RSS

Tag Archives: dancing

Author Spotlight no.104 – Jinn Nelson

Complementing my daily blog interviews, today’s Author Spotlight, the one hundred and fourth, is of portal fantasy author Jinn Nelson.

Jinn Nelson started writing fiction at age seven, on a computer with a screen bigger than she was.

She sat down one night, without any clear goal in mind, and wrote a heartwarming story about two sisters finding the perfect gift. She wrote it in multiple points of view.

At sixteen, she wrote the first draft of Fear the Hunted while also studying medical transcription. After high school, she married and lived quite happily in northern California, a self-employed medical transcriptionist until she met a group of writers online and began writing fiction again.

She now lives and writes in Wisconsin with her husband and three cats. She is a voracious reader, particularly of Celtic mythology, Steampunk, and portal fantasy. She also enjoys knitting, rock climbing, loose-leaf tea, zombies, dancing, and the Internet. Her favorite country is Scotland.

And now from the author herself:

Hemingway talked about the well of writing, a deep place within fed by springs deeper still. Many ideas are down in my well, and they rise to the surface as they grow and are ready to be realized. The story begins to align, as if nudged into place by some Hand. Some days, that nudge feels less like divine inspiration and more like a devious, cockeyed muse sent to torture me. Eventually, though, the ideas do come together and a book is the result.

Fear the Hunted, my first published work, began as images growing larger and louder with time: a girl with a mysterious mark; a young boy with blond hair shooting a bow and arrow; a ragged group sprinting away from a burning city. When enough images collected that scenes began to show themselves, I began writing them.

When she found out I was writing, my grandmother gave me a stack of her old Writer’s Digest magazines; I studied Nancy Kress’s articles on fiction, then would test out my new knowledge on the next scene. The book became a collection of writing exercises that were all connected. I followed the story to its conclusion, did a revision, but my taste told me it wasn’t really done yet. I stored it in my closet, where it aged for a few years, while I grew up and gained more skill.

Eventually, I remembered that story. It began keeping me up at night, wanting to be truly finished. I went back to studying, learning from masters like James Scott Bell and Stephen King. The last stretch of revisions felt like a descent into madness.  One of the scariest things about writing is that you don’t know what you’re doing. Not really. That may be why so many people begin stories but never finish them. There’s an element of running blind, of groping ahead for the next thing, not knowing what it will be or what to do with it when you find it. Gold is always there, if you look for it long enough. Most people, I think, stop after they get tired of looking, just before they’d have found it. Because it’s inconvenient to write. You have to create pain and live through it with your characters until it’s resolved. And if you’re stuck on one scene for six months that effort turns into a marathon. And it feels like one. You just have to keep going, hoping you’re not making a huge, 27-page mistake. Toward the end I barely slept, as the final scenes played constantly in my head. And then, finally, it all came together. I finished. That day was like Christmas.

I wandered around, staring at nothing in particular. I ate a whole pineapple pizza in celebration. Next day, reading James Scott Bell’s Plot and Structure, I could almost hear him congratulating me: “Great job, kid. You finished a book. Now get to work on the next one.”

You can find more about Jinn and her writing via… www.jinnnelson.com, www.jinnikins.wordpress.com and Twitter: @jinnm.

The blog interviews will return as normal tomorrow with non-fiction (Mayan) author Jeanine Kitchel – the four hundred and thirty-eighth  of my blog interviews with novelists, poets, short story authors, biographers, agents, publishers and more. A list of interviewees (blogged and scheduled) can be found here. If you like what you read, please do go and investigate further. And I enjoy hearing from readers of my blog; do either leave a comment on the relevant interview (the interviewees love to hear from you too!) and / or email me.

You can sign up to receive these blog posts daily or weekly so you don’t miss anything… and follow me on Twitter where each new posting is automatically announced. You can also read / download my eBooks and free eShorts at SmashwordsSony Reader StoreBarnes & NobleiTunes BookstoreKobo and Amazon, with more to follow. I have a new forum, friend me on Facebook, like me on Facebook, connect with me on LinkedIn, find me on Tumblr, complete my website’s Contact me page or plain and simple, email me.  I also now have a new blog creation service especially for, but not limited to, writers.

Unfortunately, as I post an interview a day (amongst other things) I can’t review books but I have a feature called ‘Short Story Saturdays’ where I review stories of up to 2,500 words. Alternatively if you have a short story or self-contained novel extract / short chapter (ideally up to 1000 words) that you’d like critiqued and don’t mind me reading it / talking about and critiquing it (I send you the transcription afterwards so you can use the comments or ignore them) :)  on my ‘Bailey’s Writing Tips’ podcast, then do email me. They are weekly episodes, usually released Monday mornings UK time, interweaving the recordings between the red pen sessions with the hints & tips episodes. I am now also looking for flash fiction (<1000 words) for Flash Fiction Fridays and poetry for Post-weekend Poetry.

 
 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

5PM Fiction 011: Just that extra

Welcome to the eleventh in the new series: 5pm Fiction.

Late April 2011 I discovered http://StoryADay.org and the project that is to write 31 stories in 31 days. Anyone who knows me or follows this blog, knows how passionate I am about short stories so my clichéd eyes lit up at this new marvel. And just a few days later there I was, breathing life into new characters. This went on to become (with some editing of course) my 31-story collection eBook Story A Day May 2011.

I was nearing completion of the 2012 project when I decided that I didn’t want to stop at the end of May so 5PM Fiction was born. I put a load of prompts on the 5PM Fiction page and today’s prompt was to write a story starting with the second-person viewpoint ‘As you turn the key’, so here is my 297-worder.

Just that extra

As you turn the key you wait for something. Anything. The ballerina is lopsided so you don’t hold out much hope. You’ve only wound it a little, knowing how old it is, you don’t want to overdo it – that’s you all over. Unstated. Underrated, according to Fred.

He knows how hard you work, sees you slump down on the sofa every evening, too tired to say much, to eat much, to make love. It can’t be legal, he says, below minimum wage, but you know you could earn more, higher commission, so you work harder, show houses that have been on the market for weeks, or in this case months.

You think it’s charming but the look on the faces of the viewers says it all; too dusty, too ruined, too expensive to do up.

They’re late today so you reckon they’re not coming and you’re probably right. But you like to think the best of people, give them ten more minutes, twenty at least.

You wander round the house, figuring the doorbell is loud enough to be heard from anywhere.

You wish you could buy this place, just sell a few more ‘normal’ ones, enough for a deposit. You know Fred would love it – all the space for his collection, he’d have the study he always wanted.

A chime goes and you head downstairs and open the door but the entrance is empty, then you realise the chime is still going. Not a chime, a tune, a ballet. So you slam the door and rush back to the little bedroom, the one with the faded pink wallpaper, for the child you and Fred could never have.

Opening the door slowly you see why it’s playing, who turned the key just that extra notch, and you smile.

***

Photo courtesy of http://morguefile.com. You can sign up to receive these blog posts daily or weekly so you don’t miss anything… and follow me on Twitter where each new posting is automatically announced. You can also read / download my eBooks and free eShorts at SmashwordsSony Reader StoreBarnes & NobleiTunes BookstoreKobo and Amazon, with more to follow. I have a new forum, friend me on Facebook, like me on Facebook, connect with me on LinkedIn, find me on Tumblr, complete my website’s Contact me page or plain and simple, email me.  I also now have a new blog creation service especially for, but not limited to, writers.

Unfortunately, as I post an interview a day (amongst other things) I can’t review books but I have a feature called ‘Short Story Saturdays’ where I review stories of up to 2,500 words. Alternatively if you have a short story or self-contained novel extract / short chapter (ideally up to 1000 words) that you’d like critiqued and don’t mind me reading it / talking about and critiquing it (I send you the transcription afterwards so you can use the comments or ignore them) :)  on my ‘Bailey’s Writing Tips’ podcast, then do email me. They are weekly episodes, usually released Monday mornings UK time, interweaving the recordings between the red pen sessions with the hints & tips episodes. I am now also looking for flash fiction (<1000 words) for Flash Fiction Fridays and poetry for Post-weekend Poetry.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on June 11, 2012 in ebooks, ideas, short stories, writing

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,858 other followers