December 2006

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alex's life book

  • In early 2006, I began creating a life book for my daughter, Alex. Click here for links to articles describing my experience.
  • And for those of you who are more digitally inclined, in late 2006, I recreated key pages of Alex's lifebook for an article I wrote for AlphaMom, using Scrapblog.

    You can see the final digital result (and leave comments, if you'd like!) here.

what's been on my nikon lately

  • And you can view my favourites here.

if i'm not here, i'm here

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trying not to take it personally

Back when I worked at Very Large Corporation, I befriended a coworker who every morning would e-mail a famous quote to what I can only assume was her incredibly large contact list. Most of her quotes were poignant or funny, and it was a lovely way to start the day.

Since leaving Very Large Corporation, we've remained in touch, and she tells me she's still an avid reader of Chookooloonks. I've also remained on her contact list, and still receive the quotes daily. The one I received today, however, has me a bit taken aback:

Your manuscript is both good and original, but the part that is good is not original and the part that is original is not good.
-- Samuel Johnson, (attributed)

Dude, how did she know?

i'm calling it a 'novel' because i think i'm developing a whole new genre

Lavenderflower
A photograph which my records insist I took on May 24th of this year while walking through the golf course, but of which I have absolute no recollection of taking

Well, goodness, thanks so much for your support on this whole writing thing! I am energized by your interest, if not slightly intimidated. I suppose the pressure is officially on to produce something. As a result, I'm slightly nauseated. Excited, of course, my poppets, but yes, distinctly queasy.

As for what genre of novel this is going to be...hmm. That's tougher. I mean, what genre was Old Yeller? Not that my book has anything remotely related to yellow labrador by any stretch of the imagination, or even necessarily has a shot of being the commercial success Old Yeller was, but do you see what I'm saying? It's not mystery, though hopefully there'll be some mysterious parts. It's not romance, though I might throw in a kiss or two for good measure...who knows. It's not comedy or tragedy, although one might argue that it's pretty tragicomic that I'm even attempting this.

It's about ...friendships, I guess. Yeah, that's it. Friendships.

That's the best description I can come up with right now, anyway.

So yesterday, after my trip to the coffee house, I decided to go check out a local bookstore to see if I could find books on various subjects for research purposes. I went to one of the better bookstores -- and found nothing. That's not to say I didn't walk out with an armload of books, but oh! How I miss Borders, with its floors and floors of books on every subject imaginable! Yesterday, I did manage to pick up a few works by local Caribbean authors, one by Milan Kundera entitled The Art of the Novel (since I'm a huge fan of The Unbearable Lightness of Being), and for Alex, a new Richard Scarry book -- however, my research largely remains untouched. Clearly, I have a date with Borders on our upcoming trip to North America.

To that end, I was wondering if you guys could help: do any of you know of either books or blogs about the following subjects to which you can refer me:

- Living and working in Grand Cayman, particularly Pirate's Week;
- Living and working in Lagos, Nigeria, and surrounding towns and villages;
- The Junior League, or similar organization;
- Doctors Without Borders or the Peace Corps; and/or
- Living and working in New York City?

Any resources you could point me to on any of these subjects would be greatly appreciated. And if any of you happen to be bloggers on any of these subjects and you e-mail me or leave a comment, let me just say how proud I am to call you my new best friend.

(Admit it: you're worried about what this book's going to be about now, aren't you...)

the great novel

Cappuccino1_1
My cappuccino, taken this morning on the outdoor patio of my local coffee house.

Yesterday, I was chatting with an online friend who also happens to be a writer. "Can I ask you a question?" she typed.

"Absolutely," I responded.

"Lately, I feel like I'm in a rut -- like my writing isn't going anywhere, and there's nothing special about my words. Do you ever feel like that?"

"All the damned time," was my immediate response. The truth is, lately I've been feeling exactly that way. I've been writing, but I haven't felt like I'm progressing. For the past month or so, I've been mulling around in my head what I needed to do to shake this sensation of being in the doldrums. And thankfully, I think I've come up with something.

About 5 years ago (almost to the day), I had the insane idea of writing a novel. It was insane because back then I was working as a lawyer, in a job that required me to be at an airport, or in an airplane or in a hotel constantly -- not exactly a lifestyle conducive to spending large blocks of time in front of a computer trying to be creative. Nevertheless, I started writing, and managed to get about 20 pages onto my hard drive. Then I stopped.

Recently, I revisited those pages. And while they were certainly adequate, I wouldn't describe them as riveting. Still, five years later, I think the premise of the novel is sound, and since now my time is more my own to manage, I thought perhaps I'd take a fresh stab at it.

So this morning, after dropping Alex off at her day school, I went to my neighbourhood coffee house with my laptop computer, pulled up a brand new Microsoft Word document, and started outlining the premise of the novel as if I were doing it for the very first time. At the most basic level, I spent about three hours imagining who my main characters were going to be, the conflicts they'd be facing, and brainstormed how these conflicts would be resolved. At the end of the session, I felt more invigorated than I've felt in a while. I might be onto something, I couldn't help thinking.

In about twelve days, I'll be 39 years old. As is my custom, I try to make New Year's Resolutions on my birthday (I think resolutions on birthdays are far more meaningful, don't you?). So, this year I believe my resolution will be:

I will have my novel written and ready to be shopped to publishers by my 40th birthday.

The reason I'm telling you this is because this forum, Chookooloonks, works wonders for keeping me focused. Last year, as part of NaNoWriMo, I vowed publicly to write a 50,000-word novel, and you guys kept me on track (the result was a steaming pile of dung, but hey, I completed it). Similarly, seven weeks ago I declared publicly here that I was going to start running -- and though I don't necessarily enjoy it, I am starting to appreciate it more, and I have no intention of quitting anytime soon. So I'm hoping that by letting you in on my writing plans, I'll feel more committed to staying on track.

In order to keep myself honest, however, I'm obviously going to have to give you periodic updates. However, I refuse to use the word-count method of NaNoWriMo -- while the exercise of just getting words on paper was invaluable, I found myself sacrificing quality for quantity, and I don't want to do that this time. Instead, how about if I occasionally share with you the last sentence I've written in my novel draft? In that way, you'll be able to see the progress (without actually reading the novel), and you'll find yourself intrigued! Captivated! Fascinated, even!

Or perhaps it'll just make me feel better.

In any event, that's the plan, Stan. I won't actually start writing until after my 39th birthday -- I want to spend the time between now and then really getting my outline down pat. After that, though, I'm counting on you to keep my nose to the grindstone.

And, as always, thanks.