I was invited to
participate in this blog tour by fellow writer Jae (http://jae-fiction.com/my-writing-process/).
The idea is that every author answers the same four questions about her
or his writing process and then tags someone else who continues the blog tour.
Here goes!
1. What am I
working on?
At present I’m
working on two projects. The first is editing my novel Barring Complications (http://www.ylva-publishing.com/books/barring-complications/)
with the incomparable Fletcher DeLancey (tagged below!). We are going comma by
comma to make sure you all have a pleasant reading experience uninterrupted by
typos.
In between rounds
of edits, I’m returning to the first novel I ever wrote, Stowe Away. I still very much believe in this storyline, but the
writing needs a complete overhaul. I know a lot more about the fundamentals of
writing fiction now, and I’m enjoying retooling scenes, restructuring events,
and rethinking character development.
2. How does my
work differ from others in the same genre?
This seems a very
loaded question! I suppose my writing is “lesbian romance,” but I do set out to
write pieces that don’t conform to the standard romance plot. Barring Complications is about a lot
more than the relationship between two women – it’s about US politics and
government, surveillance, family, and briefly, badminton.
Stowe Away specifically undoes the structure of a romance novel. This is not a
girl-meets-girl, something keeps them apart, girl-gets-girl novel. But more
than that, I can’t say just yet. ;)
#3 Why do I write
what I do?
I love this
question. When I first discovered the Bechdel test (if you don’t know about
this, please look it up – it’s amazing), I expanded it in my head. It wasn’t
enough for two named female characters to have a scene together where they talk
about something other than a man – they had to talk about something other than
romance. Clearly this caveat concerns lesbian characters. Alison Bechdel had
seen enough of women fawning over men, but I had seen enough of women fawning,
period. So, in my version of it, there couldn’t be romantic subtext either: the
women in the scene had to think about
something other than romance. So, it’s fair to say that many lesbian romance
novels wouldn’t pass this more stringent test. And that’s totally fine – it’s
not the real test and I’m not judging. But the women I know don’t spend all
their time talking or even fantasizing about love and romance. They have
careers and hobbies. And I want to read and write about them.
In Barring Complications, Victoria
Willoughby’s family isn’t there for her to talk about her love life – they’re
in the novel to help her navigate her career and the press, and also because
she is a well-rounded character who loves her relationships with her brother
and sister-in-law. In Stowe Away, the
main character’s mother does more than help her daughter suss out romantic
relationships. She has her own story line and character arc.
So, I write the
way I write because I am interested in strong, multifaceted lesbian characters
who are interested in romance, sure, but whose lives aren’t singularly focused
on it.
#4 How does my
writing process work?
Call me a
traditionalist, but I read my Aristotle and I believe everything starts with
plot. I know a lot of writers who start with characters and that works for
them, but starting with plot is the only way I can make sense of my ideas. I begin
with the conflict. Once I’ve figured out what drives the friction of the story,
I come up with a few mile-markers to help me shape its trajectory. Barring Complications is in five parts,
and I knew before I started writing how each part would start and end. Once I
have the main events in place, I draw up character lists and start writing.
Certainly within this basic plot outline my characters lead me to unexpected
places. But I know if I don’t give them some rules, they’ll run away from me!
Well, there you go – a bit of
insight into my writing process. Without further ado, I hereby tag Fletcher
DeLancey and Ingrid Diaz!
I just read Barring Complication and I absolutely enjoy it! So I totally agree with your comment about your characters being more than just the romance. Even if we want to read a romance it is refreshing and exciting to read about characters that are complete with opinions and worries beyond their love life.
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