Speed Bumps in the Road
I’ve been stuck on a story line for Book 5 in my
mystery series, which happens with almost every book I write but it has been stressing me out.
So I did what I have always done, put aside the new
project and went back to yet another
full edit of books 1-4. Mostly just tweaking, making sentences read better,
getting a smoother flow and rhythm with the words.
I’m 46 pages into first book, made several good
tweaks, only found one typo. Most importantly, at the end of the day I’ve felt
like I’ve been productive, which is something I needed.
I know this is neurotic, but when I am stuck on
a story line, I feel like a failure, like I have nothing left to say, I’m
washed up. Old childhood baggage, stuff for a shrink’s chair. Been there and
done that.
The reality is I have known nothing but success
with my writing, both fiction and sports writing. That being said, I hate the
feeling of having done nothing positive during a day at the computer, although
I know very well that the time spent searching for a story line is laying the
ground work for a breakthrough and not wasted.
During all the hours I spend staring at the computer
screen or out my window at the woods just beyond the backyard, my subconscious
is working, ideas I don't yet see are percolating in my brain.
Put a gun to my head and I will admit that I am
totally confident a great story line is on its way to me from the Void. It just
hasn’t arrived yet, but it’s out there, postmarked by the Grand Master of the
Void for Nathan Gottlieb, resident writer, Saugerties, N.Y.
Taking a break worked wonders for my second
book, where I was stuck on my story line roughly half way through the outline
and thought, oh well, this novel is dead. Then when I went back after a break, I
felt refreshed and bingo, ideas came flooding out.
I guess this is the agony and the ecstasy of
writing, at least the phase you have control of. A writer’s life is also
tormented by forces outside your control, such as the debilitating and often humiliating
process of acquiring an agent, which leaves one feeling like a beggar. Then
once you have one, and he/she sends your book out to a publisher, you go through
another long wait hoping your agent’s query brings a request for a full
manuscript to read, which then can take an additional few months of waiting. All
the while you are in a sort of writer’s hell, or more accurately purgatory.
I guess you have to be nuts to write a novel. What
sane person would do it? Fortunately, I have never been accused of being sane,
and being a nuts writer sounds better to me than being a Home Depot clerk who
happens to be whacked (I love Home Depot, not disparaging the company, no hate
mail please).
Is it me, or are there similarities between
writing novels and marriage: there are moments you dread and hate and moments when
you are madly in love. Problems arrive, solutions come; y0u want to bail out,
and yet fear losing something so important to you. So I guess I am married to
my work. In sickness and in health, ‘til death do us part…Hopefully not anytime
soon, thank you.