the category of "annoying change" rather than "major seismic upheaval," since most of what I have to do is change the dates on scenes. But that's about 100K worth of scenes I have to re-date
FUCK I just realized that doesn't work.
Because there's a scene that has to happen on a specific date, and that specific date is before what I thought would be the new start date. But there are other events that have to happen on other specific dates, and SON OF A BITCH I HATE YOU.
<beats head into desk>
Never again, people. Never again. I am so very done with this historical fiction thing, where I can't just decide when stuff happens because history says otherwise. I've been doing this for four books, and I will never subject myself to it again*.
I'm sure I'll find a way through this. But it is going to cost a lot of pain and suffering along the way. (It already has.) And right now, I kinda want to light the book on fire.
No love at all,
Your Writer.
*Of course I'm lying. It's like childbirth. In a few years, when I've forgotten the pain, I'll probably decide this is a good idea again. But right now, I mean it.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 04:55 am (UTC)So, yes. I get this. Loads. And paper makes such good kindling....
(Great post, btw.)
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 07:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 11:14 am (UTC)I'm likely to keep writing historical fiction, though, so I'm glad you're suffering with me.
Wait. That might not be the nicest thing to say.
I like your historical fiction, so I'm glad you're miserable?
Um. It's apparently not my morning for nice.
How about 'there there, dear'?
There there.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 07:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 11:58 am (UTC)Does this mean no followup set during the blitz? Or Elizabeth II's coronation? There is so much to be said for the onyx court in the 20th century.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 07:26 pm (UTC)But not right now, kthxbye.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 01:30 pm (UTC)YEAH!
(Just thought you might need a bit of a supporting argument)
Tony
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 07:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 01:39 pm (UTC)It's manageable with the Romans because we don't have that many sources*, but there's a reason my Mediaeval stuff turned into some sort of alternate historical Fantasy - I simply could not make history and story meet. Now there's magic stones, Ker Ys and Cantrer Gwaelod are real, and the names of places and secondary characters based on historical ones have changed, though it's still pretty much 12th century Europe. If Guy Gavriel Kay and Jacqueline Carey can do it, why not I? :)
* For the Varus battle, it's basically Velleius Paterculus (few details, strong pro-Tiberian bias) and Cassius Dio (writing 200 years after the event), for Germanicus' campaigns it's Tacitus (very pro-Germanicus bias) and Cassius Dio, for the Batavian revolt that will feature in the second book it's Tacitus, same for the third (Agricola in Britain).
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 07:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 08:06 pm (UTC)Maybe you can play that trick with your next trilogy. :)
no subject
Date: 2010-08-13 09:43 pm (UTC)I'm currently learning to program so I can create the timeline application I need in order to sort out the mess that is my shared-world novels. I have certain events that take place twice a year. I have things happening at these meetings- everybody who attends is there, things get said. Inbetween, people are travelling around and doing other stuff.
I have three different stories in that world with overlapping characters. They cannot ride five hundred miles in two days. They cannot be in two places at once. They cannot learn, aghast, something that in another bookset two years earlier they've already encountered. A world-moving event in one book needs to shake the world in the others. Etc etc.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-14 12:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-14 08:02 pm (UTC)Though admittedly, the thing that made me start swearing in this post was in the category of "things I did to myself." If I'd made a certain non-historical event happen at a different time of year, I could have shifted the events of this book, no problem.