The Sunday Circle: What Are You Working On This Week?

Sunday Circle Banner

The Sunday Circle is the weekly check-in where I ask the creative-types who follow this blog to weigh in about their goals, inspirations, and challenges for the coming week. The logic behind it can be found here. Want to be involved? It’s easy – just answer three questions in the comments or on your own blog (with a link in the comments here, so that everyone can find them).

After that, throw some thoughts around about other people’s projects, ask questions if you’re so inclined. Be supportive above all.

Then show up again next Sunday when the circle updates next, letting us know how you did on your weekly project and what you’ve got coming down the pipe in the coming week (if you’d like to part of the circle, without subscribing to the rest of the blog, you can sign-up for reminders via email here).

MY CHECK-IN

What am I working on this week?

I’m having one of those weeks where I’m largely following my nose on the writing front, but I suspect the next five days will be spent drafting a new short story (Project Hook) and trying to get my attention back on the thesis after nearly three weeks away from the project. 

What’s inspiring me this week?

I read Shastra Deo’s debut poetry collection, The Agonistearlier this week and immediately started taking notes about things to pay attention too in the work. There’s a precision to the language that really lifts of the page, but it’s the deeper entwining of themes that really carry thing–Deo’s got an interest in the body that’s exacting and anatomical, but her interests are filtered through a pop-cultural obsession that lends the work a real speculative undercurrent that frequently breaks the surface. In another timeline, published by a publisher that wasn’t a university press with literary sensibilities, I could have seen The Agonist making a run at spec fic awards like the Rhysling.

Basically, at it’s best, The Agonist reminded me a lot of one of my favourite short story writers, Caitlin Kiernan. The two writers share a similar interest in rendering the body strange and using language to evoke the uncanny, and I suspect that anyone’s whose a fan of Kiernan will likely dig Deo’s work. 

What action do I need to take?

Getting back into the habit of turning off the internet. As ever, it’s crept back into my daily routine over the last few weeks–right there as I start the day, the first thing I see when I load the computer (because I forgot to shut down the browser before logging off). I’m not necessarily wasting time on it–mostly, I’m clearing email or writing blog posts or doing other secondary-business-tasks–but they are secondary business tasks. I need to remove it from the first half of my day for a stretch, and get my focus back onto writing prose and getting books ready.  

The Sunday Circle: What Are You Working On This Week?

Sunday Circle Banner

The Sunday Circle is the weekly check-in where I ask the creative-types who follow this blog to weigh in about their goals, inspirations, and challenges for the coming week. The logic behind it can be found here. Want to be involved? It’s easy – just answer three questions in the comments or on your own blog (with a link in the comments here, so that everyone can find them).

After that, throw some thoughts around about other people’s projects, ask questions if you’re so inclined. Be supportive above all.

Then show up again next Sunday when the circle updates next, letting us know how you did on your weekly project and what you’ve got coming down the pipe in the coming week (if you’d like to part of the circle, without subscribing to the rest of the blog, you can sign-up for reminders via email here).

MY CHECK-IN

What am I working on this week?

My twin goals for this week are:

  • Writing something on my PhD exegisis every day–I’ve fallen off the wagon with the events of the last two weeks, but this week I get to reaffirm my commitment to the project and get it moving once more.
  • Work on the Exile (Keith Murphy 1) re-release and clear at least three chapters. 

It’s the first time in a while that I haven’t set myself any first draft goals, but it’s going to be a complex week for getting stuff done. There’s a funeral to go to, a packed weekend next weekend, and I’m in the phase where habits get to be reset and re-affirmed rather than being tools to rely upon. 

What’s inspiring me this week?

The biggest bang-for-my back inspiration this week has been Craig Mod’s latest Roden Explorer newsletter, in which he devotes approximately 4,000 words to the idea of publishing, appholes, and dopamine-driven entertainments. It’s the kind of topic that’s deep inside my wheelhouse to start with, but it came loaded with enough links to other resources that have got my brain sparking that it’s a highly inspiration-rich ground zero document.

What action do I need to take?

Less an action I need to take, and more an action I need to maintain: keeping my desk clear. I let a whole lot of clutter rise up in my workspace over the last few months, which culminated in the classic I’ve-spilled-coffee-on-my-laptop moment that tends to arrive when there’s nowhere to put the cup.

This was a prompt to get the desk cleared last week, but it will be ridiculously easy to fall back into the clutter mode, so I’m challenging myself to develop two habits: starting each day with a desk clear, and ending each work session by returning the tools (books referenced, notebooks worked in) back to their default state.

Ideally, I’d like to be hitting next Sunday with the desk in much the same state as it is now–a clean, ready-to-use surface where work can spread across as necessary, ready to adapt when I switch between computers and notebooks in order to get work done. 

The Sunday Circle: What Are You Working On This Week?

Sunday Circle Banner

The Sunday Circle is the weekly check-in where I ask the creative-types who follow this blog to weigh in about their goals, inspirations, and challenges for the coming week. The logic behind it can be found here. Want to be involved? It’s easy – just answer three questions in the comments or on your own blog (with a link in the comments here, so that everyone can find them).

After that, throw some thoughts around about other people’s projects, ask questions if you’re so inclined. Be supportive above all.

Then show up again next Sunday when the circle updates next, letting us know how you did on your weekly project and what you’ve got coming down the pipe in the coming week (if you’d like to part of the circle, without subscribing to the rest of the blog, you can sign-up for reminders via email here).

MY CHECK-IN

What am I working on this week?

I got distracted last week and ended up working on books-that-were-not-scheduled-to-be-worked-on-yet™, so this week I’m making a really specific to-do list. First cab off the rank is nailing the duel-on-the-bridge scene of the short story I’m trying to write, followed by nailing a confrontation-with-an-alien-nobleman-who-holds-life-and-death-in-his hands scene. I’m still working out the rest of the list for the week, but I’m trying to get it as specific as that all the way through, to the order of one scene a day.

What’s inspiring me this week?

I don’t really know how to describe Rose Lerner’s A Little Among Thorns, so I’m just going to quote the tweet that convinced me to read it:

It’s one of those books where my own review would start with “It feels a little like Heyer,” except that it’s not much like Heyer at all beyond a general feeling of incredibly-smart-black-sheep-with-specialised-interests-being-dumb-about-their-feelings and the regency setting.

And that fascinates me, because it brings home that there is something going on in a lot of Heyer novels that I really like and isolates it in a way I can lift and apply to other genres/settings.

What action do I need to take?

I am working without a plan at the moment, and that’s not the best state for me. It makes it too easy to get stuck into work that isn’t essential, and too hard to fix priorities in my mind. Little things slip through the cracks, but they’re little things that have the potential to throw off timelines.

I need to devote a half day or so to rebuilding to-do lists and upcoming commitments, plus establishing the broad areas of focus that govern my writing time and waypoints that keep things on track.