alanajoli: (Default)
2008-04-17 11:23 am

Being Your Own Worst Enemy

I was having a conversation with my chiropractor yesterday and talking about my writing. In response to my saying something about how I was delaying on a project, she made the comment, "Well, don't be your own worst enemy."

This struck me as pretty sage advice. There are a lot of moments when I'm the only person standing in my way--and yet, I still stand there, just hanging out on the path to success and not going anywhere. (Or, at least, the path to accomplishing something with my day. Success is subjective, after all.) I've been trying really hard to follow [livejournal.com profile] amieroserotruck's excellent example, which I blogged about last week, in writing at least one sentence a day. To be honest, it's not a fun way to write. But rather than sit down and write more than a sentence or two, I read books I've been meaning to read, work on other projects, and generally do other things that get in the way of my progress. It's not that any of these are bad decisions--and everyone deserves a little time off now and again--but they are decisions that keep me in the struggling stage with the new WIP.

At any rate, today I'm going to start trying to stop being my own worst enemy, starting with getting on top of that project I talked to my chiropractor about. And who knows? Maybe tomorrow I'll write a whole page. ;)
alanajoli: (lady scribbler)
2008-04-08 12:35 pm

One Sentence a Day

So, [livejournal.com profile] amieroserotruck passed on some excellent advice the other day: no matter what, write one sentence a day. She apparently picked this up from Stephen King, but I'm still crediting her brilliance in keeping up with it and passing it along. Because of this new rule, I'm happy to say that I have *actually started* that elusive YA novel that I've been talking about for months and months. Hurrah!

In the mean time, I still have other projects that I'm working on--which is a good thing, because I just realized that I only have three outstanding invoices. While John Scalzi* says not to count your chickens before they're hatched (or to count your invoices before the checks get there), I do my darndest now to only work for companies (or other freelancers) that will, reliably, fulfill my invoices. Having only three outstanding means, well, that I'd better get back to work!

*If you are a writer who makes a living via writing--or are a writer who would like to--this essay is really excellent. My only quibble is that there's a difference to me between making a living writing and making a living writing what I want to write. I picked up Well Fed Writer: Financial Self-Sufficiency as a Freelance Writer in Six Months or Less from the library when it was recommended to me and discovered something about myself: I would rather make a living doing something *not* writing--like working at the library (which I enjoy) or going back into bookselling--than making a living writing memos and promotional materials for companies. I don't think that people who do are sell outs or anything like that--but like some of my freelance-artists friends can't imagine going back to a 9 to 5 job, I've found that I'd much rather have that steady job if it means I get to write what I want to write. I'm in a balanced place right now: writing half time, working a reliable job half time, and it seems to be working out okay for me (though I'm not making nearly the figures of Mr. Scalzi). I suspect work environment is all a matter of preference. And now I've completely blathered on when I meant to stop a whole paragraph ago--I've got work to churn out so I can submit invoices! :)
alanajoli: (Default)
2007-04-03 11:18 am

Name-meme mania

I got tagged! [livejournal.com profile] jenlyn_b posted this one on both her blog and on [livejournal.com profile] memegirls, and, having been tagged, I too must complete it. :)

Would a rose by any other name smell as sweet? If you're as name obsessed as we are, fill out this Meme Girls original meme and share your name- and your favorites- with the blogging world. Then tag five friends to do the same.

1. First Name: Alana

2. Middle Name: Joli

3. Name you go by: Mostly Alana now, but my college friends still call me Joli, as does everyone at karate

4. Name(s) your parents call(ed) you: Lani and Alana, depending on age

5. Other nicknames (past and present): Lani-chan, Jo, Ferrett (as a petting zoo show animal shared my name, much to the dismay of the keepers who called me on stage), Al (though that didn't last), Lana, Nala, Foster (my maiden name), and Boss (my favorite)

6. What did you call yourself when you were little?
I called myself Lani until kindergarten, then went to Alana. By fifth grade or so I had decided that not going by a nickname was boring and tried to invent them for myself, but would then forget what I wanted people to call me (which made for some very confusing church camp experiences). You'd think I would have learned my lesson from this, but I decided to go by my middle name in college, which has confused legions--legions I tell you!--of people over the years.

7. Were your parents considering any other names (that you know of) before they settled on yours?
I remember finding a slip of paper in a dictionary when I was a kid with a list of three girls' names and three boys' names on it: among the girls' names was Alana, so I assume that was the list of possibilities from early on. The only other name I remember from the list was Alexander.

8. What does your name mean?
From the Celtic, it means either beloved or charming (it's derived from a term of affection, but Alan means beautiful or fair, so it could go either way). It could also mean noble, harmony, or fair, depending on the babynames site you use. In Hebrew (Alona), it means from the oak tree. In Hawaiian, it means awakening.

9. Do any famous people share your name?
Alanis Morisette is pretty close. Lord Google tells me that there's an Alana Curry (she was in Terminator 3), singer-songwriter Alana Davis (who, now that I've discovered her, I'm rating her on launchcast), "Quake" record setter Alana Reid from girl 0f destruction, and TV actress Alana De La Garza (Law and Order and CSI Miami).

10. Can you pronounce your name backwards?
Ttobba Iloj Anala. Well, the original surname is tricky, but my vowel dominated given name is pretty easy.

11. Favorite girls' names: For characters (rather than my future children): Aisha, Naimh (pronounced Neve), Noor, Naveen, and Noemi. Apparently I have a thing for Ns.

12. Favorite boys' names: Again for characters: Gaelen, Willum, Saif, Suleimain (which has way too much baggage to ever use in a story, but I love the sound)

13. Favorite name you've ever read in a book: Door, actually, from Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, if only because it works so well in context

14. Favorite name from a TV show: At the moment, I'd have to go with Hiro, again as just a really fitting name for the character. Independent of context, I think the name Inara is lovely.

15. Favorite name for a dog/cat: I once had a plan to name four cats as references to the members of the Inklings, so I'd have Owen, Tollers, Chas, and Jack. But as I'm not likely to ever own four cats at once, this is probably best relegated to the realms of fiction.

WRITERLY BONUS QUESTION:
16. Favorite character name from one of your own books: It has to be Taru. I think because that name came from a more personal place than the others (though all of the names of the main characters--and plenty of the secondary characters--are inspired from someone rather than just the baby-name searches I've done for some of the others). When the Steampunk Musha Comic finally comes out, it'll be a tough call between Taru and Amura Hiroko, which is a name that was stuck in my head for weeks while I tried to figure out where I'd heard it--but a Google search was fruitless and I decided I must be meant to use it.

I tag:
[livejournal.com profile] slwhitman, [livejournal.com profile] mistborn, [livejournal.com profile] frost_light, [livejournal.com profile] egg_fu (either by cover identity or secret identity, as Mr. Fu chooses), and [livejournal.com profile] amieroserotruck, plus anyone else who hasn't been tagged yet and would like to be tagged! (I am assuming that, despite this coming from Meme Girls, the gentlemen are invited to play as well.)
alanajoli: (Default)
2007-02-08 02:04 pm

Pandemonium and Peter S. Beagle

First:
Pandemonium Books, an amazing game and bookstore in Cambridge, MA, is in serious danger of going out of business--but they have a plan! It involves t-shirts, people buying t-shirts, and needing 1000 people to care. These are folks who support local authors, allow gamers space in their basement, host regular author events, and are expanding their teen fiction section (which already features Holly Black, and, if they followed up on the recommendation I gave them last month, will also be carrying Jennifer Lynn Barnes very shortly).

I don't beg for people to support indie bookstores just because they're indies. (People who know my love for Barnes and Noble can attest to that, and I always figure folks should shop where they're the most comfortable and content shopping.) I only make a call out for support when the store is truly special. Pandemonium is that. The full post is at [livejournal.com profile] pandemonium_bks--today's entry.

Second:
I just found out from [livejournal.com profile] mistborn that Peter S. Beagle, writer of The Last Unicorn, didn't make nearly the money he was supposed to on the movie of the same title. His publisher is selling autographed copies of the new DVD here; these are the only sold DVDs that Beagle will get any money from. It's worth reading the site to get an idea of the whole situation.

Amie Rose Rotruck writes the most wonderful haiku reviews, and since I wanted to talk about Peter Beagle's Last Unicorn, I thought I'd link to it here.