As I’d suspected, I didn’t get much writing done this weekend, leaving me approximately one day behind in NaNo goals.

I would hope to catch up this week, but that might be difficult, given my plans and the possible disruption made evident by reading my editor’s Twitter stream:

Kristin_Daly: Reading c/e’d MS of @dpeterfreund’s For Darkness Shows the Stars. Goodness, I absolutely love this book. Romantic, heartbreaking, beautiful.

When I get my copy edits, those will be priority number one.

The rest of the weekend was pretty uneventful. Queenie is in a nap-resistant phase. She spent most of Saturday afternoon loudly and crankily insisting that she didn’t need to take a nap, but this mama does not take no for an answer, and we had “quiet time in the crib.” Then, she slept the whole way to a family party we attended in Virginia. She was lovely and charming the whole time, though, and played beautifully with her 2.5 year old cousin, who was the only other baby at the party. I think she was quite the hit.

On Sunday, she had a three hour nap, but I think she was still tired out from the party and the late bedtime the night before. We spent most of Sunday afternoon driving around town looking for a new pool floatie for her, since we tore a hole in her other one. Q loves her pool floatie above all things, except possibly Rio. But then it ended up raining, so we wouldn’t have made it into the pool, anyway.

Wild times Chez Diana, huh?

Feeling unproductive, once we got home I roped Sailor Boy into a discussion about how best to display some of the beautiful artwork we have collected but never use (we have four beautiful paintings chronicling our lives together that were a wedding present). We progressed as far as making newspaper hanging guides and taping them up on different walls of the house and deciding we didn’t like their configuration.

Which brings me back to writing. Sometimes, work is being done even if the word meter isn’t climbing. I know that goes against the spirit of NaNoWriMo style drafting, but one must also remember that NaNo is about writing for the fun of it — it was designed by hobbyists — and occasionally, this business is not fun.

So, while my girl was resisting admitting that boy was she cranky and needed to take a nap, I was resisting admitting that however cute the scene I’d just written for my WIP, it took the characters in a direction I wasn’t entirely comfortable with. I have long known that, nine times out of ten, “writer’s block” is a name for having taken my characters and a story in the wrong direction. Hence — backtrack. So though my NaNo counter says I only wrote ~500 words or so this weekend, when you consider what I deleted, I’m still moving forward with my story.

And while Sailor Boy and I didn’t get those pictures up on the wall, we did achieve something: figuring out where the pictures DIDN’T belong. It’s okay to try to do something and fail. I put something in my book that wasn’t working at all, that was holding me back from writing the story that it was supposed to be. So I took it out. To the outsider who sees our blanks walls, it looks like we haven’t hung our paintings. To the outsider who sees my wordcount, it looks like I haven’t been writing. But I know I’ve been moving forward.


Sad face. I only did 900 words yesterday, which means I’m falling behind on my little NaNoWriMo graph thingy. You guys, it’s telling me I won’t finish until September 2. Oh, the horror.

In better news, I think I solved some of my problems. To start with, I started typing in a different name for my male main character. He’s decided to be someone else entirely. This is not without precedent for me. I also put in a big bracket (i.e., a [FIX THIS LATER] bracket) and kept typing, which helped some, too.

I don’t know how much I’ll actually get done this weekend. After all, Queenie is babbling away beautifully in the next room, and Rio needs to get a long walk in the park, and I wanted to go to the farmer’s market with my best friend, and there’s a party tonight, and we STILL have babyproofing to do…

I think if I can manage to do a few hundred words a day this weekend, I’ll be okay. I just have to make up for it next week. Somehow.

Have a great weekend. See you Monday.


First off, I did 2.5k on my WIP yesterday, bringing my NaNo total up to 8127. Snoopy dance a go-go.


8127 / 60,000


It’s going pretty well. I still totally love my heroine, and think she could happily stand alongside the likes of Veronica Mars, LaDonna Batiste-Williams, Gemma Teller Morrow, and Gloria Pritchett. Her love interest… eh. I think he’s taking me a little while to warm up to. Which is okay. After all, I wasn’t even thinking about Poe at this point in Secret Society Girl.

Though I’m not doing a four-book series this time. Hmmmm…

I think it’s his name. I’m having the most terrible problems with his name!

Also, while shopping this morning,  accidentally stumbled across a killer Halloween costume (for $6.99), and since I’ve been lobbying Sailor Boy pretty hardcore to let me throw a Halloween party this year, I knew it had to be mine. It called to me from across a crowded thrift shop.

Oh, frocks.

And speaking of surprises, look what came in the mail yesterday:

These are the Simplified Chinese Secret Society Girl & Under the Rose I sold back in the summer of 2007. Two. Thousand. Seven. When I was a simple single gal and Queenie was just a sparkle in Sailor Boy’s eye and Rio was just a sparkle in the eye some Toller in Canada. When there was no such things as killer unicorns and I lived in a one-room apartment and almost no one had a smartphone.

Publishing is a strange, strange business. Anyway, here they are, and man, are they gorgeous!

These are the headings. I don’t know if it says “Under the Rose” or “Diana Peterfreund”. But whatever it says, it does so with thorns!

These are the little widgets on every page. The one on the bottom is Secret Society Girl, and I like how it kind of looks like a tattoo — you know, to match their tattoos. The one on the top is Under the Rose. Note the little high-heeled ankle boots. I guess that’s to denote it’s chick lit? So adorable!

I love them. I hug them. I wish I read Chinese, or that I knew someone who did.

These are my first foreign editions to utilize different covers from their U.S. counterpart. What do you think? The black makes ‘em kind of badass, huh?

I wrote over 2800 words yesterday, which is a nearly inhuman amount for me, bringing my total for the month (and my new WIP) up to:


5555 / 60,000


Yay, me!

I hope I’m not jinxing myself here, but I think this book is going to be really fun to write. It is, I’ve discovered, not only frockalicious, but also bantertastic. I’m also being very laissez-faire with my drafting process. This is the first time in years I’ve written something that hasn’t had a sale attached to it, so there’s the marvelously freeing possibility that no one will ever ever have to read this.

So. Much. Fun.

Back to it.

One of my favorite episodes of The West Wing is a Thanksgiving episode called “Shibboleth” in which speechwriter Sam (Rob Lowe), bored with writing a Thanksgiving Day proclamation, decides the whole pilgrim thing would be better off as a new action-adventure TV series.

Sam: Over three and a half centuries ago, linked by faith and bound by a common desire for liberty, a small band of pilgrims sought out a place in the New World where they could worship according to their own beliefs… and solve crimes.

Toby: Sam…

Sam: It’d be good. By day, they churn butter and worship according to their own beliefs, and by night they solve crimes.

This has become somewhat of a meme in my house, to Sailor Boy’s eternal consternation. I have a habit, when falling in love with a character, to attempt to recast the entire show/film/what-have-you into a show starring whatever (usually secondary) character I’ve fallen in love with as a plucky detective sort.

Perhaps it’s my longstanding obsession with Veronica Mars.*

So when I went with my friend to see New Moon, this was the conversation we had:

Me: I like that Jessica person.

Her: Yes, she was very funny.

Me: I think I would have liked it so much better if the movie was about her. Ooh, her and the Dakota Fanning Vampire. Solving crimes.**

 

And, last month as Sailor Boy and I glommed two seasons of Modern Family:

Me: My favorite family in this is Jay and Gloria and Manny.

Him: Yes, they’re definitely the most compelling.***

Me: I want more Gloria. I want a whole show about Gloria. Solving crimes.


And then, even more recently, while watching the first season of Treme:

Me: I love LaDonna.

Him: You certainly have a type, don’t you?

Me: I want a show with LaDonna and Gloria from Modern Family. Solving Crimes.


And then, last night, as we were re-watching the first season of Sons of Anarchy in anticipation of the third season’s imminent DVD release:

Me: Man I forgot how much I loved Gemma. She’s such a bad-ass.

Him: Oh, here it comes.

Me: I want a show where Gemma –

Him: and LaDonna and Gloria get together

Me: Yes! And solve crimes!

Him: (turns up the volume)


Poor Sailor Boy. No wonder on one of our recent evening walks with Rio and Q, which I often use to whine about my writing brainstorm, he asked me why I never write one of these unadulteratedly badass characters I’m always talking about.

A few days later, I got the idea for my newest WIP. On August 1st, I started it.

It’s about a confident, witty, powerful, decisive, bad-ass…

…solving crimes.

________

* Though it should be noted, I don’t generally watch the shows where they solve crimes. NCIS, L&O, Bones, Monk, Closer, Psych, etc. etc. Nope. I don’t watch any procedurals, even the medical ones like House. And I don’t read mysteries. I never read Nancy Drew, even. But I loved Veronica Mars. (And the X-Files, though I guess the whole point of that show was that they never really solved the crimes.)

** Actually, I recently read a book like that. And it was AWESOME. And its sale should be announced any old day now.

***It should also be noted that we love all the families on Modern Family. We feel especially bonded with Mitch and Cam, since Q is just about Lily’s age, and how well do we remember everything they’re going through. Also, though I’m not proud to say this, I act a lot like Claire. I’m neurotic and obsessed with Halloween. Well, the Hallowween part I’m very proud of.

Because Lenore is totally persuasive, she got me to release the flap copy for my 2012 release, FOR DARKNESS SHOWS THE STARS, as the launch of her Dystopian August series. In the interview, I talk more about FOR DARKNESS than I ever have before.

Read the whole interview there, and the flap copy below.

Can. Not. Wait. For 2012.

__________

Generations ago,  a genetic experiment gone wrong—the Reduction—decimated humanity, giving rise to a Luddite nobility who outlawed most technology.

Eighteen-year-old Luddite Elliot North has always known her place in this caste system. Four years ago Elliot refused to run away with her childhood sweetheart, the servant Kai, choosing duty to her family’s estate over love. But now the world has changed: a new class of Post-Reductionists is jumpstarting the wheel of progress and threatening Luddite control; Elliot’s estate is floundering; and she’s forced to rent land to the mysterious Cloud Fleet, a group of shipbuilders that includes renowned explorer Captain Malakai Wentforth—an almost unrecognizable Kai. And while Elliott wonders if this could be their second chance, Kai seems determined to show Elliot exactly what she gave up when she abandoned him.

But Elliot soon discovers her childhood friend carries a secret—one that could change the society in which they live…or bring it to its knees. And again, she’s faced with a choice: cling to what she’s been raised to believe, or cast her lot with the only boy she’s ever loved, even if she has lost him forever.

Inspired by Jane Austen’s PERSUASION, FOR DARKNESS SHOWS THE STARS is a breathtaking romance about opening your mind to the future and your heart to the one person you know can break it.

Welcome, August, with your hot, muggy weather and zero holidays and hopefully lots and lots of work. Where am I on my goals?

Writing: Was supposed to finish a short story (check) and start a new proposal (checkity check). This month: Campnanowrimo. And copyedits on For Darkness Shows the Stars.

Home:

  • finish cleaning out my closet (I have two big boxes to donate/trash but I bet I can get another one)
  • get rid of the furniture we don’t use anymore, (including two dressers)
  • finish babyproofing as Q grows more mobile by the day (she’s crawling with her belly up now, and pulling herself up on anything she can reach) Made some headway on this, but are you ever really “finished”?
  • put in the rocks around the AC units near the patio
  • clean out the flower garden and replant
  • create an herb garden I’ve decided this isn’t happening this year.
  • Do something about the vines/weeds taking over our yard.

No new goals here this month.

Blog: I blogged eleven times in July. This seems to be an ongoing average for me, looking back over the months. I would like to bump it up a bit, but it probably won’t be this month, given all the work I have to do.

Quality Time with SB: Alas. More evening sofa sitting. We’re so dull. (Otherwise known as: we have an infant.) Seriously, the one time we attempted to go out and have an adventure, the place was closed and we ended up at the mall. Where we bought some new clothes, but still. This month, our poison of choice was Treme, which I loved.

On the flip side, it’s more like the nature of our quality time has changed. We spend a lot of time as a family now — hanging out on the floor watching Q cruise around and learn to play with things and make noises that could almost be mistaken for words is really entertaining. Also, Q is great at restaurants. There was a time there, around 6 months, when she wasn’t old enough to sit in a high chair and eat real food, but wasn’t young enough to sleep through the whole thing in her sling — and that made restaurants tough. But now she’s back in the swing of things charming every waiter in town.

Rio: Poor Rio. We’ve had some outlandish heatwaves in DC this summer, which means that long walks for Rio are definitely out of the question. She’s gotten in some good swimming time and a few longer hikes when weather permits, but mostly it’s quick runs to the park with her tennis ball so she doesn’t pass out from this heat.

Garden: Drowning in tomatoes. Basil doing great. Have some peppers sprouting. Mint hanging on. I got one squash before the heat killed my squashes.

And the big list:

  1. Revise/finish my contracted novel.
  2. Write short story #1
  3. Write short story #2
  4. Write short story #3
  5. Write short story #4
  6. Write essay #1
  7. Write new proposal #1
  8. Write new proposal/book #2
  9. Go to one writing-related conference.
  10. Walk my dog.
  11. Plant a garden.
  12. Make sure I spend quality time with Sailor Boy.
  13. Do at least two home improvement projects.
  14. Cut our budget.
  15. Read at least one new novel per month.
An Austin DesignWorks Production