Making space to write

This seems to be a constant theme in writers’ lives. It is and has been in mine, this making space to write–in our heads, in our homes, or finding spaces outside of home. It’s a constant challenge, so I’m always interested to see how other writers do it. And it seems you are as well; at least there was more of a resonance than I expected when I thought out loud about the idea of sharing how we create our spaces. I’d like to turn this idea into a regular (weekly, if I get enough submissions) guest post, where we can be inspired by each other’s writing spaces.

So, consider this your official invite. Let me know where you write. Send me a picture or two of your writing spot with a few lines (be it three or thirty–your call), explaining what  you need in your physical space to create space in your mind:
gordon(at)kontext(dot)ca
Anything you can think of. Here are some questions to get you started, if you’re stuck:

  • How do you organize your space?
  • What tools do you use: books, software, hardware … coffeeware?
  • Do you need a great view in front of you? A blank wall?
  • Do you need silence, background chatter, music?
  • Do you need a specific spot, a desk, a table in the house? Or do you write anywhere? As long as you have your trusted …?
  • Do you need different spaces for writing, editing, plotting, …?
  • What realities do you have to contend with that limit your space, and how do you work around them?

If there’s other stuff that’s important to you, or that you’d like to include, bring it. This is not a test. There are no right or wrong answers. Let’s get Workspace Wednesdays rolling. And check back here on Wednesdays for your fellow authors’ spaces. Comment, get ideas, share solutions. Help me make this ‘a thing’.

First Workspace Wednesday coming up on January 28th. See you then.

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New Shoes

I just sent back the proofs for The Other Side of Winter (Santuario 2), and am otherwise wringing words for Black Box from the keyboard. I’m about halfway through chapter 1.

Getting into the heads of new characters is like putting on new shoes. No matter how often you’ve seen them in the window or even handled them before, when you first slip in, they feel stiff and weird and alien. It takes a few miles of walking in them before they’re comfortable.

Same with characters. Even though these two have popped up in the previous book, writing them as POV characters is different. I have to consciously think about which way they would think/feel, and what they would do. It’s like a naggy tag in the neck of your shirt. Not actively painful, but ‘there’ in a way that’s distracting. It makes for slooow writing. Over the years I’ve learned to just write it anyway. That’s what rewrites are for; by which time the characters have become a second skin. Can’t wait for the feeling.

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New Year, new book

The Other Side of Winter (Santuario 2) is pretty much wrapped at my end. We finished the copy edits yesterday, and I ordered my box of print copies. I don’t expect proofs to be too much of a headache (famous last words, I know). What I should do for that one is break my head over posts for the blog tour.>>If there’s any particular topic you’d like me to cover, or any questions you’d like me to answer, shoot me a comment, or hit the red ‘Get in touch’ button on the right edge.<<

As for the Bluewater Bay novel, I wrote synopsis and blurb last weekend, and finished the cover art request, so that one’s out of my hands until the dev edits come back.

That leaves me free to work on Black Box. I started writing that one around Christmas, but fizzled out after only a few hundred words. The plot outline I had was just not working. The beginning bored me to tears. And if it bores me, it’s going to bore you, which is not acceptable. I’d been more or less idly kicking that one around in my head for the past few weeks, the muse feeding me stingy little bits and one-liners that ever so slightly shifted the characterization of both protags. Today I sat down to redo the outline. I threw index cards around like confetti, rearranged them in elaborate mosaics, scribbled here, scratched out there–in short, I made an inspiring creative mess of things, and I’m much happier with what I have now. I should be able to do at least the first few chapters, before I run into a couple of looser points that need to be tied down still. We’ll see.

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My top 3 of 2014

Lock In by John Scalzi (audio book)
This was stunningly brilliant on all levels:
A really smart, tight, intricate plot, well researched.
A thoughtful discourse of how we deal with the other, and what ‘disabled’ defines (or doesn’t).
A protag whose gender is left up in the air. With a first person narrator,  a threep (i.e. android) body, and a name like Chris Shane (addressed as ‘Agent’ Shane), the question of Shane’s gender just never comes up. I’ve read a book with a similar conceit, and found it intrusive and distancing there, but here it simply works, because Shane’s gender is supremely and confidently irrelevant for either plot or reader identification. Ingeniously the audio version comes in both a male and female voice recording (Yes, I listened to both.), the capable and delightfully geeky choices being Amber Benson and Will Wheaton.
And almost as an aside, the hint at a possibly lesbian or bi partner, and the late revelation (don’t blink or you’ll miss it) that the protag is a poc. This. This is what I dream of when I pick up a novel to read. We need more diverse books.
(The free novella that came with it is more of a cute gimmick, a bit of background and maybe fan service. I wouldn’t have needed it. The book itself blew me away hard enough.)

Static by L.A. Witt
This one hit me in a tender and very personal spot. Just to explain why it’s here, even though it didn’t come out this year; and that it’s here for reasons beyond the writing itself.
It pulled me right in from page one and didn’t let me go until the end. And it got under my skin. Its protag fluctuates between two genders in a world that doesn’t accept their ability to do so. It asks a lot of relevant question, and while it doesn’t have all the answers (who would?), it makes one thing abundantly clear – that people fare infinitely better if you just let them decide who they want to be. Even if that turns out not to be static.
Amen to that. I don’t think I’ve ever come across a protagonist I could identify with on quite that level. Did I mention, we need more diverse books?

Hostile Ground by L.A. Witt and Aleksandr Voinov
Hot damn. This was right up my alley. Lots of action and even more steam with a healthy dose of social relevance that never preaches and never takes away any of the suspense or fun.
You might have guessed it: We need more diverse books. Sense a theme here?
I’m really looking forward to the sequel.

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The Other Side of Winter (Santuario 2)

is now available for pre-order.

Cover by Reese Dante

Not all wounds are visible.

Skanian investigator Bengt fell in love with fellow policeman Alex Rukow in a week. But that was a year ago, and they’ve been apart ever since. Then Alex escapes the corrupt and destitute island nation of Santuario and comes to live with Bengt. Happy ever after . . .?

Alex’s lifelong dream of leaving Santuario has come true at last. But he finds himself adrift in a society he doesn’t understand. Worse, past nightmares come back to haunt him, and after so many years of suspicion and self-reliance, it’s harder than he imagined to trust someone else.

Bengt just wants Alex to share his comfortable life. But the more he tries to give, the more Alex pulls away. Their physical connection couldn’t be better, but Bengt can’t seem to get through to his difficult, taciturn lover outside the bedroom. Meanwhile, he has his own demons to confront—not to mention a serial killer on the loose.

Bengt and Alex must dig deep for the courage to face their pasts, but it may be too late to save their relationship or their lives.

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Title reveal and submission

The line edits for Santuario2 are done, and blurb, tags, and all the other accoutrements delivered. The cover is absolutely stunning (I can’t wait to show you), and the title is finally settled (Yes!). Lots of tugging on imaginary curtains. Tada: The Other Side of Winter

I’ve also gone over the beta edits for the Bluewater Bay novel and submitted that earlier this month (another tada).

So everything feels done, done.  I’m scribbling a sentence or paragraph here and there, but the muse has eaten too much chocolate and gingerbread (I also suspect she got into the rum we brought back from Cuba), and is idly twirling gift wrapping ribbons around her thumbs while I’m organizing files. I’ve long been planning to collect all the bits and pieces like plans, plot bunnies, orphaned scenes, half-written novels, and terrible first drafts into a private wiki, so I can find things back at a click when I’m looking for them. That is finally happening. It’s the classic year end clean-up that allows for a breather, sets a symbolic marker, and frees capacities for a fresh start.

In that spirit I’m toasting you with some rum-spiced eggnog and wish you all Happy Holidays and lots of cheer celebrating whatever you’re into.

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“Listen, the snow is falling over town”

Yup, shovelled snow for the first time this winter. The long dark season has arrived. But in the writing cave the news are excellent.

The Bluewater Bay novel is out to betas. Which, since it’s due at the end of the year, is a huge weight off my chest.

And, while I’m waiting for the lines for Santuario II to come back, I started plotting another Santuario novel. It’s not, strictly speaking Santuario III yet, as it has a different main couple, and Alex and Bengt appear without carrying a POV. But it does deal with one of the open plot points of the first book. So, a spin-off? Tie-in? I’ll call it 2.5 aka Black Box for now. The muse couldn’t care less. She just really wants to write this one. One of the MCs is trans. We’re both pretty excited about that, since it touches ground close to home. I worked out a decent plot skeleton today, and will start a first research wave tomorrow. Wish me luck.

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Queer Romance Month – A look back and a big Thank You

When AJ first talked to me about the idea of a Queer Romance Month, I thought it presented a fantastic opportunity for anyone on the MOGAI spectrum, both for our visibility as a group and to make our individual voices heard.

And QRM delivered. In spades. Far beyond what I had imagined it could do. In both the posts and the discussions in the comment sections it exceeded every one of my expectations.

I wasn’t looking for anything more personal than that. I already knew I wasn’t cis, I’ve known even longer I’m not straight; I’d made peace with my otherness a long time ago. That I didn’t fit into any of the LGBT groups in my life might have been harder to accept, but I’d made, well, at least a truce with that, too. Discovering the internet in the nineties helped a lot. It gave me a space in which I could be who I was without having to deal with being categorized by my appearance. So, yeah, I wanted to participate in QRM. Maybe what I had to say would even help someone else. But I wasn’t expecting any immediate, personal impact.

Man, was I ever wrong.

I’ve used the word queer to describe myself for a good number of years now, because

  • one, bisexual/bigender is a mouthful;
  • two, I’d have to explain at least the bigender thing to an exhausting extent; and
  • three, most people don’t want to know that much.

Having the Q added to the LGBT salad of letters seemed right and good, but it didn’t change anything for me personally. I’d never met anyone like me (still haven’t), and I’d met few enough people who identified under the Q for lack of fitting anywhere else that I didn’t think of us as a group in any real, visceral sense.

QRM changed that, up close and personal. It’s not going to make me want to have tea parties every day now, but the simple knowledge that there’s an interconnected group of people outside of my immediate circle of family and friends, who I could meet face to face and still be a part of is joyful and liberating. Finding your ‘tribe’, regardless in which area, makes the heart sing.

So, thank you for making my heart sing. I’m more grateful than I can say to everyone involved, for investing their time, knowledge, emotions and (sometimes very personal) experiences to make QRM so much more than I thought it would be. Thank you especially to Alexis Hall, who conceived of and followed through with the idea (after the format of Read-a-Romance-Month), and without whom QRM wouldn’t have been born.

Queer Romance Month–no you, all of you–blew me away. And I’m hoping very much that we can do this again next year.

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I’m giving my 2 cents on Queer Romance Month today

Please come on over and join me. Give me your 2 cents, and let me know what you’re looking for in your Romance novels to enter into a draw for Santuario.

http://www.queerromancemonth.com/love-is-love-by-gb-gordon

 

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October is Queer Romance Month

QRM banner

We’re starting QRM off with a big launch party at Joyfully Jay with great giveaways.

There’ll be several new posts each day throughout October, showcasing book recommendations, posts, articles, essays, and flash fiction from the queer-identified, the queer-writing and the queer-supporting.

C’mon over. Join the party. Spread the word.

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