Monthly Archive for April, 2009

World Building 101: a Redux

So, here’s the blog post I said I’d write about what happened at my world building workshop. But first I want to set up why I did this workshop and how it became something a little different from what I’d originally assumed it would be.  

I’d been asked to do a presentation ages ago by LSUS’s Write On group, and I’d been like, “Yeah, sure! I’ll figure out a topic later!” I’d thought of doing a big power point with pictures of my agency and my publishing company that I was going to take when I went to NYC in March. The problem with that plan was a) I forgot to take pictures and b) I can’t work power point.

So I was greatly relieved when the estimable Jaye Wells and Mark Henry, two UF authors extraordinaire and fellow Leaguers, invited me to help them wrangle a workshop down in Dallas on World Building. I was like, “Sweet! I can just steal their thunder! Like some ancient Greek demigod!” I do hope they don’t plan on chaining me to a rock where something eats my entrails for eternity. You wouldn’t do that to me, would you, guys? Right?

Anyway, the problem with me stealing their idea was that I didn’t know what World Building was. Again, for those of you who’ve stumbled upon me, I, in my turn, have stumbled upon being a writer. I have written and read all my life, but not in order to become an author of Urban Fantasy. I did it to become an Academic as I enjoy a good mortarboard and am a total masochist.  

So I went to the workshop and learned as much as everybody else did. But the funny, if inevitable thing, I learned was that I had totally world built, I just didn’t know the lingo. As I was researching Tempest Rising, I researched all the things you have to research to world build, and I had tons of pictures saved on my desktop that I could stare at for inspiration. I just didn’t know that  what I was doing had a name.

But it made sense to me to do it, at the time, because I was writing about a shit ton of stuff I hadn’t ever seen or done before. I’m not magic. I’ve never met a shapeshifter. Rockabill doesn’t exist. I’ve never actually seen the Old Sow. So I had to make it up in my head and, I figured, the more visual cues I had to draw on, the better.

So I knew exactly how I’d run an Urban Fantasy workshop on World Building. I’m a good teacher; it’s a concrete concept I can dig into, so no problem. But, except for one student, no one who was going to attend my workshop wanted to write fantasy. And yet, that didn’t bother me at all. Because I realized, as an urban fantasy writer, how much world building must go into more realistic genres of fiction. After all, the thing I had to research longest, and was most worried about getting “right” wasn’t the genies, or the magical powers, or the magical weapons . . . It was Maine. The “real” world. I can tell my reader that vampires are purple with grey eyes and only one arm coming from the center of their chest, and, if I set it up okay, a reader would have to concede that, in the world of my book, vampires are purple, etc. But Maine exists. People live there. Anyone can google it. If I screwed Maine up, I’d be foobarred.

And then I thought about the worlds of other books that are our world, certainly, but that are not. They are the world of their author; the world of their protagonist. I thought of Portnoy’s Complaint, by Philip Roth, one of my all time favorite books. That book is set in our world, and yet it’s utterly Portnoy’s world. I can see it the way he would see it. I can smell the cooking cabbage, see the glistening sheen on the liver draining on the cutting board, see his own sweat glistening on his forehead as he ponders what he’s just done to the family dinner. Similarly, in Roth’s Sabbath’s Theater, Mickey gazes at the carefully laid out gourmet breakfast spread that his well-off hosts have left for him on their kitchen table. It is just a collection of jams and pastries and cereals, and one pre-segmented grapefruit-half wrapped in cellophane, but Mickey sees the poignant, and ultimately fruitless, detritus of a wealthy man’s attempt to gain immortality and peace through Healthy Living. It is just a single image of a breakfast table, but it’s also a still life, a tableau of modernity that slices away the layers of our domestic comforts to give Roth’s reader an indication not only of our own human condition but of Mickey’s condition. We helplessly see what Mickey must helplessly see at all times, all around him: the proof that we must die and that we must live fearing our own death, the condition which Roth calls our human stain.

So we all world build, to some extent. I know that an author like Philip Roth has never, outside of kindergarten, sat with a bunch of magazines and cut them up in order to make a montage. But he’s still world building.  Since he’s a genius, he gets to skip a few steps. But I need all the help I can get, so pass the scissors and glue.

On that note, when I went into the workshop I went armed with a bunch of magazines, some scissors, and the handout you see in the preceding blog post. I introduced the topic, just as I did in the handout, and then I instructed the class to cut out a single image from their magazines that fit with their current project or, if they didn’t have a project, fit with their visual understanding of a favorite book.

Everyone got really into it, and came up with some really great pictures. The student who’s working on a UF idea found a shampoo add with a woman who has flowers for hair. He thought it was a great idea for one of his fairy characters, and we all wholeheartedly agreed. 

Another student is working on a series of short stories about a family’s holiday. She picked out this postcard perfect photo of a beautiful home, covered in snow, that looked like something Thomas Kinkade would paint. When it came time to explain why that image reached out to her, she explained that the matriarch of this family was cold and forbidding and perfect, and that everyone dreaded these family holidays. So I latched onto the eery perfection of the house, with its snow sprinkled all over it in perfect waves as if even Nature was afraid of upsetting the woman who lived there. And my student mentioned these things, but she also brought up the lights in the windows, explaining how they represented, for her, how there was warmth and love at the center of this family, despite all the surface dysfunction. It was a wonderfully symbolic little tableau of a tense, but ultimately loving, family dynamic.

In a final example, another student of mine is working on a fictionalized memoir of her own family. Rooted in the deep south, the work will span pre- and post-Civil War themes. This student latched onto an image from a Marks and Spencer’s add, which had a really beautiful woman in a beautiful long dress sitting in a sumptuous boudoir. My student talked about how the dress, especially all the detail at the bottom of the very fancy skirt, reminded her of the antebellum South. I used this as a great example of how you can take an expected image – the finery of the antebellum Southern Belle – and make it unexpected, and more symbolic. A skirt like that would have gotten dirty very quickly, one would imagine, around the sweeping expanse of its hem. The intricate beading would have brought the spectator’s gaze downward, over all that intricate beauty, to a thin crust of dirt along the very bottom hem. Symbolically, this dirt would represent what bought such finery (slave labor), but also what the entire Belle system was based upon. After all, imagine being a woman who was honored and lauded as an icon of femininity to be preserved and cherished (at least in popular song), but whose own father and her own husband could, quite possibly, have fathered dozens of bastards by raping slaves? Such beautiful, pampered ladies could have been sired by and married to a rapist, and the physical proof of both their adultery and their barbarism would be embodied in children, slave children, who one has the right to sell at auction. The dresses may have been wicked pretty, and the boudoirs wicked sumptuous, but you don’t gotta be William Faulkner to see that things were seriously rotten at the core of Plantation society. So I used her picture as an example of how you can riff on an image in an unexpected way. Of all the possible images to discuss in the photo, she focused on the skirt, which I thought was interesting. And so I asked, “Why is she focusing on that?” Asking yourself such questions might lead you to your next riff.

All in all it was a great workshop, and I know that I learned a lot, even if nobody else did. I realized how important world building is for everyone, not just sci fi/fantasy writers, and how visual images can help so much with one’s writing, especially with sensory language. People struggle with sensory language, but it’s so much easier if you have something in front of you that you can imagine tasting/touching/smelling. Something of which you can see the colors, and how they swirl together or offset one another or clash.

So world building is, as Martha would say, a good thing! 

Thanks!

World Building 101

So, I ran a little workshop at my University on Wednesday about World Building.  I’m going to blog about that for my next few posts.  Firstly, I’m going to put up the handout I made for my students.  Then I’ll blog a reaction piece that talks about what happened/what I learned from doing the workshop.  I think it went really well, not least for me, as I’m still sorting out what I “do” when I write and learning how to articulate that in a classroom setting.  Anyway, here’s the handout!

WORLD BUILDING 101

What is World Building?

World building is a term coined in science-fiction writer’s workshops in the 1970’s. In its original sense, world building refers to the act of creating an entirely new (either futuristic or fantastical) world. Such worlds must be coherent, and the writer must articulate every nuance of his or her world, including history, geography, physical and natural laws, culture, society, religion, etc.

That said, every writer world builds. As an urban fantasy writer, I take our world and I give it a little supernatural twist. But even writers who write “realistic” fiction world build. After all, each individual has his or her own unique perspective on life. If I attended a party with a goth, a cheerleader, and a hipster, they would all describe that scene to me from their own particular perspective. 

Therefore, the first thing to focus on is what your world looks like.  In order to do so, I’d like you each to take five minutes looking through magazines to find a picture that, for whatever reason, represents an aspect of your world. If you’re working on a project, use that. If you’ve never even thought of writing a novel, let alone have an idea of what your world would look like, think of your favorite book and imagine you’re directing the movie of that book.

*** Remember, this is JUST AN EXERCISE. Don’t go crazy looking for the perfect picture.

Now take a moment to figure out why that image spoke to you. What are you focusing on? You’ll discover that discussing what you highlight in the photo will be very different from what other people would have focused on. Now try to latch onto an aspect of that photo that you can riff on, or twist, or use as a symbol.

Things you want “embodied” in your novel:

What is the tone of your book?

What is the twist of your book?

What is the nature of your protagonist/antagonist?

Where do they live?

How do they dress?

What might the soundtrack to your world be?

What do you HAVE to have in your book?

I find that getting the tone is the most important thing in building my world. Then I build upward, looking for images that inspire me. Because I write urban fantasy, half of my world (our half) is already built, but I have to establish Jane’s (my protag’s) perspective on that world. Then I have to make-up the second half (the supernatural). And figure out how these two synch.

If you’re NOT writing sc-fi/fantasy, you still want to establish what your book “looks” like.  

Then you build a board, like a storyboard, that has images that inspire you. You can refer back to these images as you write, giving yourself something tangible to focus on and describe. Think of it like painting a still life, but with words. 

Things to include on your board:

Models who look like your characters

Outfits they might wear

Things they may own: cars, weapons, clothes, etc.

Houses/buildings that inspire you

Art that inspires you

Furniture

Pull these images as you come across them. You don’t have to sit down and search, necessarily, but as you find images you can add them to a pile or add them to a board. You never know when you’ll use them. Then paste them together on story boards or if you use your computer, as I tend to, put them in files together. Some people organize my book, by character, by chapter, by scene, by setting . . . do whatever works for you.

Establish the look of your world goes a long way to establishing everything else. If you are a sci-fi/fantasy/paranormal romance/historical romance/etc. writer, you’ll have to do a lot more AFTER this initial step to really define your world. A lot of work goes into such development, and you want to make sure you do it BEFORE you start writing.

If you are writing more “realistic” (yes, I’m THAT po-mo that all traces of the “real” go in quotation marks), than these visual cue boards may be all you need to make before you start writing. But you’ll be surprised at how much they can help you ground your world. Sensory language, an integral part of writing that many writers struggle with, comes very easily if you have an image in front of you waiting to be described. You can imagine stroking your hands over it, smelling it, wearing it, bumping your head against it, and then you can describe how these things would feel/taste/smell, etc. 

In other words, these boards make you remember that, no matter what kind of writer you are, the world surrounding your characters matters. It’s easy to get wrapped up in the thoughts and actions of our characters so that we forget they’re supposed to be “real,” doing “real” things in a “real” world. That’s when we lose our anchors and, therefore, lose our readers.

Over at the League . . .

I need help naming our new belly dancing troupe!

There’s also some info on an upcoming (free!) workshop I’m running at LSU in Shreveport, this Wed. Come on down if you’re in the area!

Odds and Ends . . .

First of all, I’d like to say congratulations to Wolfgang Hinck, who won the whole shebang in the Prof. of the Year.  I’m really chuffed for him and jealous of his heavy, heavy award.  It was, quite honestly, the heaviest award I’ve ever had to muscle.  Congrats, Wolfgang!

After the awards, I was speaking to another first-year colleague who was also nominated, and we both felt so honored to have been in the top 20 this, our first, year at LSUS.  But it was strange, at the same time, because people kept coming up to congratulate us and talk to us about how, as new professors, we’re the fresh blood the school needs, etc.  Which is such a dangerous compliment, if you think about it.  After all, the whole nature of being new is that you get old very quickly.  This was my very first year teaching as a “real” prof, and I’ll never get it back.  I’ll never by really new again.  And I will be a boring old professor in her second year, next year.  So the trick, I’ve come to realize, is not to be satisfied with being new and shiny.  The trick is to maintain my enthusiasm for teaching and maintain my interest in my students.

But I also realized how quickly this term is ending (only two weeks left!) which means Summer is Afoot, and mama don’t have to teach no summer school.

Can I tell you how excited I am for my summer vacay?  First of all, I get to be a Real Writer again, which is good because I’m apparently not very good at balancing my two identities.  

Secondly, I’ve got a friend coming in from London.  I’m picking her up in Dallas, where we have been invited for dinner and Rock Band with the Rockingest Rockstar EVAH, Dakota Cassidy.  and then we’re going to NOLA after hanging here in Shreveport, a bit.  Then we’re driving to Chicago, via Graceland, where we’ll hang with my peeps.  And then, NYC, baby.  I’ve gotta wedge in a trip to Boston, at some point, to see my dear friends and my surrogate family.  And I also really want to go to Seattle, as my good friends are spending the summer there and it’s Very Tempting to visit.  Oh, and I really want to go to Maine.  And . . . . . . . .

Traveling, apparently, is What I Do.  I roam, cause I want to.  What are you doing this summer?

Thanks, LSUSers!

So, I just found out last night that I’m a finalist for LSUS’s 2009 Professor of the Year award.   It’s an incredible honor, and I am very humbled.  Basically, students had to go out of their way to vote for their favorite professor and enough voted for me that I made the top 20. 

I’m shocked, to be honest.  Not least because it’s my first year here, and I don’t have any massive lecture courses or anything like that.  I didn’t even know the award existed until a week ago, when a student told me that she’d voted for me.

Anway, I want to thank all the students who voted for me and all of my students, in general.  You lot challenge me constantly and definitely keep me on my toes.

Some of my friends and former colleagues in the teaching biz have asked me, “What’s your secret?”   Ha!  I wish I knew.  Because when I review my teaching for any given day, I mostly focus on every time I nearly swore (constant!) and every time I lost my pen in my hair.  I have a surprising amount of hair, and it eats pens. 

So I don’t know what I do, to be honest.  I try to treat my students with respect, which I think means having high standards for them.  I try to reward the students who work, and I have no problem failing the students who don’t.  I try to make my expectations as clear as possible and to make sure that they know my door is always open to them.  And, when it’s not, they can always make an appointment.  I do try to make class “fun,” but not in a way that demeans them or their purpose in going to university.  They’re not here to play games, or do stuff they did in high school.  They’re here to learn and be challenged, and I try to do that in a way that is open, accessible, and doesn’t make academia into some secret society where we all speak jargon and take ourselves too seriously.  Not least because it’s  hard to take yourself seriously when you’re searching through your ponytail for your pen. 

Finally, despite my normally rather curmudgeonly ways, I try to give a little extra to the students who are ambitious and want more out of university.  A lot of people are just here, as they are at any place of higher education, to get a piece of paper that opens up opportunities for better jobs.  But some are here for more than that.  To those students, I try to give as much as I can.  I know how important certain teachers and professors were in my own development, and if I can be half the mentor to my students as my really great professers were to me, I’ll die a happy lady.

So thank you so much, to all of my students.  Being a finalist for this award means more to me that I could ever have imagined.

On Narcissism and Protagonists

So I’m doing a shit ton of interview questions for Falcata Times, some of which they’ll use in their magazine  and all of which will go up as a FAQ section of this website, eventually.  (I’m halfway through, Gareth, I swear!)  

Falcata Times asked a lot of questions that other people have asked in other forums, or to this blog site when I was looking for questions for the back of Tempest Rising.  One of the most common questions I’ve seen is “Are you like your protagonist?”

I love answering this question.  The short answer is, “No.”  I’m not like Jane at all.  She’s way braver, way nicer, way more confident, in some ways, than I am.  We have some similarities, but any good traits are exacerbated in her and she doesn’t have my bite or my ambition.  I’ve also given her my sense of humor and my english nerdiness, but that’s about it.

So it’s an easy question to answer, in some ways, but there’s more to it than that.  Because I consider my books to be more character driven than is normal for UF.  I mean, there are clear plotlines, and they’re action packed and very UF friendly.  But, like Charlaine Harris’s books, the core of my writing is my characters, and especially my protagonist.  In theory, I think that some really plot-driven UF books could be written with an entirely different protagonist than what’s on offer, and yet the bulk of such books would be the same.  This isn’t a criticism, mind you.  I love the detail of the world-building that are in such books, and I love an action driven, ambitiously plotted read.  But my book isn’t like that.  You couldn’t have Tempest Rising without Jane, in the same way you couldn’t have The Southern Vampire Mysteries without Sookie.  Despite the fact that Alan Ball seems to be doing his best to cut her out.  But that’s neither here nor there.

Anyway, my point is that Jane is the hook of the book.  So when people ask me, “Is she you?”, that question is more loaded than I, at first, realized.  Because Jane IS my book.  And she was so clear to me from the beginning.  I wrote her story, not mine.  And the other series I’m developing has the same sort of tension to it.  My new protagonist is the polar opposite of Jane, in many way, and yet they have some striking similarities.  Especially their capacity for friendship; their loyalty; their self-awareness.  And these are my values; the values that mean most to me and that I esteem above all others.  So maybe both Jane and my new gal are dream versions of me, without all the baggage and neuroses that I cart around like a valet.  This makes them easy to write, in some ways, because I just think in terms of what I should do, or what I would like to do, in a given situation, and then I have them do it.  

So the real challenge, I think, would be to write a character based on my faults, on what I’m ashamed of about myself.  And I know this.  I’ve been aware of this for a while.  My real challenge would be to write a character who is weak where I am weak, rather than strong where I am strong(ish).  

I’ve been mulling over that character for awhile.  I knew one thing about her: she’d be entirely human.  There’d be no secret revelation giving her great powers, or anything.  She’d be human and utterly vulnerable.  She’d also be a bit of a shit.  But it would make sense why she was a bit of a shit.  And she would have some really good traits, to make up for the shitty ones.  

Another hard sell, and keep in mind that I was selling to myself, was that I wanted her shitty traits to be rather non-dramatic.  No nymphomania, no drug addiction, no penchant for pushing over old ladies or toddlers.  She’d just be a bit of a shit in the way that most of us are, if we’re honest, a bit of a shit.

So, basically, I wanted to create a character who was average: an average human who was averagely shitty.  But who would want to read that?  That character would have to be really cohesive for her to work.  And I couldn’t see her.

Then I was on a massage table in Calistoga, a treat  from my oldest and dearest friend, Jana.  I hadn’t actually relaxed since I started Tempest Rising a year ago, I don’t think, until that moment.  And my new character came to me in a flash.  I saw her, standing in front of me, and I knew everything about her.  And she’s awesome.  I love her, warts and all.  Some of them are my warts, some of them are made up warts, and all of the warts have a backstory that is completely fictional.  But she’s AWESOME.

So she’s number 3 on the list of people to write, but she’s higher than that in my estimation.  I’m so excited to breathe life into her, and I can’t wait for the summer break.  I am going to write like I’ve never written before.  I gotta get this stuff out, before I burst.  

Because my protagonists, in the end, aren’t me.  They aren’t even figments of me.  They’re fully formed women nestled under my skin, and they want out.  They want to be born.  I understand Luigi Pirandello, when he says of his Six Characters, “Born alive, they wished to live.”  My girls want to live, too.  So I gotta git to steppin’.

Summer break can’t get here soon enough . . .

What I Learned From Copyediting

So I just finished reviewing my copyedits from Orbit.  They were great.  Whoever did the copyedits was super thorough, which I really, really appreciate.  I did learn a few things for next time, however.  And I will share them with you, mostly because if I write them anywhere else, I will lose them.  I lose everything for I am a bit batty.

Anyway, here is what I learned from copyediting:

1) I am 30, and in my day (which in MLA years makes me about 400), one was supposed to put two spaces after a period (or full stop for my British readers).  Now it’s only one.  I should have known that.

2) I’m still not certain what to do with ellipses but they seem to involve four, suddenly, and to be tightly spaced.  I’ll have to watch and see what they do with them in the final copy.

3) In future, I need to make a firm decision about what to capitalize and what not to capitalize and be more careful about consistency.  I had capitalized all of my supernatural names, which was dumb, so I made some lower case but not all and . . . disaster ensued.  

4) Never, ever, quote song lyrics.  This was my big gaff.  In academia, we have a very generous fair use policy.  You can quote pretty much anything, at great length, as long as you attribute it properly.  But apparently the music industry sues the pants off anyone who even breathes in a way that might sound at all like an actual lyric.  So I was busy rewriting those scenes, and will never quote lyrics again.  

5) I have also learned I have to learn the Chicago Style Guide.  Dagnabbit.

This is what I learned reviewing my copyedits.  Thanks!

Smolder: Live at the Radisson

Smolder, live at the Radisson

Lead Guitarist: Dakota Cassidy
Bass: Mary Lois White
Drums: Jaye Wells:
Vocal stylings: Nicole Peeler

This is what we get up to when we’re unsupervised.

Over at the League . . .

I have some questions about the swag I need your help with!

There may also be some video footage of us rockbanding.  And me raping Sabotage.  Yes, that’s my voice.  Aren’t you excited for me to start public readings?  Bring your earplugs.

Oh, the fun!

So I went to Dreamin’ in Dallas, hosted by DARA, to be Jaye Wells’ and Mark Henry’s lackey over the weekend.  I also hung out with Dakota Cassidy and Michelle Bardsley, both of whom rocked my casbah.  Seriously.  I would have Dakota’s babies and then give them to Michelle to raise, because she seems more nurturing than me.  Loved everyone.  Loved them.  And hanging out?

It was so.  Much.  Fun.

Can I just say how nice everyone has been to me?  I totally came out of the woodwork.  No one knows me; no one has read my book.  I could totally suck.  Indeed, I may suck.  Galleys are out for author blurbs, and they could be returned saying, “This sucks.  Thanks.”  

And yet everyone is so nice!  I feel like I’ve been pulled into some admittedly rather crazy family.  But I am used to the crazy, crazy family so I feel even more at home!

Let me try to recap what we discussed:

We talked about fending off the temptation to take oneself too seriously.

We made pacts to beat the crap out of each other if we did, indeed, begin to take ourselves too seriously.

We talked about torturing cover models at romance conventions.

We talked about torturing stormtroopers at sci-fi/fantasy coventions.

Everyone gave me tons of great advice for things I should do to pimp my book.

We discussed the swag (I need some advice on this, people.  A league post will be forthcoming).

We discussed were-chihuahuas and their peen (it was sooooo wrong).

We discussed whether were-cat creatures had barbed peen, and whether they’d get “locked up.”

We discussed many other things.

And then we Rock Banded.  

I made a complete tit out of myself, as usual, and there is video.  Mark, bless him, has promised to distribute it.  I am doing some sort of flailing version of an epileptic T-Rex.  And I mean the dinosaur, not the glam rocker.  

So that was my weekend.  There are photos on my facebook, for those who are interested.   It was such a fun weekend, guys, and thank you so much for letting me tag along and for welcoming my friend and I with such open arms!  And for the good, old-fashioned were-peen humor!