I put Orly and Yelena chibi stickers on my laptop. I plan to have Black Wax Vampire stickers available online next month.

It’s Sunday on the weekend following my week off from work that I was finally able to take off to write. My goal had been to write four entries of My Darling Tragedy. My stretch goal was five entries. I wrote six, amounting to nine thousand new words over the nine days I had between the five workdays and two weekends. My usual monthly output when I’m working hard is six thousand words. So, the nine thousand words feels great. I now have ten journal entries in pocket. It’s nice knowing I’m ten weeks ahead of the online publishing schedule in case I run out of ideas or get stuck. Furthermore, I’m also happy with how these six new entries turned out. I hope my readers are happy with them too.

During the week I also finished reading two books: Small Rain by Garth Greenwell and The Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura. I loved them both.

I also watched two films: Casino (1995, directed by Martin Scorsese), which is among my favorites, and The Rose on His Arm (1956, directed by Keisuke Kinoshita), which I really liked for its imagery, music, and ending. I mention this because, with my day job, keeping up with MDT, and meeting my reading goals, it’s not very often I’m able to watch films.

I also had a Silent Book Club meetup where our host announced she was retiring and passing the torch to me to take over the administrative and hosting duties. She began this chapter of Silent Book Club in 2018, and I’ve been attending since 2019, so it was a meaningful goodbye. I have big shoes to fill, as she was a great host. I’m now hosting two book clubs.

So, my month was really enhanced by being able to take a week off from work. But I see I have 152 work emails waiting for me Monday morning.  

 

 

 

I’m still working on turning Exhume into a novel. I’ve been at it for seventy days straight. I’m making incremental progress, averaging 130 new words a day. The more I work on it though, the less sure I feel I want to show it to anyone. To be honest, the more I work on it, the less excited I feel about it. This might be because I’m struggling to develop the characters beyond the screenplay version. It might also be because I’m writing in third person, present tense, which I’ve never done before. I chose this as it felt closest to the way a screenplay is written.

Recently, I had this thought of writing Forever Candy from a different point-of-view. The last time I tried writing it, I was writing from Candy’s POV, in first person. But now I’m thinking of writing it from Burrows’ POV. I’ve tried that before, but only in third person. For some reason it never occurred to me to write him from first person. I wrote a little, just to try it out, and I got really excited about it.

I talked to my shrink about this quandary of mine—which story to pursue now. Even though I’m struggling with the Exhume story, she and I both belief that the regularity in which I’ve been writing it has really improved my mood and helped pull me out of my last depression. We’re wary of me walking away from that. On the other hand, I’m so excited to write this other story right now, that I feel like I should seize the opportunity of inspiration.

My shrink suggested I work on both, simultaneously. I can keep making my little daily progress on Exhume, while also embracing the excitement I feel with writing a different book. When she said it, it baffled me because I’ve never written two books at once. When I wrote The Last Midnight, feeling inspired, I had to put Scribbles of the Empress down completely, even though I was already 40,000 words into it, and I only picked it back up after I had finished.

So, I guess I’m going to give it a go, writing two books at once. Wish me luck.

Yellowface by R.F. KuangI’ve been going to the gym regularly and counting calories on MyFitnessPal because my doctor told me I really need to lose weight. In twelve weeks, I’ve lost 18 lbs. While on the treadmill last week, I listened to Yellowface by R.F. Kuang. A friend from Silent Book Club told me she had read it. She mentioned what a despicable character the POV characters is, but I really enjoyed the character and found myself relating to her. This wasn’t because I want to or ever would plagiarize another author (but if I did, it would be Kwon Yeo-sun and her book Lemon, LOL), but because, as a mediocre writer, I know all too well what it feels like to be jealous of writers who have more talent than I’ll ever have. While listening to Yellowface, I was really impressed with and jealous of the author with how smart and sharp her writing is. She’s super gifted.

I don’t know if it was that book or other books I’ve read recently (For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Road, All the Lovers in the Night), but I’ve glimpsed the dawning of me giving up as a writer, feeling like I’m just not talented enough to write something worthy of the readership I daydream of having. Mediocrity is a dreadful thing to feel.

I know it’s not over just yet though. I’m going to try to keep going, fueled by my hopes that Forever Candy will be a good book. Again, wish me luck.