The Wheels are (Finally) Grinding

All last year, I had this really great idea for a novel, and even worked out a significant portion of the story out in my mind, but only got up to about 10,000 words before losing momentum with it. It just kind of sat on my hard drive for a couple of months, forgotten, before I picked it up again just a couple of weeks ago.

The spark that re-lit the fire underneath this project came completely unexpectedly. A few weeks ago, I was playing Final Fantasy 6 for the second time, and I was actually thinking very seriously about adapting it to a novel. I played FFVI for the first time in the Spring of 2006, and was really impressed with it. The story, in particular, is IMO one of the best computer/video game stories ever written. My first reaction to beating the game in April 2006 was “Gosh, I’ve GOT to write down this story and tell the world about it!” I did end up writing a short FF6 fanfic that got put up on a major FF6 fansite, but I had this urge to take it further. I suppressed it for a while, though, since I probably wouldn’t be able to get it published, but the urge resurfaced this summer. Since I had some doubts and/or apathy about the other story idea, it was very easy for it to be put on the back burner while I got involved with FF6 again.

Well, a couple of weeks ago, I was preparing for an online Quark writing meeting when I got involved in this long IM chat with Aneeka, one of my friends from Quark. She’s probably one of the most serious writing group members, since she pretty much started the writing group a couple of years ago, and she’s finished a novel that she’s polishing up and trying to get published. Actually FINISHED one of those things! She might not think so, but that alone is an accomplishment!

So anyways, we got to chatting, and I asked her “so what do you think about fanfiction? Is it really worth writing?” because I was a little bit worried about the FF6 novel adaptation project. I mean, it’s not an original story, and thinking practically, it doesn’t have much of a publishable future, since Square-Enix owns the story and all the characters. She told me that it’s not necessarily wrong, it’s just more of a way of practicing your writing skills. She then started asking if I had any other projects I was working on, and the discussion ended up with her encouraging me to give my own ideas more of a chance.

The discussion actually changed a lot about how I was thinking about things. First of all, she started making me think in terms of goals, which is really significant because a lack of goals is what made the project lose momentum in the first place (after all, I still have a lot of great ideas for the story, and I know I can make them all work). Second, she got me excited about it again. I guess that was the most important thing. I just wasn’t excited anymore. But hearing about where she’s at with her story, and just getting excited about creative writing in general was enough to light the spark that was needed to get the engine moving again.

So now, my primary project (and the source for most of my submissions to Quark this year) is The Lost Colony. It takes place in a post-apocalyptic world, where humanity is recovering from a nearly fatal war against hostile AI (yeah, I know it’s an old Sci Fi cliche, but I have good reason to believe that cliche’s aren’t bad if you know how to use them). Three hundred years ago, just before the war, a habitable planet was discovered on the outskirts of the explored universe. The war isolated a group of refugees and colonists on this planet, and over the years they developed into a unique, independent culture. Now, the war is over, and the rest of humanity is looking for places to expand. Sayed Hamedi, who is used to being an overlooked yes-man in the coalition fleet, finds himself stranded on this planet. As one of the first people to make contact with the civilization there, he unwittingly becomes a central religious and political figure, when all he really wants is to make his way back to the world he’s always known. Along the way, he catches the eye of a tribal chieftain’s daughter, who has big dreams of adventure and escaping from the life she’s always lived. It’s a clash of civilizations, and this couple is at the center of it. Along the way, they fall in love with each other, with each other’s cultures, grow past their differences and immaturities, and realize that they need to fight desperately to keep it all from falling apart. But unknown to them both, the planet holds the secrets of an ancient past that will change the course of both civilizations forever.

Sound like something from the back cover of a Tor paperback? 😉 I guess I’m doing well then.

Here are my goals with the project:

1) write at least 500 words a day on this project (Aneeka is really grilling that into me!)

2) FINISH THE ROUGH DRAFT BY THE END OF THE ’07-’08 BYU SCHOOL YEAR

I really hope I can do it!

Goals for this Blog

Welcome to A Thousand And One Parsecs! This is a blog about my writing projects as an aspiring writer of Science Fiction. At this point, I’m coming out of a lull in my creative writing, but I think that with the start of a new semester at BYU (and my duties as writing VP for Quark, BYU’s Sci Fi / Fantasy club) will break me out of that lull pretty quickly. Besides, it wasn’t much of a lull to begin with. I won a short story contest in the spring, lost one in the summer, and have two short stories that are looking for a place to get published, with a little bit of polishing.

My inspiration for this blog comes from a couple of my friends at Quark, who also have their own blogs about their writing projects. I’ve really enjoyed reading them over the past few weeks and months, and figure that it would be a great way to keep me honest in my writing. Besides, blogging in general is a lot of fun! I have a couple of writing projects, and I hope that this blog will give me a chance to talk about my struggles and get good ideas from everyone who stops long enough to drop a comment or two.

Ever since I knew how to write, I’ve had this urge to sit down and write stories. Even before then, when I was just a little kid, I would constantly make up stories in my head. My writing has always come in stops and spurts, floods and famine. In high school, I started two or three stories and took them all the way out past 100 pages before either getting frustrated or distracted. I have no problems starting a story, but I hardly ever finish them. I was really proud of myself in 2006 for finishing a short story and submitting it to several places to get published. Even though it was rejected everywhere, it was a real first.

Right about now, I’m on the border between being a hobby fiction writer and actually doing something serious about it, but I’m still on the hobby side. Hopefully, though, I can jump to the other side fairly soon. Like most creative people, I am ridiculously busy (I’m taking 18 credits, living in foreign language housing, working a part time job, active with church duties, and taking jujitsu, all in addition to leading the Quark writing group and doing my own personal writing. Oh, and I have three other blogs). However, I know that it’s not an excuse. If I’m ever going to be more than just a hobby fiction writer, I’ll have to start now, since I don’t think I’m ever going to be less busy than I am now.

My goal with this blog is 1) to help me be more engaged in my own writing, 2) to keep my friends updated with my writing, so that they can help me with my goals and struggles, and 3) to start some interesting discussions and share some constructive thoughts about writing with anyone who drops by and stays a while. I’m going to pattern after the blogs of some of my other friends in Quark, so we’ll see how it goes. I’m used to blogging anonymously, but I’ll open up a little bit more here with how things are going in my personal life–at least, those parts that impact my writing. I won’t try to popularize this blog or get it listed all over the internet, but I will try to share some thoughts that are worth reading, rather than ranting about myself all the time. We’ll see how it goes.

So, that’s what I want to do with this blog. Thanks for stopping by, and please, drop a comment or two anytime and let me know what you think!

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