NaNoFeed: another day with no words but a fair bit of gratitude

I didn’t write yesterday because the day job ran too late, and today it’s the day before Thanksgiving, so it won’t be until evening that I will have time to write.  (I’m writing this on lunch break at the day job.)

On the other hand, comparing notes with my colleagues at NaNo and elsewhere, I have the following points of gratitude:

  • My partner and I don’t feel the obligation to do the usual Thanksgiving (no giant turkey, no overeating, no football or shopping).
  • I have the time off, unlike the people who have to work retail. (And that’s a whole other essay on the current state of the culture.)
  • I may not be rich, but I’m not poor either. My day job doesn’t eat my soul, and I learn new and interesting things there.
  • For the first time in decades, I have real writing colleagues both locally and globally.
  • I’m doing the things I want to do: writing, publishing, art.
  • I’m a very lucky person.
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NaNoFeed: Absolutely no inspiration (except for the Muse of Research)

This NaNo novel has felt like a term paper; I’ve been keeping my eye on the clock, reviewing my research materials, and hacking the work out in chunks. Such success as I have had has depended upon keeping pace at (average) 1,667 words a day, with the definite understanding that I will fall behind from time to time.

At last night’s Open Book write-in, very much less populated (maybe three or four of us?) than the ones two weeks ago when it was hard to find a place to sit, I scored 3,000 words or so, with a whole lot of help from my good buddy Mreauow. She proposed a word-race. (Ready-set-go and whoever reaches 500 words first raises their hand). That set the pace for the rest of the night.

The key with a word-race is that you have to let go of any notions of the perfect word. That’s really important, given that I’m working the same turf as good ol’ Bill the Bard, not to mention Horace, Plutarch, and sundry Dead White Guy worthies.

I think the thing that’s kept me going is research. This NaNo pep talk by Scott Westerfeld (one of my steampunk/neo-pulp inspirations with his Leviathan series) has another take on the Muse of Research. If in doubt, he writes, look up details from the complex glory of the Real World to make your characters, setting, and plot less generic. My chief muse-between-hardcovers for this project has been the wonderful Cleopatra biography by Joyce Tylesley, which looks at Cleopatra and the Ptolemaic dynasty through the lens of Egyptology. This morning I re-read the account of Cleopatra’s summit with Mark Antony, which analyzes the Isis iconography used in the design of her costume, concluding that she came to the summit not as a mortal queen but as an incarnate goddess. At the time of this meeting, Antony recently had been received by the priestesses of the temple at Ephesus in his character as the avatar of Dionysus, so she was both taking a leaf from his book and raising the stakes with an implicit dynastic offer.

So I’m going to write this famous meeting, one of the most-painted, most-performed, altogether most-celebrated episodes from Cleopatra’s career–from backstage. Cleopatra was most certainly one of the great impresario-director-performers of all time, so the highest drama in this scene from her POV lies in the preparations and the raising of the curtain.

And now, in spite of no preparation whatsoever and what feels like a glacial writing pace, I am inspired.

A brief note: remember the classic description of the ship in which she arrived? Purple silk sails. Which implies–trade with China, at that time the exclusive producer of silk. I started reading up on this, and yes, Alexandria is a transshipment point for silk and other East-Asian goods, which will excite unfavorable comment from Roman moralists some years hence.

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NaNoFeed: And now, for the technical naughty bits (Excerpt!)

The viewpoint character of Cleopatra’s Ironclads is not your standard Cleopatra, and one sure sign of that is the lack of Naughty Bits as traditionally construed. To make up for that, there are geektastic scenes of engineering, in which Cleopatra’s design team takes Murphy’s Law (not sure whose name it bore in her day) as a design principle.

And yes, there are kinks to be worked out in my understanding, but this is NaNo-fun. And it’s NaNo-raw, so be warned.

So without further ado, here’s the prototype. Let me entice you with the following: steam-powered clockwork fire-ships, and explosions. We’re watching a demonstration with scale models in the atrium pool of a disused palace in the Royal Quarter.

Continue reading

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NaNoFeed: Greek fire, crankshafts, and a grocery list

After the tour, I’m 1300 words short of being caught up. I am feeling much better about NaNo and life after yesterday’s Minneapolis Central Library write-in, the Very Highly Moderated Write-in For People Who Want to Get Stuff Written, following the five-hour write-in at Wilde Roast.

And now we have the breakthrough: yes, folks, Greek fire and crankshafts.

One of the conflicts in this story is the opposition of techne (craftsmanship) and poiesis (art) which is so predominant in Greek philosophy and which has bedeviled Western science down to the present day. Cleopatra, as a principal investigator whose world-view bridges cultures (she is the first Egyptian-speaking monarch of the Ptolemy line) is uniquely positioned to bring together different takes on this; there’s also her position as sacred impresario (stage-managing her own performance as avatar of Isis, both in the ordinary conduct of public life in Alexandria and greater Egypt, as well as the attested ‘summit of gods’ with Antony at Tarsus).

In between times yesterday, I wrote a grocery list of research yet to be done:

  • Order of battle at Actium, and how the outcome might be changed
  • More about Alexandrian steam technology, automata, Archimedean screw, as well as the technical (metallurgical) requirements for building screw propellers and other components of ‘modern’ steamships
  • Egyptian and greater African world-view about craft, diplomatic relations between Egypt and other kingdoms in North Africa, East Africa; any trans-Saharan contact at this time?
  • Timeline for the Silk Road, and links between Alexandria and points east
  • Full political briefing on both Rome and Egypt and their alliances and emnities in the Mediterranean Basin and elsewhere.

This story is only a sketch. The paradox is to write with confidence as if I knew what I were doing, and to be willing at the same time to revise the result extensively in the face of subsequent research.

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Six Sentence Sunday, 18 November 2012 (Cleopatra’s Ironclads)

Caesar had had his conference with Sosigenes the astronomer, and made notes on the reform of the calendar, which would be undertaken on his return to Rome. 

She had a project of her own to undertake, as well. Timaeus was sent for, and the author of the treatise on automata, and the guilds of artificers who might have to do with this, and the shipwrights. They stared at each other across the table, until she had the wine and dainties brought in. 

And then they drank, and argued fiercely, with the queen’s own scribe to take notes, and the queen herself to interject a thought or question from time to time, and Timaeus after the fact to tell her he wasn’t sure it would be a symposium or a brawl.

“Some of both, I would imagine,” she said.

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NaNoFeed: writing in solidarity with the 28-hour writing tour (on my couch)

I need a T-shirt that says I survived the Ides of March.

I wrote 5000 words tonight, between 6:25pm and 10:45pm (with breaks in between). Yay me, and why can’t I be this productive on other nights?

Because I’m crazy-busy with other things. As soon as NaNo is over, we’re going to start doing some more Annie Brown previews, this time including the character designs!

Meanwhile my pals are doing the overnight portion of the tour and I am writing (a teeny bit) in solidarity on the couch.

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NaNoFeed: Live from the 28-hour writing tour (The eve of the Ides of March)

Cleopatra had a rough night on 14 March 44 BC, like everyone else in Rome. (Special thanks to Bill Shakespeare for the weather report.)

During the night the wind rose, and she heard it howling in the wee hours, whistling as it found all the chinks in the villa; Charmian rose to put the shutters to, and to bring in more covers, and to light the brazier a second time. Nothing availed against the chill and the rumble of thunder; on such nights one was reminded of the dominion of the gods, no less than in high summer when the great river placidly overflowed its banks to deliver the fertile soil of the upriver lands to the inestimable benefit of Egypt.

The dominion of the gods.

A lightning strike, not far away.

The rule of chance.

Answering thunder, that rattled the crockery. She rolled herself in the covers, thinking of her brother, who slept in the same palace. No, she had reliable guards—of that she was sure, for they were Caesar’s men among them—and she had spies as reliable, and still and yet there was chance.

On the other hand, all of that would play out whether or not she slept, and if she could sleep in the bottom of a rowboat on her way through her enemy’s blockade, then she could sleep on a stormy night, under the roof of her ally and true consort.

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NaNoFeed: live from the 28-hour writing tour (murder most foul)

I have two murders to write tonight. One is historically attested (the assassination of Julius Caesar on the Ides of March 44 BC) in all of its journalistic particulars (who-what-when-why-where-and-how). The other may have been death from natural causes, though not inconvenient politically for the one who’s suspected in giving nature a little nudge. That’s the death, in August 44 BC, of Cleopatra’s second brother-consort, Ptolemy XIV, at age fifteen.

I actually like the notion, suggested by some historians, that he had been plotting with the exiled sister Arsinoe to overthrow Cleopatra, call Arsinoe back from her exile in Ephesus, and rule together. Once Cleopatra knew this to be the case, she would have defaulted to the political option of the Ptolemaic dynasty for several centuries before her: sibling assassination. (As opposed to parent-child assassination–in either direction–or husband-wife assassination–ditto.)

Writing POV someone who’s about to whack her brother, or arrange same in cold blood, is really interesting, shall we say. I haven’t written a protagonist with this much political power before.

With power comes responsibility (that’s the cliche version) —

and with power comes (tautologically) the power to get things done, and one face of that is political murder. It’s simple, elegant, and at the top of the social structure one is beyond the law because above it.

Not that I approve, mind you, but it’s making the temptation understandable.

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NaNoFeed: Live from the 28-hour writing tour

This year is different. This year is really different. I’m obsessing over three or four things at once (some of which will be unveiled in December), including visual character designs for Annie Brown and the Superhero Blues. I’ll be revising that novel, and working on the script for the graphic novel. Release date for Annie Brown is currently projected for some time in early December. A Thanksgiving-weekend release date would have been nice, but not ultimately practical given the number of projects under consideration.

Meanwhile, I’m sitting at a table at the Wilde Roast Cafe in Minneapolis, Minnesota, waiting for the rest of the Northern Route cohort to show up. I’ve ordered a decaf, because my body’s already on night shift, and I’m probably going to be working through the night on this and other projects. Last night I went to bed at five o’clock in the morning, so I’m operating in another time zone already–jet lag without the inconvenience of travel.

Or the Twilight Zone, more likely.

I’m about to queue up the music and start the first writing bout of the day, having spent most of it considering the physical realization of some of my Imaginary People. The cover design for Annie Brown doesn’t require the whole crew, but the graphic novel will.

And that being said, I’m off to make some words, in the Original Spirit of the Tour — which is to say, coming from behind to pull off amazing wordcount feats.

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NaNoFeed: a pause in the dark of the year

Special thanks to Becca Patterson, whose conversation about definitions of success sparked this blog entry.

***

This is my year of NaNo-failure (which is to say, not brilliant over-achievement). Yesterday and today I skipped writing, and now I’m behind on word count. Weirdly enough, I’m not worried.

Have you ever read Bill Holm’s book The Music of Failure?

It utterly changed the way I think about success and failure, some time back in 1991 or so. I read an excerpt in the now-defunct Hungry Mind Review.

Holm writes about his Icelandic immigrant elders, who were poor in worldly terms but rich in books and music. He talks about the whole stance of the Icelandic sagas toward failure–they absolutely dwell on it, unwrap a long tale of national self-destruction. What he thought American literature ought to pay more attention to, because we’re on the highroad to destruction and haven’t the wit to know it.

He’s one of many writers who saved my life. I read it at just the right time, in one of the deepest dark- nights-of-the-soul I’ve ever lived through, during the first Gulf War and the hideous denouement of my graduate career so-called. I’d been sucked into one definition of success and relearned at great cost what I had known about myself at twelve: that I was a born rebel and had never fit in at school, least of all with the other A-plus students. (When people started saying “think outside the box,” I had no idea what box they were talking about. Even as a kindergartener, not only didn’t I color inside the lines, I drew new lines.)

I had failed at the calling that wasn’t mine. (Yes, there were other things going on, including an institution stacked against me, but at bottom this was the essence of the matter.)

When we find our right calling–as writers or as citizens–we have enormous power. All of us together are the keepers of culture and the makers of history. We set up karma, unknowing; everything we do ripples outward, radio broadcasts that will be received in distant solar systems, centuries after we’re gone. People long dead have saved my life, and changed it. And I haven’t had to wait centuries to see the effects of my own work; in present tense, young people I have mentored are doing amazing things: as writers, as students, as professionals, as citizens.

Recently, I’ve been starting each of my writing sessions by playing the Internationale.
I played it for my nephew. He didn’t recognize it, but said, “Classical, right? Church music.” More right than he knew. I belong to the first church of it doesn’t have to be like this.

And I observe my penitential and meditative season in November. The Black Month, dark and magical, when we dream awake as the year darkens toward solstice. The nights grow longer, and in daylight, a grey unforgiving light plays on the bones of things. It’s just right for storytelling. Plot is bones and karma, and novelists are the technicians of cause and effect.

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