I’ve been regrouping, reclaiming time, recalculating, rescheduling, and happily, writing. Getting my feet wet again with the essay in the anthology Still Me…After All These Years: 24 Writers Reflect on Aging made me eager to return to the writing life–a little older, and hopefully a little wiser about things such as time management.
Getting back into the writing life after a couple of years focused on family issues, getting my knee fixed, and other activities feels like a major transition. Almost like starting over.
And because I write mostly crime fiction, I really am starting over this year. My last book with Five Star will be published in their Frontier Fiction line because it’s historical. My contemporary crime fiction manuscripts in the works will need a new publisher. Five Star recently dropped their mystery line, retaining only the historicals and westerns. My one historical novel, the one I consider the novel of my heart, will possibly be the only book I write that’s not set in today’s world.
I say possibly, because I never know what idea will present itself next.
Meanwhile, I have two full first drafts to work on and a new project started that I really like. I plan to finish that new first draft before going back to the others for revisions, self-editing, and submission. It would be nice to finally finish something. I haven’t done that for quite a while.
Wishing Caswell Dead is the historical mystery that’s scheduled for release in November. I expect to have cover art soon. That’s when I’ll really get excited. It never seems real until I see the cover.
And by the way, Wishing Caswell Dead is the novel I started back in 2007 while waiting for The Prairie Grass Murders to be released. I wrote five versions of WCD over the years, completed The Desert Hedge Murders and Dead Wrong and saw them through publication, then finally went back to version three of WCD to fix and submit.
One thing writers need in abundance is perseverance. Another is patience.
What other qualities do you think writers need to survive the writing life?
Margot Kinberg says
I’m very glad you’re picking up your writing again, Pat. It’ll be really interesting to see how it evolves. My guess will be that you won’t write the same way as you have been writing, and that will mean you’re evolving. You’re not the same you now. I’m eager to see what ‘Pat the Writer’ will create!
Patricia says
Margot, that’s an interesting observation. Although I still can’t seem myself wandering too far from crime fiction, it’s very likely my style and maybe even my voice will have changed. Life has a way of doing that to us, especially as we get older.
Madeline Mora-summonte says
I know I need coffee and chocolate and the occasional binge-watching and binge-reading breaks. ๐
Good luck with the starting over!
Patricia says
Binge-reading is where I’m at these days…although I have a guilty binge-watching secret. I accidentally tuned in to Duck Dynasty episode one day and got totally hooked. Uncle Si makes me laugh so hard that it has to be therapeutic. Since it’s their last season, some channels are running all the old episodes, so I’ve been recording them. Whenever I need a good laugh, I watch an hour or so and feel better immediately. Who knew?
L. Diane Wolfe says
I’m sorry they dropped the mystery line.
I’ve been away from writing my own book for two months now and it will feel like starting over again when I finally get back to it.
Patricia says
Hi Diane! These breaks, whether for life interruptions, lallygagging, or writing-related chores, can sure upset the flow of words and story. With each project, I’ll have to go back and read from the beginning, taking notes along the way. A lot of work, but I guess it will keep me out of trouble. ๐