All posts by Jason Fischer

Midnight Echo goes digital

Issue #6 of Midnight Echo has just been released into the ether as a digital download, available in various formats. This is the science-fiction/horror special, as edited by David Conyers, David Kernot and myself. Really happy with how our issue turned out, and now you can also experience the space-borne chills on your favourite reading device.

More info here: http://midnightechomagazine.com/products-page/midnight_echo/midnight-echo-issue-6/

(rumour has it that the preceeding issues may also get re-released in a downloadable format? Giddy-up)

Speaking of Midnight Echo, don’t forget about the AHWA Short Story and Flash Fiction contest. The winning stories will end up in a future issue of this magazine, as well as scoring a snazzy plaque and bragging rights.

Contest info is here: http://australianhorror.com/index.php?view=57

AHWA Short Story and Flash Fiction Competition 2012

Just a quick signal boost: Each year the Australian Horror Writers’ Association holds a short story and flash fiction contest, and this year I’m one of the judges. It’s a great little contest. Winners receive a cool engraved plaque, paid publication in the association’s magazine Midnight Echo, and bragging rights for a whole year 🙂

Entries are open till May 31st. More details here:

http://australianhorror.com/index.php?view=57

The Writer as a Parent

(Firstly, I should mention that, by the nature of this topic, it falls under Your Mileage May Vary)

During my recent writing sabbatical, I was handed a golden-ticket opportunity to take leave from my full-time job, and focus exclusively on my writing. Awesome stuff. Did the right thing, planned my goals and worked my butt off to reach them.

Not only did I get to work on my dream job, this sabbatical had another fantastic benefit. I was lucky enough to switch roles with my spouse and take on most of the parenting of our toddler. She got to increase her involvement in the workforce, while I spent more time with our gorgeous little boy. I will always be grateful for this experience, and will be a little sad when I put on my workclothes and return to the world of commuting and punchclocks.

Having said that, there were times when it was as hard as hell. I’ve never done anything like this before, and friends could testify that I can barely look after myself, let alone another human being 🙂 and I should state for the record that for two of these days, the boy was in child-care, to lock in a good window for my writing. So I only really had solo care of the boy for 3-4 days a week. I’ve got nothing but admiration for those parents who are not only full-time carers of the littlies 7 days a week, but work/study from home AND write fiction full-time. It astounds me, and having had a brief taste of their lives, it confirms how awesome and brave these people really are.

It is also a bit dangerous for one’s sanity. What you’ve got here is the double-whammy. Full-time writing is one of the most socially isolating career choices. Better people than me have gone bonkers after 6 months to a year of doing this, and being the primary carer of a kid is even worse. Cabin fever is a real possibility, and I’ll admit there came a point where I really struggled with the parenting aspect. There are so many resources for new parents, mother’s groups, the whole kit-and-caboodle. But coming in late to things and doing the Great Swap, it’s really easy to get a bit lost. Especially if you’ve been the auxilliary parent, and are now stepping up to the plate for the first time.

It’s awesome, being Daddy Day-Care. I would do it all over again, no hesitation. But here is some hard-won advice I would pass on to anyone thinking of combining writing with parenting for the first time:

Make use of your support networks – get a respite now and then. In this regard, your mother-in-law is an angel sent from heaven.

Look after your partner – they’re probably as worn out as you, especially if they’ve gone back to work from parenting. Culture shock! Do lots of nice things. Don’t forget this.

Don’t hold stuff in till you explode – if something is bothering/confusing/upsetting you about the kid-wrangling, try having a chat with your partner 🙂 chances are, It’s All Okay.

Don’t forget to be an adult – even if it’s once a month, arrange a catch-up with your friends and colleagues, sans kid. Just a bit of this stuff staves off the cabin fever!

Get a routine and stick to it – if you’re hopeless like me, get your better half to draft up a schedule. This helps dissolve all instances of “I don’t know what the hell I’m doing.”

Get out of the house more often – nuff said. Lots of great activities out there to keep you and kid happy 🙂

Don’t be afraid to just let the wheels fall off – There will be times when you have a filthy house, everything went wrong that day, and you may as well have stayed in bed. It’s all good! Write it off, try again the next day.

 So yeah, not saying I’ve been a Perfect Parent during this time. Hoo boy, far from it. I have dropped a lot of balls, doubted myself constantly and gone around the bend and back again. But now more than ever, I definitely appreciate what my spouse has been through since day 1. She is an absolute hero, no question! End result, one happy well-adjusted kid, two slightly frazzled parents. No matter what hats we are wearing at the time, that much hasn’t changed 🙂

Getting up with the high-tech!

So I finally uploaded the WordPress app onto the iPhone, hopefully this means I will update this blog a bit more often.

Things have been going well on the writing front. I’m currently working on the first draft of the next After the World novella with the working title “Better Red than Undead”. Some familiar characters reappear in areas including Florida and Cuba, so I’ve been madly doing some research to try and get all my facts right. Hopefully this will translate into a good book.

2012 is already starting to look busy! Once i square away BRTU, work starts on a cool secret project. More details when I can give them! Plus I’m contributing some time to the Australian Horror Writers Association over the coming year, including a judging role and possible work with the mentor program.

Finally, issue #6 of Midnight Echo has gone live, so make sure you check it out! Details via the AHWA site.

(ps – it is not recommended to blog via Siri, unless you want your posts to resemble a bad Babelfish translation from Swahili to English)

Slowcooking your Fiction?

With November all but gone, the final days of my writing sabbatical slip away like greased ferrets on meth. I’m pleased to say I achieved everything I set out to do. Now I have a little window of time to relax, work on a couple of other short projects, start to noodle around with the edits for “Papa Lucy and the Boneman” and generally pat myself on the back.

With November’s end, it also brings to a close NaNoWriMo, the annual scribble-fest that consistently generates universal love or hate. A lot of folks I admire do this every year, vomiting 50,000 words onto the screen in rapid-fire style. Participants include everyone from newbies to established authors, and by all accounts most folks get something out of it. Be it the community, the challenge, or the solid kick up the bum, something works for the participants.

I understand why folks do it, but I decline every year, even when buddies get all excited and revved up. To save time, I’ll point you to this post by the eloquent author-bot known as Alan Baxter, who says it far better than I can. For the record, I agree with pretty much all of his points (especially the, “if you do get something out of NaNoWriMo, hey, that’s just dandy” vibe): http://www.alanbaxteronline.com/2011/11/01/nanowrimo.html 

Don’t get me wrong, this isn’t a NaNoWriMo bash. Swift writing has its place. I think it’s absolutely useful (nay, essential) that anyone who wants to write professionally can pick up this skill. If an opportunity lands on your desk with a heavy thud and a ticking deadline, you need to be able to come up with the goods. Particularly when doing write-for-hire work (inc. the lucky sods who get involved with media tie-in work) excuses just don’t cut it. If you can’t produce good copy by the time it’s needed, future work will go to someone who *can* crank out work quickly. That’s just how it is.

At this point in my own writing trajectory, I’m lucky enough to have some perspective on this issue. For the purpose of this post, I’ll simplify the NaNoers and the NaNoNoters into two camps: those who Flash-Fry their writing, and those who get out the greasy old contraption from the bottom cupboard, the devotees of the Slowcook.

Sometimes, you absolutely have to fry the shit out of something. I’ve written several novellas and short stories to deadline, and have twice completed a Three-Day Novel race (30,000 words in a weekend!!). Typically much more editing is required on the back-end, but it can be done. If you’re organised and systematic about it, it’s not impossible, and you can still walk away with a quality product.  The Flashfry is a completely different discipline to the Slowcook, and every writer needs to be able to do this when the chips are down. These are the dudes who have groaning brag-shelves, when many the thwarted Slowcooker is still waiting for the stars to align properly, or “when I just have the *time*” etc).

Some examples of folks who’ve managed this successfully are Sean Williams (who famously wrote three or four books in one manic stretch) and Steve Savile. Steve can consistently turn out polished writing on any topic, and recently wrote a tie-in product in 19 days. 100,000 words in just under three weeks!!! An absolutely staggering output. And these aren’t sloppy products by any means, these are polished pieces completed by professionals, at a professional level. So it *can* be done, especially if that’s your job.

Then, there’s the Slowcook approach. You frequently hear of people who have taken *years* to write a single book. By all accounts, it took Jeff Vandermeer several years to work on his various Ambergris books (Finch etc). Ted Chiang has written a mere handful of short works over the last twenty years, and they’re all beautiful. These are all speculative fiction writers of course, I’m sure there’s a tonne of other writers wiser folks than me could point to and say “Slowcookers”. Often, new writers will take their first book and polish it down to bone, over several years and drafts. Then, joy of joys, new writer sells said book, with the proviso that book #2 is due in a scarily short time-window. So, you honestly have to be able to work to both of these methods.

So what’s the point of this ramble? Anyone who’s ever seen me eat can verify I love to fry me some food. But geez, it sure is nice to tuck into a slow-cooked casserole on a cold winter’s day. It’s been bubbling in the pot all day, and the meat virtually dissolves on your tongue. Heavenly! It sure is a beautiful thing to see a story where every word belongs, where the writer has the comfort of playing at artisanship, giving many slow hours to the work at hand. These are often the works of great resonance, that you can read over and over. By all means works written under pressure can *also* pull this off, don’t get me wrong. Some of my favourite books are masterpieces of the Flashfry method, and typically have a rattling pace, great opening hooks, and are leaner than whippets. 

So fret not, ye of the Flashfry and folk of the Slowcook! For your methods are not mutually exclusive! NaNo if you must, but do yourself a favour and try your hand at a good old Slowcook once in a while, and for heaven’s sake just keep at it, no matter which method you pick. Had a 500 word day? Awesome, long as the words rock. 5K? Kick-arse! Word-counts can often be a false economy, so don’t let the figures rob you of the joy of creation.

Good writing is all, so aspire to it, no matter how you run your kitchen 🙂

The Writer’s Credo

May I always stay hungry.

May I always realise that this is as legitimate a career as any.

May I never be content with what I’ve achieved.

May I remember that this is meant to be fun.

May I never EVER step on the dreams of a newbie.

May I never lose the unbridled joy of creation, even in the face of a punishing schedule.

May I never fall into the twin pits of conceit and envy.

May I keep my pride in a match-box and my hubris locked up under the stairs.

May I be just organised enough to run a small business, chaotic enough to enjoy it 🙂

May I never overlook the positive power of sleep, productive routines, and eating properly.

May I remember to occasionally peel away from the keyboard and mingle with other humans.

May I succeed at this mad enterprise, so I can repay every single ounce of faith placed in me by my loved ones!

Amen!

On the Completion of Project Lucy

Once more, apologies for the extended blog silencio. While I’ve been on this writing sabbatical, I’ve done my best to cut out the typical faffing around online that I’ve often passed off as “writing” and occasionally “research”. Bullshit, all of it 🙂 Seeing as Arts SA did the right thing by me, I have tried to do the right thing by them. Which has meant head down, bum up, and cranking out the words. Everything else is procrastination and best avoided if you’re serious about becoming a word-warrior 🙂

So, after three and a bit months down in the word-mines, I emerge triumphant.  The first draft of “Papa Lucy and the Boneman” is now complete. I stand with one foot planted on the defeated Project Lucy, wiping off sweat and the occasional adjective.  

What happens next, you may ask? Well, there’s about 100,000 words that need to be taken to with a cricket bat. I’m in the process of enlisting a handful of trusted friends to help with beta-reading. Once comments come back, well me and that novel are going to have a little chat. In a room with no windows. I might be taking in a phone book. Don’t make me spell it out.

In all seriousness, there’s still plenty of work to be done. One of the best pieces of writing advice I ever received was from the legendary Cat Sparks. She said that far too often, writing is rushed out half-cooked, and not allowed enough time to ferment. So yes, the work continues, as I do my very best to craft resonance and beauty into this story. With each pass I hope to pick up inconsistencies, continuity errors, and somehow work up the courage to kill my darlings. But it’s probably a little too soon to jump back in just yet. Couple weeks at least, I’m sick of the sight of that bloody thing!

But the good news is, I’m a couple of months ahead of schedule. There’s a semi-embargoed project that I’m about to start, and I hope to drop some juicy details soon. Have also put some feelers out for a couple of things, and hopefully I’ll land a bit of write-for-hire work in the window of time that has just opened. But overall, I’m relieved that I can cross this one off the list. There was a time when I thought I’d lost my novel-writing mojo and would be cranking out weird short stories forever!

Apart from that, a day or two of down-time, family, videos and reading, and walking around in the sunlight like a myopic cave-Fisch. Then, straight back into things.

No rest for the wicked!

Your pal,

The Fisch.

Confessions of a Pantser

So, I’m officially a little over half-way through my writing sabbatical. How’s it all going? Very, very well indeed!

Have stayed on target thus far, and with this head down and bum-up approach I’ve just reached the 75% complete mark. So, I’m slightly ahead of the game which is nice. This should allow me ample time at the end to work on revisions, quietly hunt out beta-readers, and just generally knock the cobwebs out of this story.

In writing parlance you may have heard of two types of writers, outliners and pantsers (ie flying by the seat of your pants). Definitely a 100% pantser here. Apart from my zombie novellas (which were planned and researched to the hilt) I approach longer projects with a very fluid outlook. I know the beginning, some of the middle and maybe the end, but the rest is a horrid mess, one I wade into with gusto.

And I’m glad of this.

The first reason being that my process (your mileage may vary of course) runs on the very best of fuzzy logic. Once I hit that sweet spot where words flow and hours vanish, my mind quite happily skips away from the ordained path. Sometimes it just doesn’t work, but other times my subconscious brings me the real story, what I actually need to be telling. With a loose enough outline, I can make the most of these sporadic outbursts from my opium-addled muse, who flutters in occasionally, leaves feathers and shit everywhere, and sometimes comes up with the goods.

So a few well-justified lateral arabesques as they occur to me, constant revision and editing to make sure the continuity is up to scratch, and this is basically how I write my first and second drafts simultaneously. If this were a building, I would have most of the framework up, but boy oh boy, the rest is a dog’s breakfast. I’ve got wires and shit everywhere, the plumbing is visible, and the builders have left cigarette butts and dirty magazines all over the place. It’s an embarassment. But if I step back a little, and imagine how it’s going to end up, well I’m sure glad the architects agreed to that 11th hour amendment. The place just wouldn’t look the same without that command tower and the revolving gazebo, and just because I didn’t think of these things when I first conceived of the house, doesn’t mean they don’t belong.

But yes. Flying by the seat of my pants means that a driving element of this story just sort of slid in by accident, because it needed to be there all along. This has completely affected the relationships between a group of antagonists, one of the POV characters, and has forced a complete revamp of the setting itself, all  for the better. Some great epic moments have arisen from the arrival of this particular gizmo, and I’ve managed to import some much needed gravitas and actual fantasy into something that could have ended up as a bad Mad Max knock-off with token wizards. Nope, my half-arsery has steered me through these troubled waters, and instinct saves the day!

So Book 3 of 4 is done and dusted, and it’s time to bring this bad boy home. See you on the other side!

Your pal,

The Fisch.