Now on to
what I want to talk about this week. It’s almost time for summer break here—summer
break, for me, means one week between the end of spring quarter and the
beginning of summer quarter, during which time I have to prepare the Blackboard
course for my summer class—and I’ve been excitedly planning my summer writing
projects. I haven’t been able to get anywhere near as much writing done as I
would have liked for the past year, but the older Amalie gets, the easier it is
to get things done around her. On top of that, I’m only teaching one class over
the summer, and it’s a creative writing class. I expect to have plenty of time
in which to write, and that’s exactly what I plan to do.
Here are my
goals for this summer:
1.
I’m going
to complete the first draft of a middle grade children’s novel, of which I
currently have about half written. This, I decided, is the main writing project
I want to be focusing on right now. I talked a few weeks ago about how
leapfrogging from project to project was preventing me from really getting
anything done, and how I needed to pick one project to just finish, for cripe’s
sake. Well this is the project I’ve settled on.
2.
Once I’ve
finished the first draft of that novel, which will probably take me no more
than a month, I want to write a first draft of the much shorter children’s book
I’m collaborating on with my mom. My mom is a scratchboard artist, and she’s
creating the illustrations for a children’s story that I’m going to write. We
agreed on this a couple of years ago—but I’ve been slacking in my duties. She’s
already completed several scratchboard paintings for the book. I’m going to use
the paintings she’s already created as inspiration to write the story. We don’t
know if we’ll be able to find a publisher for the book once it’s finished, but
it’s an incredibly fun project and worth spending time on, nonetheless. Plus, I
sort of think we might be able to do a show in a gallery even if it doesn’t end
up getting published, or we can create copies of the book ourselves and sell
them as art-chapbooks (I learned how to make those in a workshop while I was
getting my MFA).
3.
In
addition to those two main projects, I want to work on some stories. I have, at
present, five stories I’m sending around. I have three more stories in draft
form that I’d like to revise and start sending out, and three more half-written
drafts of stories that I feel really excited about and would like to finish. I
won’t set a concrete goal in terms of stories, but I will say that by the end
of the summer I’d like to have a few more stories in circulation, and ideally,
I’d like to have complete drafts of the three half-written stories I believe
are so promising.
These sound like great summer projects! I would love to see your children's book. :) I keep saying I'm going to do one of those with my sister or younger brother, but keep putting it off.
ReplyDeleteYou should totally do it, Jenni. You should do a collaborative project with both of them--how cool would that be? And then we can workshop them with each other :)
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