Guest Author Nicole Murphy Posts on “The Challenge”—Plus Giveaway!
Just confirming that the competition for a copy of Rogue Gadda closed at 5.00 pm today and Nicole will be letting you all know who the lucky winner is very soon. Thank you to everyone who commented and stay posted for the result. 🙂
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Last Saturday I guest posted as part of fellow Supernatural Underground author Nicole Murphy’s guest series on Dreams and Fulfilment—a fabulous series by the way, which I do recommend that you check out, here with today’s guest author, the amazing Kerrelyn Sparks.
The Dreams and Fulfilment Guest Series celebrates completion of Nicole’s “Dreams of Asarlai” trilogy with the release of the third and final novel, Rogue Gadda. Today I am delighted to have Nicole here as my guest to talk about the challenge of completing a series—and beginning something new.
And Nicole also has a copy of Rogue Gadda to give away to one lucky commenter—so read on and do take the challenge.:)
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Guest Post: The Challenge by Nicole Murphy
And so, my third book in my trilogy is published.
A momentous occasion, not least of which for my sense of myself as author. After all, I’ve published three books now. Three books that have been well received by readers. I know I can write a good story, keep them hooked for page after page.
I’ve made it. I’m awesome.
At this point, it seems to me that I’ve got two choices. One is to believe that what I’ve just said is the end. The other is to believe that it’s just the beginning.
If it’s the end, then I’ll just keep churning out the same books. I write well enough now to get away with the voice I have. Different characters, alter the plots a little… Yeah, that will work.
But if I believe it’s the beginning, then I can’t stop with what I’ve already accomplished. Yes, it’s good. Yes, I’m good.
But I can be BETTER.
When I started writing, I had the dream of having a book, with my name on it. Having people love what I’d written. Well, I’ve done that. Three times.
So now, I have a new dream – to become a better writer. To ensure that each book I write is better than the one before.
I’m doing that by challenging myself. Making myself deal with characters, or plots, or ideas that are different from what I’ve done before.
For example, in Dream of Asarlai I’ve got one main antagonist, with a very clear goal. We even see her point of view from time to time, so the reader absolutely knows what Asarlai is up to.
But in the new trilogy, my antagonist is a group of people. Their goals are clear, but their actions are less so. And we don’t ever directly see their point of view, so I have to work hard to ensure the reader understands it, even if the point of view characters don’t.
See? Challenge.
Some of the challenges I’m setting myself may not seem that far removed from what I’ve done. Another example – I’ve just finished writing my first contemporary romance. My trilogy is full of romance, so it might seem that it’s not that hard to write another genre of romance.
But it is. It’s a much slower paced book, and doesn’t have all the fun stuff like monsters, magic, explosions and so on. It’s a simpler style, and it’s also much more focussed on the internals of the characters. In every scene, I found myself wondering if I’m attacking it the right way, making the right choices, not going deep enough or too deep. Thinking a great deal about what makes story and character work.
More of a challenge than I ever anticipated.
And then there’s the joy that is short stories. The great thing about shorts is that you can experiment wildly and because they don’t take a lot of time to write, it’s not too much of a problem if they fail spectacularly. And of course, succeed or fail, you learn from them.
I’m glad that people have loved the Dream of Asarlai books. I’m proud of them. But I hope that in future years, people will be saying “Yeah, they were good, but these new ones are GREAT!”.
Giveaway question – enter the draw to win a copy of Rogue Gadda by telling me what challenges you think you should set yourself.
Plus:
Rogue Gadda Cookie:
As she got on the bus, Asarlai felt her soul shrink. Star, but she hated to commute with humans. She hated the stupidity in their gaze, that they looked at her and didn’t realise what she could do to them. She hated the smug comfort they had in a world that wasn’t what they thought it was. She hated the sheer, overwhelming numbers of them – they threatened to overtake everything.
That she had to do this was an abomination to her, and just made it all the more clear that she must succeed in her task, to save other gadda from this trauma.
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About Nicole Murphy:
Nicole Murphy has been a primary school teacher, bookstore owner, journalist and checkout chick. She grew up reading Tolkien, Lewis and Le Guin; spent her twenties discovering Quick, Lindsay and Deveraux, and lives her love of science fiction and fantasy through her involvement with the Conflux science fiction conventions. Her urban fantasy trilogy Dream of Asarlai is published in Australia/NZ by HarperVoyager. She lives with her husband in Queanbeyan, NSW. Visit her website http://nicolermurphy.com
To read another guest post by Nicole on “Loving Humanity – Why Speculative Fiction Rocks!”, click here.
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And don’t forget: Go in the draw to win a copy of Rogue Gadda by commenting here to tell Nicole what challenges you think you should set yourself. The competition will close at 5 pm on Friday 15 July, NZ time.
For my current paper, I have to interview a community group about how they communicate with other cultures.
So my challenge is to find a community group (I don’t have any contacts) and interview random people I don’t know, face-to-face.
I’m not really comfortable asking people things if I don’t know them, I prefer the anonymity of email. This will be a real challenge, taking me out of my comfort zone.
Hi Janib
Boy, do I hear you on this one! I worked as a journalist for four and a half years, and I really don’t like approaching random people, or bugging them for anything.
Unfortunately, the only way I got around it was to take a deep breath and barge in. And then walk away, sweating and panting 🙂
Best of luck with it – I’m sure you’re doing to learn a lot about yourself from the experience, as well as what you need to know for you paper
That must’ve been tough for a journalist – not wanting to approach people.
Mine is only a one off, I can do it once!
Jan, I was wondering about the SPCA for your group — they are a volunteer group and would have to deal with many different cultures in South Auckland?
Thanks for the idea Helen!
They have to deal with all of Auckland – so many, many cultures.
I’ll talk to my lecturer/Rebecca at the SPCA Foster programme.
Good luck—I do hope it works out.:)
Jan you can interview me!! I represent a community group 🙂
My challenge for 2011 is to submit a piece of writing for publication every month. Starting February. So far I have a publication result of 0/4, plus 1 I haven’t heard about yet. I have a completed novel sitting on my hard drive. My beta readers, mnostly librarians, say it is good. I have to put my somewhat bruised ego on the line and submit it for publication.
Morag, I believe ‘someone famous’ said that if you’re not getting at least one rejection a week then you’re not working hard enough. Now you may have done all this already, but I believe it’s really important to both reserach your markets, ie what publications actually publish, as often there is an editorial slant (for example, there was a US based zine that I always thought would be a great market for my stories, until I took a subscription and realised that they were marketing to a completely different demographic.) In terms of the book, at some stage we do have to put ourselves out there and submit, and it can be a pretty brutal process at times, but again I think—research your market; see who is publishing books like yours; if you’re thinking of going overseas then definitely think about trying for an agent. And when you do get a rejection, whether for a novel or a short story, “try” not to take it personally—we all do, of course, but the truth is that there are innumerable reasons for stories not being selected, none of which have anything to do with the quality of the story.
Well done, Morag! As friends of mine often say – you can’t get published if you don’t submit. And you’ll hopefully learn a lot from the rejections and the process of thinking them through and improving the story.
All the best.
My challenge should be to stop eating chocolate & mudcake when I’m upset or stressed. So far I am failing & packing on the kilos. My mother has dementia & is rapidly going downhill, so I know that more challenging times lie ahead. I need to find coping skills that will replace chocolate.
Jeanette, so sorry to hear about your mother. It is a hard time and maybe for now just be gentle with yourself while you deal with that. If you want to find another way, maybe consider meditation or yoga. My counsellor (I’m dealing with depression at the moment) said even deep breathing can help with anxiety, Fill your whole lungs (even take a second breath in), hold and then release.
However you go, all the best.
My challenge is to use my new Annabel Langbein cookbook “The Free Range Cook” and make something from it.
Hi June
Love cooking new recipes! Hope you find a delicious new staple for your repertoire.
My challenge is to get a bachelor degree by the end of next year.
Hi Rhonda – what are you studying? I’d love to return to university one day – I love learning new things. My degree is in primary teaching, specialising in special education, and it was great fun 🙂
I have no end of challenges I’m tackling right now. But, the main ones are finishing my last revision (for now)so I can get some queries out. I want to do that by the end of this month. That’s the writing challenge!
Other than that, I have to keep trying to adjust to living in a new country. The biggest challenge there involves finding the hot water cylinder so I don’t have to take ANY more cold showers! Ever. My biggest challenge for the year was to get the nerve up to get on a plane again, and I did that, with an ash cloud hovering near by, no less, so that’s something 🙂
Congrats on facing your fears 🙂 It’s a wonderful feeling, the freedom that comes when you don’t allow fear to rule your life 🙂
Best of luck with the revision. I’m big on setting deadlines for myself, otherwise I tend to wander… 🙂
Me too, Nicole. No pressure, no effort! 🙂
I’ve set myself a list of challenges with a cut off date so that they get done. It’s business related and I need to make hard decisions about where to go next in life 🙂 The most immediate one is getting sales online and what colour to paint the shop!
Hi Marie
Good luck with the hard decisions – something I’ve been thinking about lately myself, about exactly what I want from my life. On my blog, Kim Falconer gave us a great exercise on getting to the basis of what you want – http://nicolermurphy.com/post/Dreams-and-Fulfilmente28093Kim-Falconer.aspx Maybe it will help you with your decisions.
Thanks to the random number generator at random.org (one of the greatest websites EVER)the winner of a copy of Rogue Gadda is Rhonda Mercieca. Thanks everyone for coming along to share your challenges and I wish you all the best with making your life what you want it to be.
Congratulations to Rhonda and thank you for being such a great guest ” … on Anything, Really”, Nicole. let’s do it again sometime! 🙂
This year has been full of challenges for me. The last one involved writing the introduction for CSFG’s new anthology, Winds of Change. I honestly didn’t think it was going to be as hard as it was–rather like pulling teeth.
My next challenge is going to involve standing in front of a crowd at the launch without going bright red or trying to fade into the woodwork.
Elizabeth, editing an anthology is such a huge endeavour that I can see how distilling the process into a short introduction could seem like the most significant challenge of all. I am sure you did a fine job of it though—and the great thing about a launch is that it is one event where you know the audience do actually want to hear what you have to say, and as no one could possibly know the anthology better than you do, you need have no fear of being tripped up. I have absolutely no doubt that you will wow ’em! 🙂