Timeline published!

The fifth and final Shadow Glyph novel is now published! Get Timeline from Amazon (click here) or contact me to inquire about a signed copy (shipping will be pricey).

The river leads here, or perhaps, from here – these, the days of old, when men chose where mountains and lakes might lie. At the source, at the end, the Traveller will find what he seeks, or perhaps, only more questions.

One thing is certain: this is the destination of a great journey and the beginning of a grand history. The Age of Myths must come to an end…

And six hundred years down the river, Artemys Gothikar must be stopped.

Lives of Gethra Blog #1

Here’s the first of a few blog posts for my new web series Lives of Gethra!

To introduce these posts, the focus will be interpreting and exploring writing insights brought about by the experimental writing process behind that web series. If you haven’t read anything about it, check out that website’s Author’s Note page or read on to glean what impression you may.

Lives of Gethra has taught me a lot about writing. It’s real-time connectivity forces me to write on it nearly daily. I feel that it is training me to be a better writer, to get inspired with unique prompts I don’t often choose, and to publish things in a timely, efficient fashion. I expected this, and I haven’t been disappointed. On the other hand, I’ve been quiet surprised by many aspects of the ongoing project. Today, I’m going to write about characterization.

In the world of Gethra, the main characters range from high status to low status (two concurrent point-of-view characters right now include a Queen of a sprawling city-state and a hunter for a primitive island tribe). This is determined by Lives’ double-edged sword: circumstances and choices, both of which are outside of my control and cut me both ways, forcing me to keep up with stories I can’t always predict. There’s something more to a well written character however: personality. This is reflected in those choices, but it’s important to note that the “author” has an idea of a character’s personality without any of their actions being revealed or even decided yet.

And this is where Lives of Gethra gets super interesting to me, both as a writer and a surprised reader! This is the first time in all of my writing over the years that I am not imagining a character’s personality myself. It’s quite difficult to remain unbiased and not fill in the blanks (but it’s hard to do that with real people too–you know what they say about “assuming”), but, like any writer, I strive to avoid prejudice. In Lives, the real-life people behind each character are those personalities. They determine the character’s choices, and by extension, their circumstances. They may take actions that don’t fit with prior actions, because personalities are so much more angular and unknowable and gigantic than characters are. A good author labours to include such ‘character twists’ in their stories, but something designed is always a shade less believable than something natural. As a writer, I’m astounded by how difficult, but also how rewarding, it is to allow such a wide range of personalities into one of my works. Currently, there are characters more passive or more idealistic than any I’d choose to write about in a plot-driven, narrative arc-ed, story. I hope it brings the tapestry of Gethra to life in a way very few stories are, but I hope that as a childishly-excited artist.

I hope this sparks an internal analysis of characterization and personalities in stories for you, whether you’re an author, an artist, or just someone stumbling upon these thoughts. In any case, I cannot wait to introduce the next personality into Gethra’s quickly developing world.

Gothikar Release Date

Exciting news on the publishing front: Gothikar will be for sale from online vendors tomorrow, January 14, 2014. This includes the Createspace store and the various Amazon websites! The next day, Wednesday, residents of Kelowna BC, or the Quinte West area in Ontario can buy the book in print, from either myself in BC or from my dad. Please email shadow.glyph.books@gmail.com if you’re interested. Kindle has a different review process, so it may not be available until later in the week.

Business aside, I’m thrilled to be bringing the second book to readers. It’s an exciting story that was a lot of work to make, and I look forward to feedback! Here’s the synopsis from the back of the book:

Gothikar is the story of two men, a father and a son; a Prince and a Magician. Together, they will drive the Triumvirate into the crisis that unfolded during Shadow Glyph. They will be influenced by one another, but also by the future they cause.

The father fights a war of justice. A noble heart and wise mind is enough at first, but as the war stretches across decades, he finds himself drawn thin. Above all, he knows he must save the Triumvirate. When the cost for this is his life he can accept it, but when the price for its salvation becomes his soul the lines of what he should do and what he must do become blurred.

The son has his own war, one to destroy the Triumvirate. Raised by the cold war on the home front in his father’s absence, he will be offered chance after chance to save his soul. Unlike his father, he does not hesitate to sacrifice his morality for his cause. His father fights to save the government, while the son fights to undo it.

Gothikar is the tragedy of sacrifice and failure. One of these men’s struggles will be in vain. One of them will emerge victorious. One of them will destroy the Triumvirate.

Editing…

Gothikar is in for editing now and should be returned to me within 4-5 weeks.  This unfortunately bumps us past our Christmas deadline.  I’ll say for certain though, that the book will be for sale during January.  Probably early January.

Either way, it’s quite exciting to think that a professional industry editor has my manuscript right now!  I’m looking forward to getting some feedback!

I’ll post a tentative cover design and synopsis this week sometime.

Book 2 is done!

Gothikar’s manuscript is done at last! The writing process is complete! 11:55 pm November 8th, 2013! This baby is tentatively 376 pages long (118136 words)!

Now to give it a quick reread and send it off for editing. I will provide an updated timeline of that process as soon as I submit it. When last I checked, they estimated it to be a 3-4 week process. Then I have to review the editing and review a proof print copy. I’ll provide an official release date as soon as I can.

Writing Tip #5

Multitasking.

There’s no such thing as writer’s block (defined as a complete inability to make progress with one’s writing).  There is boredom.  Frustration.  Indecision.  Distraction.  But no all-inclusive syndrome.  There are solutions to any of these problems.

The number one thing I hear new writers say is that they can’t write further.  They start something long and then get stuck and give up.  I think every writer experiences a boredom problem.  No matter how brilliant an artist you are, there is a point where you just need a break!  Unfortunately, many people don’t return to their project after their break.  It is too hard to go from a week or two of no writing to working on a large project again.

My solution is simple.  Do two.  Do three.  Work on multiple projects.  When I got bored of writing Shadow Glyph, I would write on something else, whether a school assignment or another idea I had.  I have about 5 different stories that I started during the writing process of Shadow Glyph.  When I grew bored or frustrated with Shadow Glyph, I would start something new, or work on another project that seemed interesting to me at the time.  After a couple days or weeks even, I would return to Shadow Glyph.

Trying to press on with a story when you don’t want to is a good way to completely burn yourself out and is more than likely to result in a ruined product at the end.  Readers can tell when the author is forcing something and when the writing IS actually flowing.

Save yourself some madness and your work some quality-lost and try multitasking!

 

PS: I have uploaded a diagram of one story-line from Shadow Glyph under the Shadow Glyph section above.  WARNING: this content includes spoilers.  Only read it if/once you have read Shadow Glyph.