Thursday, December 12, 2024

Research

Writing fiction sometimes brings you to search for some really random things online. To give you an idea of what that looks like, here's a sample list of 20 keywords/phrases I've googled while writing Intersection: 

  1. Last wishes
  2. Power/energy rationing
  3. Primal instinct
  4. Anatomy of a lamp
  5. Can emotional pain cause physical pain
  6. Parts of a camera
  7. Not Chinese enough
  8. Trees in Selangor
  9. Hindu funeral rites
  10. Sound that a walkie-talkie makes
  11. Concept of letting go
  12. Sambar recipe
  13. Wind movements
  14. Dementia in the elderly
  15. Follow the light
  16. Name for pathway in front of shops
  17. Scents and memories
  18. Characteristics of a whirlwind
  19. Describing hands
  20. Are vampires considered undead


Update

 I've got some significant progress to report, guys! 

I think I'm finally (x 1,000) wrapping up the story arcs for Radhesh and Audra. I've faced so much dilemmas with regards to both their stories, and it's been really tough figuring everything out. But I think I've finally sorted out most issues by now. 

And and and... 

I think I've also decided on the ending paragraphs for this novel. It's a little different from the original way I'd concluded things in the version I submitted to Fixi Novo in the past, but I think I'm happier with this new version because: 

  1. It has hope in it, and this has always been a major theme that I feel strongly about. You will see it peeking out from nearly everything I write. 

  2. It contains some reflection in the narration, and ideally, that's what I'd like to direct my readers to do.

  3. It rounds up the theme of memories nicely, which is the main topic that this novel is zooming in on. 
I feel extra excited now that this is in place. I can't wait to let you read it. 

There's still plenty more to add/remove/review/revise for this novel, but it feels like more things are taking shape lately, and I'm glad. 

On another note, I noticed lately a fellow contender of mine from the Fixi Novo contest has already gotten his novel published. I am so envious! But of course, I'm sure it's a huge accomplishment for the author concerned and he deserves every bit of the success that he can now enjoy. 

I only hope that I will get to the same point too, and hopefully soon!

Just yesterday, I saw a post on one of the Facebook writers' groups that I'm in where someone posted about her book appearing in the shelves of Staff Picks in a bookstore next to other famous authors and how she felt about it. Such a huge moment for an author. 

I wish that I could reach this point too. 

But I know that even when I do, it's another thing altogether whether anyone will actually pick my book off the shelf at all. And that will be another source of anxiety in itself.

Nevertheless, just the chance of getting published, and having a novel to my name is such a thrilling thought. 

An old friend of mine asked me in the past once whether I like sharing my writing with others. I do sometimes, and yet, I also don't. So I'm still afraid you're all going to hate my novel, but well, I'm still at it. 

And hopefully someone, some of you, somewhere, will like it. 




Thursday, December 5, 2024

Dismal

 It has been both a fruitful and unproductive week. 

I am now free from the shackles of paid assignments for the time being and can now, supposedly, focus my brain power on writing. But I've fallen sick again with the flu. And my eldest son is unwell too, meaning that he is home and not at school, thus derailing my plans to savour some peace and quiet in the mornings to write.  

In the mysterious world of The Novel, some new scenes have gotten fleshed out, while some old ones have gotten refined. Story arcs are diverging. The plot is rounding off in some corners. 

But plot holes still abound, and I struggle to feel okay with the rationale for many things in the story. I doubt myself and I do it a lot. I wonder endlessly whether the reader will buy the story, will even bother to plod through it to see it to the very end. 

However, the most painful part of all of this is that I recently realised that it's already been about A YEAR since I began working on this novel. And with this awareness comes a sense of awe... and also alarm. 

When will this stupid novel ever be done? 

If memory hasn't failed me, I believe it was on a Sunday morning that I laid down that very first scene that eventually became the beginnings of Intersection

My youngest son was ill that day, and so my husband and I had agreed that we'd split duties and that he'd take our eldest son to church while I stayed home with the sick one. 

And so, after my youngest son had finally drifted back to sleep, I found myself free for awhile. A very rare occurrence for a mother like me. So I of course did one of those things I love most in life: I decided to write. 

I was aware, at the time, of a novel writing contest being run by a local publisher known as Fixi Novo, and thought fleetingly to myself that perhaps it might be an opportunity to try and submit something. I didn't really expect to win, but I told myself that perhaps the whole experience of fleshing out a novel would be a good thing anyway. Plus, with a definite deadline in place, maybe I'd actually FINISH SOMETHING for once. 

Well, here's the thing: I did submit for the contest BUT I didn't actually finish writing the novel. I mean, I did put in a concluding scene/chapter in it, but there were LOTS of MISSING PARTS in between. 

YES, you read that right, dear Reader. That is really what happened. And this is the first time I'm admitting it here out in the open. 

Nevertheless (and for this I am eternally grateful), the kind organisers of this contest somehow did me the huge honour of still reading my story, and I was actually shortlisted as one of the finalists in the running to win the contest. But of course, now that you know what the actual state of my manuscript was at the time, I'm sure it would not surprise you at all that I most definitely did not win. 

Something else quite unexpected and charitable that the organiser (ie publisher) did for those of us finalists was that they passed along our contact to another local publisher who is open for submissions. On the one hand, it felt somewhat like a breach of privacy, since our express consent had not been sought for this sharing of our contact information. Then again, in this instance, maybe I'm kind of thankful for this happening because it has given me another chance at finding a home for Intersection. 

For those of you who haven't read my previous posts, basically the gist of it all is that this other publisher has expressed interest in seeing my full manuscript after I had passed along some sample chapters to them to read. 

So I am beyond elated at this opportunity because it's the closest I've ever been to having someone consider publishing fiction that I've written. Yet I am self-sabotaging everything by not being able to conclude the writing of this novel in its entirety. 

Sigh. 

"How far are you from being done?" My husband has asked me on more than one occasion. I have never been able to answer very definitively. 

Perhaps I'll never be done. The sheer fear of having worked on something so extensively that is ultimately worthless continues to haunt me. Also the fear of having hoped on the publisher being open to my work only to have them slam the door on me once I actually have something substantial to show. 

I don't know. They call it Impostor Syndrome. I would term it more like the Infirmity Of A Lifetime. 

Well, anyway, that's that. Now you know something you didn't before about this novel and its background/beginnings. 

For now, I'm still keeping the light on and allowing Audra, Radhesh, Chen Hao and Mastura to keep me company. (Not to mention Alfian, Putri and Dahlia too). But I hope they divulge their personal secrets to me soon because trying to guess at what their lives and inner feelings are all about is killing me. 

I know this blog is mostly an exercise in talking to myself in order to stay motivated to FINISH THIS THING, but if you're out there, and you bothered to read all this gibberish, then thank you from the very bottom of my heart. I'm really glad you came. 

I'll do my best to make it worth your while. 

I'm still working on it. 

I'm still writing.