Writer from Cambridgeshire (Aspiring). Acerbic assesor of Counterfeit Culture. Occasional Twit. Habitual user of NaNoWriMo. A lover of Nonsense Correspondence . Noter of Notes. Creator ofThe Short Stupid Existence of Prose Darling: A Modern Fable for The Fashionably Late. Please feel free to Correspond.

Missing Scenes

A list of scenes which I omitted while writing the first draft. They’re in no order. I hope it makes the whole things seem appealing though (imagine what I actually put in!).


1• A conversation on willows

2• The King’s speech (page 98)

3• The Bus

4• The Scottish Port

5• Descriptions from dragon feeders

6• More radio news

7• Visiting the orphanage

8• Something about the “Job”

9• Thom and Valarie’s house

10• A shopping list for camping in an abandonded house

11• A list of books owned by a young person 20 years ago

12• The quilt

13• The death of her parents

14• Can you name that band?

1• A conversation on willows

2• The King’s speech (page 98)

3• The Bus

4• The Scottish Port

5• Descriptions from dragon feeders

6• More radio news

7• Visiting the orphanage

8• Something about the “Job”

9• Thom and Valarie’s house

10• A shopping list for camping in an abandonded house

11• A list of books owned by a young person 20 years ago

12• The quilt

13• The death of her parents

14• Can you name that band?

Christopher John Eggett

How To Win #NaNoWriMo 2011 (Or 5 Ways To Take NaNoWriMo In Your Stride)

My NaNoWriMo currently stands at 13,155 words, we’re on the 4th day (and I’ve had 3 days of writing). I feel pretty good about it, I’ve not hit a block yet, I’ve not decided that what I’ve written so far is a sloshing fuck-bucket of nonsense, hey I’ve even got time to squeeze a blog post in, I am taking it all in my stride.

Here’s how:

Read More

Christopher John Eggett

5 Places I Would Like To Write My NaNoWriMo From This Year

Everyone talks about their writing space when it comes up to NaNoWriMo time, Whether it is social (turning the phone off, promising nice things to the due-to-be-ignored, etc) or physical space (“I arrange the entire room into a pentagram of writing books, with me at the middle - if I leave, I die” etc).

But what about actual spaces? Here’s my Top 5 Place I Would like to Write My NaNoWriMo from This Year:

Read More

Christopher John Eggett

5 Things To Do With a First Draft Manuscript of Your Novel

1. Hang it round your neck as a handy alternative to an albatross.

2. Kill things with it. Depending on the thickness of the MS you can use it to kill things. Beetles, cockroaches spiders - if you’ve got a particular thick murder mystery which refuses to take off you could always actually kill someone with it. Going to prison helps book sales, look at Jeffery Archer.

3. Carry it everywhere with you under the pretence of working on it anywhere. Some people go to the gym, some people wear those funny weights under their clothes so they’re always doing a micro work-out. Most would-be writers spend a great deal of time lugging half a dead tree about under the pretence that editing it on the night bus home would be a great idea. If you’re still waiting for inspiration to get editing then you might as well leave the lump at home.

4. Hide it. The guilt of a heavy thing watching your every wasted moment is compounded by it’s heaviness. Hide it somewhere where it can’t see you. It also makes for an interesting version of hide-and-seek against yourself, in the past.

5. Make detailed written edits which you will entirely ignore when it comes to actually editing the electonic “master” copy. I did this. It was good to have read the thing - and pretty important I’d say. But all those edits and chicken-scratch marks I’ve made are pretty much ignored in the MS as I can spot them as well in the electronic copy. However, if you’ve got a couple of pens you need to run out (so you can spend more time buying pens) this is a great way to achieve this goal.

Christopher John Eggett

Mind Modelling The Novel: Modular & Hierarchical Structures In Editing Your Novel

I’ve been using scrivener to edit my Novel for a week or so now (or maybe it has been longer). It has proved itself useful because it presents a simple and easily understood system for understanding the structure of your novel.

First it offers you the ability to take the 200+ pages of brain-gush and chop and slice it into something approaching “scenes”. Film is one of the most readily available examples of modular content in popular culture, and as such Scivener allows you to break a novel into these easily understood parts. These tasty snippets of goodness allow you to look at your wretched creation as not just a month long #NaNoWriMo finger-spasm (although it is) but as a series of pieces in a game, like chess for example:

When we play Chess we don’t think about how the pieces look or what the board looks like - we also don’t look at the board as a linear set of actions taken on a whim. Instead we see every piece as having a phantom future in front of it, and we see it all at once. Invisible lines cast by the shadow of the bishop mix with the 4 spots where “The Horsey” (as I believe it is known) can make it’s seemingly erratic movements. This sense of setting up certain space for the enemy to fall into to be trapped, or to act as deterrent fits well with editing a novel.

I can now see all my pieces on the board (except, it isn’t a chess board, it is a map of Northern Europe and I’ve got a long stick to move all the pieces about. Also: I probably have a cool Kitchener moustache) and I am ready to gather parts together, make  changes to the structure of the novel. Scrivener allows you to organize your modules (nuggets, slices, snippets) into Hierarchies in exactly the same way you organise a web-page or your documents on your computer. This mind model is so familiar to us it becomes a breeze to move labeled parts of your narrative about and see - like you can looking at the chess board - how all the movements fall into place, which pieces offer protection to others and which are at risk. 

In short Scrivener has made me feel in control of my novel for the first time in a month! And surely that can’t be a bad thing?

Christopher John Eggett

Amputation/Disection Of A Novel (With Scrivener)

So I took the novel out last night and flicked through a few pages, found all the breaks I’d pencilled in and broken the novel up into these pieces in Scrivener.

The main selling point of scrivener for me as far as I can tell is the introduction of a file system not unlike the one used on computers. It is interesting that is is the most comfortable form of organization to me now - file and folders within each and a snippet of text at the core. It helps me see meaning in the novel as it stands, I could now happily write a short essay on the themes featured in my novel - I knew them before, but I didn’t know where their weight was.

A few thing occurred to me while chopping this novel up:

  • It’s pretty short
  • But some of those chapters are pretty long
  • I’ve still got a lot of work to do.

So night my plan is to flick through the MS again and take on the first chapter. I think Scrivener has a panel for adding “themes” to it, I might even plot a theme chart to see what I can lose (if indeed, I do need to lose something) - I’m sure some of the ideas should be dropped, it feels messy at the moment.

I’ll take on the first chapter, buff out the crassness, break it to my will and maybe even add a little worthy flourish.

Christopher John Eggett

Paralysed From The Wrist Down / A Christmas Carol

So, I finished a first draft. I gave #nanowrimo a go and managed to place a story on to paper of a required length to be considered a “novel”. 

That bit was pretty sweet.

On Christmas eve I dashed around all morning looking for a place which might ring bind such nonsense, sadly, for all my intensely local attempts I didn’t manage to find anywhere likely. 

In the first hour of the afternoon I was kindly asked by my Grandmother to “just pop out and see if you can find that new Annie Lennox CD”. I went to Tescos (I thought, foolishly it would turn out, that’s a safe bet for something my Grandmother had seen advertized). I wandered like the festively shell shocked through the worried faces and, upon finding nothing, attempted to extract myself speedily. 

And there is was, on the horizon (across the round about), in all its magnificent glory - Staples. 

Now, honestly, tell me, when have you been Glad to see Staples? 

I recklessly flung myself on and across the round-about (in a tinsome little yellow car - purring like the magnificently asmatic beast it is) and into the othr side of the retail park. 

Finally I burst into the shrine to office supply fetishism which is Staples. I fluttered onto the large long desk which a bemused plump dumbling girl looked back at me I asked: 

“Do you do binding here?” 

She glaces behind her to the row of 6 ring binding machines and suggest that, yes, it might be a service they provide. 

“And can I print here too?” 

The printer behind her warmed itself up with a sarcastic hum. She again made affirmative suggestions. 

A pang of fear struck me as I realised there was one more question: 

“And can I edit it now, before I mean? I mean -” I puffed out some air, apparently I’d not been breathing “- Can I make changes here and now?” 

She said yes, I handed over the dongle, thrusted it into the beige machine, she pushed a screen my way (like a lovers cheek turning to me) and I made my last ammendments: double spacing, footers, headers and page numbers and a title page. 

She started printing it, it would be ten minute “why do you go have a look around?” She said, clearly infering that I should calm down while doing it. So I did, not too far at first (after all, she could steal my novel!) But in a matter of 40 seconds I got over this and explored the store a little further. 

I wandered round the promotional junk, some of it making sounds. I circled the orangizational stationary, the clips (bull-dog clips, paper clips, coloured clips, clip clop clips) and the pins (they were mainly just pins). I travelled deeper until I found something worthwhile, v-ball 0.5 pens - my heart leapt - these pens are the only pens for scribbling with; draft should be chicken scratch and these pens are of the few who facilitate such messiness. I picked up a handful (in blue and light blue). 

I travelled deeper into the store and found an unknown treasure - and can you believe it was reduced to clear? A pen, a fine liner, in red - WITH - tiny, tiny adhesive post-it notes which come out the other end! Such wonders I never knew existed! I picked up one of these pieces of crap and began my trek back towards the “printing-zone” or whatever ghastly name it had been called. 

I came to the desk after dodging some staff members moving storage about (potentially in to storage). I looked at the wodge of paper (200-odd pages) bound with a mental spiral, a frosted grey front, a hard back card. 

I picked it up and dropped it on the desk with a “WHAM!” 

I was happy. I paid, I said thanks and sorry and gushed my way out the door i blasted in through. 

And now it sits here and I’ve edited a few pages, but I am not sure what to do next. The problems: 

1. Feel like crossing everything out, but I can’t decide if it will help or not. I feel it is often too early to assess the usefulness of certain scenes to the novel as a whole. 

2. I want to other things, such as: finish other novels (3 left hanging), write a new novel (one idea hanging in the ether) write an illustrated kids fiction with my girlfriend, write a parlimentary graphic novel (with a twist), paint, make money, play video games, get fit again, play with twitter, write a blog post. And in all this I cannot decide to do any of it.

Have you and words of wisdom to share?

Christopher John Eggett

Against Expectations: Rogue Character Actions In My #NaNoWriMo

This may be a common occurrence to other #NaNoWriMo participants - especially those who have taken part in previous years - but I have rarely experienced my characters doing unexpected things. Usually I know what is going to happen, or at least, what I think should happen.

Not in this case!

3 Unexpected Occurrences:

  1. My Hero is a liar. I had no idea. He lies to everyone he meets and seems intent on making his life more complicated than even I intended. I thought I had made it all quite socially awkward enough - but it seems not enough to his taste.
  2. My Hero decides at one point to go and have a drink and something to eat when he should really be heading to a certain location to have a confrontation as I intended him to! The bastard. It worked out well though, he bumped into someone else he didn’t want to see and, well, it was awkward and (hopefully) funny.
  3. No mobile phones do not exist. I cannot really say this was a conscious decision - it just kind of… happened. There seems to have been a focus on the development of one kind of technology over that of telecommunications.

There are others I am sure, but I believed when I started this that there was a set idea for this world and clear paths for those that inhabited it to follow.

Have you ever found yourself surprised by the actions of your characters?

Christopher John Eggett

A #NaNoWriMo Playlist

I am sure there are a few of these out there, and as I considered it a massive procrastination I refrained.

But at this point, with 28,353 word so far and 21647 to go, I am feeling quite confident and I think I can manage a little procrastination.

So here are the three (yes, only three) artists I am listening to while writing:


1. Mount Kimbie

Apparently this is a form of dub-step. I always thought dub-step had more of a relentless “Wub Wub Wub” to it; but here it is sparse and delicate. Enjoy Mount Kimbie’s Maybes

2. Fuck Buttons

An old staple of mine at work - you know, for when I need to bash out a press release or an article and Chris Moyles is on the radio or something equally obnoxious is happening in proximity to me. I present Fuck Button’s Lisbon Maru

3. Four Tet

Ah, Four Tet, Kiran Hebden never lets me down - or when he does - he does it in a way which is clearly “worthy” (definitely not pretentious at all!). A multi instrumentalist bringing a bit of intelligence to “intelligent dance” (I may have made the sub-genre “intelligent dance” up entirely). Please open your ear flap for Four Tet’s She Moves She

Have you got a Playlist for #NaNoWriMo? Leave me a comment, I’d love to find a few new earworms.

Christopher John Eggett

My Knitted Tortoise will be with me throughout all of #NaNoWriMo. He has come into my possession recently  and he is a very fine thing. It has been suggested he could be my muse and my mascot for the duration of #NaNoWriMo.

Knitted Tortoise Watches You Procrastinate

In other news: I have unhooked my twitter from this blog. I have realized it amounts to little more than randomly spamming myself. I have also been working on another project: My High Meadows - If you like pretty, take a look. 

And finally, take a look at this little fiction.

Christopher John Eggett

How I am Preparing for #NaNoWriMo

     How I am Preparing for #NaNoWriMo



1. One line a day for every day of writing. A reasonably popular tweet by myself here put it like this: http://twitter.com/CjEggett/status/26452036043

@dirtywhitecandy Good #NaNoWriMo tip: Plan ahead with one line for each day. 30 lines today is a giant ladder in November!less than a minute ago


All these lines aren’t the same kind of lines. Some are key phrases, some are first lines, some are merely descriptions of what I hope will happen in that day’s writing.

I can now see the points of contraction and release across the whole story arc - albeit very roughly.

2. Boxing off other projects. The process of “boxing up” out standing work consists of me collecting together something similar to a “report” or “assessment”. I look at the current work critically and gather the measure of the problems. I write these down. I then collect together ideas for each text and put them and add them to the “report”.

I then put it somewhere safe and out the way of my eyeline (certainly not within a few clicks of the desktop!) - the equivalent of getting a persona taller than you to put something on a high shelf (and taking away your ladder, and making sure you’re blacklisted at the ladder shop).

Currently I have the following which needs boxing up:

  • a short film script about two old men following a fridge into the German mountains
  • Novel currently called “The Correspondence of Philip Turnbuckle” (old, at about 30,00 words)
  • Novel currently titled “Mossy Treacles” (Newish, at about 20,000 words)
  • Poems (Scraps and drafts)



3. Stop Drinking So Much.

4.Procrastination. Write a blog post about how you’re going to prepare for #NaNoWriMo, maybe make a twitter list - and definitely get involved with hashtags on twitter like #litchat. Make sure your procrastinations look like real work, and if you must, make time for it instead of actually doing any preparation. After a nearly lethal does of procrastination you might start trying to justify it to yourself with irony and humor. Stop and listen to this:



Then forget about step 3 and return to step one.

Christopher John Eggett
Search
Navigate
Archive

Text, photographs, quotes, links, conversations, audio and visual material preserved for future reference.

Likes

A handpicked medley of inspirations, musings, obsessions and things of general interest.