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 settling back into a work groove this week, right in time for a two week break from uni teaching where I can swing the bulk of my focus around to my own work. There is some marking and thesis writing on the docket, but the big project du jour is either a novella or short novel about boxing, space truckers, and too many hours reading Howard’s Sailor Steve Costigan stories while also watching The Expanse.

Admittedly, I had a similar draft to this underway at the start of the year, but it kept iterating outward to become something else. I’ve stripped this one back to its bare bones, and i think I’ve finally got a handle on the character which allows me to keep the focus on them.

What’s inspiring me this week?

I’m in the middle of a lot of really inspiring books, but I’m going to repeat a book that I’ve recommended very recently: Damon Suede’s Verbalize. While I watched some great movies this week, and read some good fiction, I started a deep read of Suede’s work right as I started planning the novella I kicked off on Monday and started building a development process using the exercises he lays out.

And while his core advice–figure out what characters do, rather than who they are–seems like such a simple thing, the impact it’s made on my writing process is immense. Characters who have previously seemed flat and elusive suddenly have a through-line to their narrative that makes them comprehensible; scenes are built around conflicting tactics between two characters, and immediately become easier to write because the focus is on the consequences of those two approaches coming up against each other.

Even the major beats of the three-act structure become easier to lay down, because they’re often about showing how a particular strategic approach fails or succeeds.

Having put together a system, I’m now running every problematic, “I don’t know how to write this” draft I’ve got through it, seeing if it starts to spark something that makes me eager to write and finish it.

What action do I need to take?

I’ve got to finish uploading the Short Fiction Lab stories to a bunch of stores that aren’t Amazon this week, and I’d like to start the redraft of the current short story once I get all the marking off my plate later in the week.  Both are things that are likely to slip my mind by Thursday, when I’m expecting my schedule to open up, so I’m logging them here to help me remember.

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 started writing again last week, doing my best to get at least a paragraph written every day on a novella project and a short story project.

This week I’m stacking a little more on: a redraft of the short story that I’ve got sitting there, waiting for me to flesh out its verbs and voices; tightening up the first quarter of the story draft I’ve just written; progressing the novella to the end of the first act in its current draft; writing an opening sequence for a thesis chapter.

The bigger challenge is actually writing myself a plan for doing all that and sticking to it. 

What’s inspiring me this week?

The second season of The Thrilling Adventures of Sabrina arrived on Netflix this week, and I remain utterly enthralled by the implications of this series and the changing state of TV narrative. 

It remains, as the first season did, a fascinating study in what can happen when you disconnect advertising revenue from the creative process–you cannot tell me that a high-quality drama about the inner workings of a Satanic church would have survived in an environment where revenue was driven by advertising dollars. 

And the characters remain outstanding, both in terms of casting and the arcs they’re pulling everyone through.

What action do I need to take?

So many of these at the moment, because Dad’s death and my sister’s illness through March, and the little coda of getting a cold last week, means that I feel like I’m behind on everything right now. However, since I can only fire up on thing at a time, I really need to look at the design of this site. I had a crash way back at the start of March, and the design for the site reverted to the look I was using back in 2010. I need to set aside a little time to rebuild, and freshen things up around the .com.

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’ve got to write two or three novellas for my PhD between March and May, and the coming week will be spent locking down a lot of the early brainstorming–I’m averaging about three pages a day of notes and snippets of conversation, getting a feel for the characters and the situations I want to put them into, and I’ll be carrying that through to the ned of the month when the writing begins.

The big challenge for these is figuring out how to do something surprising or new with the genre–I’ve got the nominal details locked down for the first novella on the list (Working Title: Bug Hunt), but I’m still figuring out how to make it work in the prose itself.

The other big projects for the week is the rewrite of my ghost story, which which needs a few hours of dedicated focus, and going through the mid-canditature review for my thesis on Friday.

What’s inspiring me this week?

After a month in which I read very little, February has been all about devouring books as fast as possible and I’m incredibly spoiled for choice here: do I talk about the sublime lines, near-perfect sentences and paragraphs that Angela Carter rolls out in Heroes and Villains, even though I disliked the bulk of the novel? The big boosts to both practice and general well-being after reading Cal Newport’s Digital Minimalism? Have my cake and eat it too through the expedient of sneaking these questions into this section?

Truthfully, the book that consumed me this week was The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison–not just because it’s an incredible novel, but because I’m interested in how the craft ties into the effects it generates. The book is huge–around 500 pages–with a single point of view protagonist guiding every moment, a cast of thousands that all share different names, and a world that involves highly codified social strata and strictures that are rendered in titles distinctly tied to the setting. 

The experience of reading the book is a constant search for context, which makes it rather slow to begin and I’ll admit that I sat with this book partially read for a long, long time due to wading through all the set-up. But that slow set-up also serves a purpose and fits with the protagonists experience, and once the ball starts rolling it was nearly impossible to put the book down.

What action do I need to take?

One of the big innovations of the last week has been taking email apps off my phone and only checking it when I’m seated in front of a PC with enough time to respond to anything i’ve been sent.

That’s a good first step, but I’d like to take it further by setting up a dedicated window of time in which I check email, and setting up a checklist that makes sure I’ve checked all the messaging sources I should be (uni email, various messenger programs), given that I’ve also pulled social media off my phone as well. This means tracking time a for a stretch to figure out how long these reviews normally take, and what messaging services are not time efficient for me.