Topic: Blackjack temporarily suspended

Hello wonderful people of TNBW,

This note is for those who have been reviewing my novel, Blackjack Interstellar, and may be wondering where’d it go.

I’ve received so many useful reviews over the last little while (for which I’m mega-super-grateful, you guys absolutely rock!). But I’m struggling to keep up (because life).

So I’ve temporarily deactivated the chapters to (a) give me a chance to keep up, (b) so you aren’t spending your precious time on versions that may have become absolete.

I’ll reactivate it all as soon as I catch up over the next week or so.

I don’t know if I’ll repost the first few chapters for points again, we’ll see. I won’t be rewriting it heaps, just adressing some of the holes and clarifying some ambiguities. It’s my first novel so my ambitions are pretty low. I’m doing it for fun and to learn a thing or two.

I’ll still be reviewing other people’s stuff as and when I can.

Thanks heaps guys.

Much love

A.

Re: Blackjack temporarily suspended

Oi! Quit revising or it'll never get writ.

Re: Blackjack temporarily suspended

Kdot wrote:

Oi! Quit revising or it'll never get writ.

Hehe, It's practically already writ. My first draft is 60,000+ words (I reckon the final might be 70K all up at most, because I'm planning to add a few extra chapters). But it's a 60,000-word-long mess. So this is the part where I actually do need to revise  smile

Re: Blackjack temporarily suspended

I look forward to its return. Happy editing!

Don

Re: Blackjack temporarily suspended

Kdot wrote:

Oi! Quit revising or it'll never get writ.

I had the same thought when I saw the sixth version of--Chapter One.

6 (edited by Temple Wang 2019-01-29 08:49:49)

Re: Blackjack temporarily suspended

Rachel (Rhiannon) Parsons wrote:
Kdot wrote:

Oi! Quit revising or it'll never get writ.

I had the same thought when I saw the sixth version of--Chapter One.

I’ll buy this as the prevailing notion, but it kinda depends on your objective.  I follow it now, but I didn’t in the beginning, and I don’t regret a single revision. 

When I was first learning to write, I revised ad nauseum as I got feedback from people who were more skilled than I was.  I used the effort as a concentrated way to hone my craft.  Once I got to the point where my craft was satisfactory and I could write something decent after a few passes, I stayed more with the rule of “just keep writing” that everyone touts.  I’m not saying the way I did it was right, but it worked for me, so I say, if you want to keep honing an isolated Chapter as a means of “improving your craft” then, you go girl.

If revising becomes a means of procrastination, that’s different, of course

For writers that are more disciplined and that aim to spend that 10,000 hours that it takes to master a craft, then spending a few weeks writing the same Chapter over and over ain’t no big deal.  So, while I agree generally that you can’t let revising be sand in your gears, when you are in the process of learning to write - you tackle it whichever way works for you, ‘cause no one can blame you for trying to “get the words right.”

I have a copy of a “Farewell to Arms” that has Hemingway’s alternative endings.  There are 39 of them (though 47 were found in his archives).  One of his most famous quotes is:  “I wrote the ending of ‘Farewell to Arms’ 39 times before I was satisfied.”  But that’s not exactly accurate. It’s a misquote from an interview, and what’s missing is the most important part (in bold below):

Hemingway: It depends. I rewrote the ending of Farewell to Arms, the last page of it, 39 times before I was satisfied.
Interviewer: Was there some technical problem there? What was it that had stumped you?
Hemingway: Getting the words right.

— Ernest Hemingway, The Paris Review Interview, 1956.

7 (edited by Alza 2019-01-29 17:32:39)

Re: Blackjack temporarily suspended

It’s actually version 7 now smile

I agree with both opinions. But I’ve already written about 85% of the story. I found this website after I started editing.

The last three chapters I left for “dessert”. To reward myself for putting in the hard yards. The rest was written “in the dark” on “pure inspiration.”

I told my friends last year that I’d finish the first draft by January and would then rewrite it 27 times. We laughed, but I was kind of serious. It’s my first attempt at long-form fiction and it is very much about learning at this stage.

I don’t intend to try and publish after the 27 times either. Not until I’ve repeated the process 3 or 4 times with other stories (should that ever happen). smile