An interesting thing has occurred for me. Well, a couple of
interesting things.
I've heard back from 2 of my beta readers about Tempest Makers. Some of the observations
they've made have me thinking, "Huh. I hadn't thought of that."
Which, one, is part of the point of having beta readers, and, two, helps me
understand the hundreds of plays and stories discussed in classrooms where the
author had a certain set of ideas in mind and the reader "found" a
few more, new ideas.
I hadn't really thought of Tempest Makers as being "subtle." I just write what comes
to my head and sort it all out until it makes sense. Maybe I'm not adding
enough emotional meaning to get worked up over it, or maybe I'm tired of
freaking out over writing and so I'm effortlessly channeling any anxiety into
writing. <shrugs> I dunno.
As I got over the hump of putting Tempest Makers out into the light, more ideas keep knocking at my consciousness,
as if they are the people who come to your house to deliver your phone book. You
open your door and there sits a phone book [esoteric trivia about ancient customs
deleted].
This morning, I woke up to an idea that wasn't words but
imagines, and for the most part continues to be images. I run them back through
my memory to make sure I remember enough to jot them down in my notebook or
draw a picture. When my brain is happy the images and pictures are enough, the
mute button is switched off and I can hear some dialog; some of it "coherent,"
some of it not, yet.
It reminds me of an essay Neil Gaiman wrote about being
asked where he gets his ideas. The essay is in Writers Workshop of Science Fiction & Fantasy.
He says, "'I make them up,' I tell [people who ask].
'Out of my head.'" He explains, "I don't know myself where the ideas
come from, what makes them come, or whether one day they'll stop."
And you know, I think that makes absolute sense. I think if
you have a spark of an idea, for me, it is the idea of Justice, and with a little
bit of "glue and construction paper," and not stress over creating
"something", your brain will have the space and power to come up with
some pretty creative stuff.
I think the moral of this story is don't rush it. Have patience.
A phone book will show up on your doorstep soon enough.
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