Inspiration at Half Price

[flickr id=”7665973486″ thumbnail=”small” overlay=”true” size=”small” group=”” align=”left”]I have a new weakness.  A new collection brewing.  It’s small for now – just 3 items, but I adore them.

Last year I discovered a section at our local book resale shop (you know the one, I named it up there^^) called “Collectibles”.

Since discovering it I’ve been fortunate to find three items that manage to both bring me joy and inspire me all at once.

Three books with publication dates pre-1900 in pretty amazing condition.

Three books that one of my characters could have, and likely would have, in her lifetime.

[flickr id=”7665943684″ thumbnail=”small” overlay=”true” size=”small” group=”” align=”right”]Jane Doe from Changing Tracks is an avid reader with an eidetic memory.  She loves poetry, but reads just about anything she gets her hands on (she has even been known to read medical texts).

So even when I’m not working on Changing Tracks. I love having these books on hand.  They make me think of her, and then in turn my other characters.  They bring me inspiration, and a chance to focus on my characters and give them a little more depth.

None of them cost me very much (although I would have willingly spent more on each of them) – but they are books that will never leave my home.  While I willingly resell books all the time to keep some space open in our cramped home, I have handfuls of books that never leave the shelves.  These have and will maintain a prominent and permanent place in my home.

To me, they bring Jane to life even more than she already is in my head.

Let her out to breathe.

There’s no better inspiration than that.

Inspiration Overkill

[flickr id=”5079013878″ thumbnail=”small” overlay=”true” size=”small” group=”” align=”left”]I remember the days after I finished my first novel.

Not just the days – the months.

I thought that was it. I loved those characters so much, how could I possibly have another story in me?  Their story was beautiful and deep and not even finished – how could I ever move on?

That novel suffered through years of my tears, queries and rejections.  It now sits in the back of my files, neglected and left behind.  There are days I remember it, days I contemplate its resurgence from the mothballs of my external drive.  I still love those characters in the way you love an old familiar friend. I still truly believe their story deserves to be told.  I also now fully believe that I didn’t tell it well that first time.  It’s certainly not a horrendous collection of words – but it doesn’t shine. It requires far too much time and attention for me to ponder revisiting it right now.

About three years ago I had a whisper of a story idea. In rapid-fire free-writing I cranked out well over 500k words of a story (or 3 or 4) surrounding new characters.  Yes, three years ago.  This is the story that I am now querying out.  The story that I just absolutely love my main characters with a shamefully blinding addiction some days (I wish I were as clever and quick-witted as my heroine).

Last year I started another series based around another couple of characters. Another two characters (no, make that four – or five – or…well, the series has a LOT of characters I love) that I can adore. A story that I can sink my teeth into, that requires multiple facets and stories to cross the depth of all of these people.

Once I reached the point a year ago where I had started on rewrites for both of these pieces I once again wondered where I would find more. How could I find more characters? I certainly don’t want to recycle characters.

Fast forward to today.

I’m in final edits and the query stage for Changing Tracks. Then I have The Tribe still in mid-draft.

And what else?

Well…I have a horror (horror? Me?) flash fiction that I’ve submitted to an e-zine.

I have an Urban Fantasy that’s got about three pages of world-building notes.  Characters named. Story line being plotted.

Of course there’s a short story that I started, but have put on hold. I want to wait on it for personal reasons. It’s a fun little smexy romp that will hopefully get attention before the end of the year.

I just started another HWR short – make that short-for-me – story.  I’m deep in the second chapter and the new characters are becoming really interesting.  They have their damage, but their stories are so rich.

Oh, yes…can’t forget the new story idea that came to me this morning. Still in its infancy. So very young, but so very exciting.  I haven’t met the characters yet – but I’m sure they will be tortured.

Maybe one day I’ll create a character that I don’t torture. That just…is. Maybe.

But as I look at my growing story folders and all of the possibilities I’m startled. I wonder – what happened to the days when I thought I’d never create another story?

What about you?  Do you find yourself in plotting overload?  In a wasteland of ideas with no clue what to start building next because every idea is so exciting?  What do you do with all of your story ideas? How do you keep track of them?

Are you a spread sheet diva (or divo)?  Or do you have notes scattered everywhere? Paper or electronic?

Do your ideas come in a flood like mine have this time? Or a slow trickle that lets you keep up?

 

I Suck At Titles

[flickr id=”6818404384″ thumbnail=”small” overlay=”true” size=”small” group=”” align=”left”]Thanks to some incredible luck, one beautiful person, and my attempt at a sparkling personality…I have a real editor critiquing my baby right now.

That frees up a lot of time for my muse to alternately panic (OMG will she like  it?), and decide to plot up 5,000,000 more books.

Or maybe just two. ~insert the ominous for now here~

On top of the one book I’m in mid-rewrites of, and the other that she dreamed up a few weeks back.

She is insane (but we covered that already).

The problem is, that I now have 3 title-less stories wandering around in the realm of my imagination.

One of those stories has its blurb ready, I have the page built for it even – but no title to gift it with.

Changing Tracks took a long time to come up with – and the train isn’t even a huge part of the story, but the entire series titles revolve around the train. Of course those weren’t the original titles either.

I suck at titles.

Which sucks because I don’t feel like I can get much of anywhere without a title to round out the story.

Now just don’t get me started on the dreaded query…