Friday, June 28, 2013

The Memory Project

The Memory Project

by Carey Torgesen

My mother once told me memories were like a string of pearls. Beautiful and strong. But if you look closely, you see the ridges, the imperfections, the truth behind the beauty. It seems both wonderful and sad that each pearl’s very life was dependent on one single speck of sand. And it's this unique beginning, part fate and part circumstance that creates each pearl's own story. “A story within a story” she called it.
But I wasn’t thinking about any of that today. At least, not at first. I was just exploring. I needed to get out of my mother’s hair as she was flitting about from here to there trying to get the food ready for the party. My sister, Sam, was turning sixteen. Which, if I didn’t know any better, must have been some holiday for the way everyone was acting.
So no one noticed when I snuck out the back door, canvas slip-ons in hand, not even looking behind me as the screen door slammed upon the door frame. It was hot. Hot as hell. And I wanted to take Jesse, my best friend, over to the lake on the Duvall property. With a tote slung over my shoulder, I dropped my shoes, slipped them over my feet, and made my way down the trail that led to his house.
Sweat dripped from my forehead. Putting my hand in my jean shorts pocket, I dug around for a small rubber band, looped it around my hair twice and wiped my brow with my arm. It was always a relief when I could keep my thick mane off of my neck and shoulders. Even though the south was known for its humidity, I would never get used to it. Being from upstate New York, it seemed you couldn’t really ever take the Yankee out of the girl. Even though I’d lived in Louisiana more than half my fifteen years, I continued to think of myself as a “northern belle”. Was that even a thing?
The grass swooshed past my bare legs as I took the path off the trail and darted through the thick trees and brush, the shortcut to Jesse’s place. A light breeze blew and for just a few seconds, I took in a breath and sighed with relief. I had only been out of the house for five minutes and already my skin grew sticky from the heat.
I slapped at my arm, swatting the slight tickle I felt.
“Stupid skeeter.”
Through the small clearing of trees, I saw the familiar yellow house belonging to Jesse Peterson's family. When I had moved here, my step-mother had quickly befriended Lily Peterson, the local head of the Daughters of the Revolution chapter here in Oak Grove. In a matter of months, they became inseparable, which is how I ended up being best friends with Jesse. Only one year older than me, Jesse and I had been forced together in endless games of badminton and poker games for coupons. These ladies were weird. But then, I kind of enjoyed listening to the town gossip and kicking Jesse under the table whenever they belted out one of those high pitch laughs that sounded like a horse’s whinny. So, I guess by association, I was weird too. I didn’t mind.
With a skip and a jump, I hopped from the first step to the top of the wrap-around porch and knocked on the screen door.
Lily, beautiful as always, came down the hall and smiled. As she walked toward the screen to unlock it, she called up to Jesse. “Natalie’s here!” Her soft red curls, held to the side by a ribbon, were something I always envied.
Some people wanted to be blond; I always wanted to be a ginger. Anything but the dull brown I inherited from my father’s side of the family. She opened the door, the hinges creaking as she did so, and I made my way into the small living room. The electric fans whirred above and I stood right smack in the middle of the room, closing my eyes and looking up so I could feel the cool manufactured wind against my damp skin.
Without opening my eyes, I knew Jesse was on his way down. The thump of his heavy trudging echoed through the house as he came down the stairs. He wasn't the stealthiest of people. But how could I expect a sixteen year old boy to be stealthy? Especially one who made football his life’s goal.
“Nat! What’s up? I was just about to get something to eat. Want somethin’?” He flipped his long bangs out of his eyes and headed down the hall, stopped, turned and looked back at me, jerking his chin toward the kitchen. “Whatcha waitin’ for?”
I followed him down the hall, my shoes making the occasional squeak against the hardwood floor. The darkness of the hall soon gave way to the bright light of the kitchen. A light breeze flowed inside, ruffling the curtains. I scooted the small, wooden chair from the table, plunked myself down, and turned to watch Jesse as he attempted to make the world’s biggest cold cut sandwich of all time.
“Jesse! You really think you’re gonna be able to get that whole thing in your mouth?”
At the very same moment I finished the question, Jesse was stuffing his mouth with the sandwich, his cheeks bulging from the sheer volume of food. I rolled my eyes and shook my head.
A bit of bread flew out of his mouth as Jesse smiled and sputtered something incomprehensible. I narrowed my eyes and cocked my head to the side. “What?”
He swallowed audibly, and smirked. “I said, that’s what he said.” He chuckled and winked.
I blushed. “Jeez, Jess, you’re somethin’ else.”
He propped himself against the counter, picked up the sandwich again, and before taking another hulking bite, said, “That’s also what she said.”
I rolled my eyes and stifled another laugh. Jesse could always put a smile on my face. Even when we’d first met, he had a southern charm that all girls, myself included, found irresistible. I bounced my heel up and down and tapped my fingers on the table while I watched Jesse down an actual submarine-sized sandwich in a matter of minutes.
“You in a hurry, small stack?”
I fanned myself with one of the nearby napkins. “Nah, I’m just waiting for you to be done so you can go with me to the lake. You in?” I knew Jesse was in. He was always in for swimming. Any chance he could take to see a girl in a swimsuit was one he’d gladly agree to. And since that was where most of the kids hung out in the afternoons, odds were pretty great that his wishes would be fulfilled.
Jesse grabbed the half gallon of milk and chugged. A small dribble rolled down his chin into his shirt. When the container was empty, he slammed it down on the counter triumphantly, looked at me, his lips curling in a smirk, and belched. “Let me get changed.”
“Good Lord you’ll make some girl proud,” I said.
###
Walking through the tall grass as Jesse wielded a branch as a machete, we talked about our plans for next year. Jesse wanted to try to get into a college on a football scholarship, and me, I would be content with an academic grade point average that would allow me to get into a top university. Preferably NYU. Their arts program was incredible.
The heat of the summer stuck to our skin and there was no cover to shield us. The wind, what minor amount there had been, died down leaving only the movement of the grass as we waded through it to stir the air around us. Jesse peeled off his shirt, his chest and back slick with sweat. I found myself scanning him, covering every inch of his bare chest with my eyes. He was the perfect color of tan in the summer. Copper and bronze, probably due to the drop of Cherokee blood in him. I'd always known Jesse was attractive, but it was only in the last year or so I really noticed the small things that drew me to him. The dimple in his cheek, his chiseled cheekbones, the breadth of his shoulders, these are things I'd overlooked before. But I noticed them now. And although I enjoyed looking, it also weirded me out just a bit how at a moment’s notice I could go from smelling his nasty burps and being disgusted, to wanting nothing more than to kiss his amazingly full lips.
“Are you checking me out?” Jesse’s voice tore me from my daydream.
“What?” My nose wrinkled. “No. Jeez, Jess. Aren’t we a little full of ourselves?” I leaned down, pretending something was in my shoe. I took it off, shook it out, and hoped that when I stood back up, the heat from my cheeks would have dissipated.
“I’ll race you.” Jesse took off without a beat.
I was not planning on running, but the competitor in me couldn’t help but take up the challenge. He may have been older and more athletic, but I was faster. And he knew it, which was why he had given himself the unfair head start. Even so, I still made it to the dock first. I threw my tank into the bushes, kicked my shoes off, and plunged into the water.
About thirty seconds later, as I was swimming, I heard the splash of Jesse’s cannonball behind me. He surfaced in front of me, and playfully pushed me down by my shoulders. I popped back to the surface and splashed him in the face. This was pretty much our ritual.
The water was divine and it took off the edge from the unbearable heat. For the first time in what seemed like ages, we had been the only two in the water. Then again, my mom was planning the birthday party and next to a southern cotillion, my mom’s parties were pretty much the event of the season. Most likely anyone who was anyone was getting ready to wine and dine on finger sandwiches and vegetable slices wrapped in cured deli meats.
After the swim, Jesse and I lay under the shade of a magnolia at the water’s edge, waiting for the noon heat to die down. After about an hour, we were ready to make the trek back home. By now the party should be in full swing and my mom would be irate if I didn’t at least show my face for an hour or two. Like the good friend he was, Jesse placated my whiny pleas and decided he would do me a favor and attend with me.  I was sure he just wanted to be there to hang out with all my sister's friends. Although they were hoity-toity and a little too stuck on themselves for my taste, they were beautiful and I could understand what Jesse saw in them.
On the way back, Jesse tugged at my arm, and headed left toward the tree line and the old McAllister place.
“Why are you taking us back this way?” I asked.
“Have you ever heard the stories?” Jesse stopped and turned around, waiting for me.
“Stories?”
“Yeah, about the old farmhouse at the end of the road?”
“Sure I have.” We’d all heard the stories. They came to be known as our small town’s urban legends. Unexplained flashes throughout the night. Loud noises like electrical fences making contact with an unfortunate creature. Screams. “Everyone’s heard them but no one actually believes them. What are you getting at?”
Jesse moved in close to me, the heat from his body penetrating the space between us. He moved his hand toward my hair, catching a wayward strand between his fingers and delicately placing it behind my ear. My muscles tensed. I swallowed hard. I could barely breathe with him in such close proximity. His face moved next to my ear and he whispered, “What I’m getting at is I think we should check it out. Haven’t you wondered what was in there?”
I took a step back. Our eyes locked. I pulled my bottom lip in between my teeth and looked at the ground. Anything to break this hold he had on me. I still wasn’t entirely sure what his motives were, although it seemed like I could make a pretty good guess. But this was Jesse. My best friend.
The moment of quiet must have been all he needed because his hand clasped mine. He pulled me next to him. We walked hand in hand towards the old farmhouse.
It was strange. I'd been all around the unoccupied area between the neighborhood houses and never once had I stepped foot past the long row of Crape Myrtle trees. They lined the property like soldiers protecting a castle. As we came closer and closer to the house, Jesse’s hold on me became tighter and more protective. About one hundred yards away, I stopped, causing our hands to break from one another.
“Jesse,” I hesitated. “I’m not sure I want to do this. This place is…creepy.”
“It’s just an old house.”
I glanced up at the facade of the home. It was an old estate house. The kind that would've been called Tara or Willows or something. The white paint had cracked and peeled revealing rotted wood beneath.  The windows were cloudy with cobwebs and dust settled around the angles where the joints of the wood met. The house may have been grand in its prime, but now took on the appearance of something out of a horror movie. The dozen stairs leading up to the porch looked as if they'd crumble to pieces if we even thought about climbing them.
“I have a bad feeling about this.” I wrapped my arms around my body.
“Okay, Han. Duly noted. Now let’s go.” He held out his hand again.
“Who?”
“Han Solo? Star Wars?”
I stared at him blankly.
“Never mind, let’s go.”
With Jesse’s hand in mine, we made our way up the stairs to the porch. The wood creaked and groaned under our weight, an occasional pop emitting from under our feet. I let go of Jesse’s hand at the top. Already half inside, he seemed adamant about going in. Me? I wanted to try and take a peek first, to get my bearings, and to see what was going to attack me before I actually surrendered myself to a heinous death.
With the bottom of my tank, I swiped a small circle on the dirty windows, brushing any leftover layers with my hand. Blocking the glare of the light with my hand above my head, I squinted, attempting to see what was inside. From what I could tell, it was barren. Whoever lived here before had cleared out pretty much everything inside. Well, at least that’s somewhat normal.
Knowing the place hadn’t been suddenly abandoned, but that someone planned and moved out, made the place much less horrifying. Straightening up and smoothing my shirt down, I strode in after Jesse, standing next to him as we stopped in the empty foyer.
A long winding staircase, complete with both full and broken wooden spindles led upstairs to a hallway and what else, we couldn’t see. To the left, there was a small room, blocked partially by one side of the oak French door that was closed. I could make out some empty bookcases.
I pointed. “Must be the den.”
Jesse nodded. “Wanna go up?”
“Wanna not?”
“Got it. Not ready yet. I’m gonna check out the rooms in the back.” Jesse trudged to the right.
“How about not ready ever?” I called out to him. I looked toward the ceiling; dark molding lined the place where the wall and the ceiling met. I followed the molding all around the space and looked at the wall nearest the staircase just in time to see a spider the size of a small child scurry across to a crack at the base of the stairs. The hairs on the back of my neck were seriously thinking about yanking themselves out of my skin by the root and running their way out of this place. They had the right idea. “What the hell am I doing in here? He’s cute, but not that cute,” I mumbled to myself.
“Nat! Come on in here. You gotta see this!” Jesse called out from the other side of the house. I rolled my eyes and made my way to where he was. The hall, narrow and dark, creeped me out and I had to stop and peer inside every room to try and find him. As I opened doors, I looked in, seeing nothing but dust, cobwebs, and an occasional scrap of trash left behind.
“Where are you?” After looking in three different rooms, I started to worry that either this was some sort of trick an ax-murderer was playing, luring me to my death, or Jesse was trying to scare the crap out of me. Both scenarios seemed entirely plausible.
As I got to the last door on the left, I pushed in, once again hearing the creaking. I looked around, the ruddy brown of the walls were warmed by the slanted shape of light filtered in through the one large window. Walking toward the window, I looked through the filth-coated glass to orient myself with where I was relative to the outside. I spotted the long dirt road that at one time must have been a driveway, now a bit hidden by the wiry weeds and grasses that grew in patches here and there. Off in the distance was the tree line and a little further the small grove of oaks that Jesse and I had ventured through. And just beyond that—
“GOTCHA!”
A pair of hands grabbed my shoulders hard and squeezed. Pain jolted through me. My heart skipped and my blood ran cold. I knew that voice. I knew that touch. But a part of me still wasn’t sure what I would see once I opened my eyes.
Sure enough, when I looked at the face in front of me, it was Jesse, cackling like a dying rooster. His face was red from laughter.
With all the might I could muster, I hauled off and punched him on his shoulder, but it only seemed to make his laughter fiercer.
“What was that for?” He barely made out the words between guffaws.
“Being an asshole.” I narrowed my eyes, and stifled a small grin.
With a mischievous smile, he grabbed my waist with one arm and pulled me close, while his other hand tipped my head so our lips could meet. His lips, soft against mine, made my heart race. He kissed me gently at first, one soft touch after another. Then both of us grew eager. His tongue slipped inside my mouth and we kissed, lips moving in time with one another, the warmth of his breath washing over me. As he pressed his chest closer to mine, his heartbeat echoed with my own. The taste of salt lingered as his lips slipped from my mouth to my neck to my mouth again. He pulled away and his eyes pierced mine.
“I guess I should have called you an asshole sooner. Seemed to be the magic word.” I smirked, blood rushing to my cheeks. I couldn’t help it. The moment was so intense; I had to break it with something.
Jesse ran his hand softly through my hair and tapped my nose. “I've wanted to do that for a long time. Know what?”
“What?” I answered.
“It was as good as I imagined it. Better.” He smiled and held me in his arms. Suddenly the warmth didn't seem all that bad. Even though the temperature was sweltering, his body heat comforted me as if he was shielding me from a cold winter’s night.
I wrapped my arm around his neck, pulling him toward me as I reached up on my toes and kissed him again. This time softly, my lips relaxed on his, sucking gently on his lower lip. His lips curled and I pulled away. Unable to look him in the eye afterward, I bashfully looked down.
I caught a glint of something on the floor. Or more correctly, underneath the floor. The wooden boards that made up the flooring were the same everywhere, except the very spot we were standing on. The wood here looked lighter than everywhere else. There was about a half an inch gap between the boards and there was something shiny under it. I stepped back, pushing Jesse back to take in the whole space, with my eyes not leaving the spot.
I pointed. “Do you see that?”
Jesse looked down. “The floor? Yeah, someone did an awful job replacing the wood. So?”
“No. Under it. Do you see that…thing?” I knelt down, my knees popping a bit. Jesse bent down, one knee on the floor.
“Yeah. What is that?” He tried wedging his finger under the wood to pry it loose, but the width of the gap wasn’t wide enough to get under it. It wiggled when just a little pressure was applied. Jesse stood up. "Get back." In one swift motion, Jesse slammed his heel into one side of the plank, forcing the other side up. He grabbed the board and yanked, tossing it behind him.
I peered through the now vacant space where the board was and clearly saw an old suitcase, nestled down in the crevice underneath the floor. I really wasn’t too keen on putting my hand down in the dark. I glanced up and flashed Jesse my best “pretty please” smile and hoped like hell he’d get the message.
“What? You think I want spiders crawling up my arm? No thanks, sweet cheeks. This one's all yours.”
“But you’re a guy. A football burly man. Nothing's supposed to scare you.”
“I didn’t say I was scared of spiders. Doesn’t mean I want one taking up residence on my person.”
I narrowed my eyes and pouted.
“Fine. Move.” Jesse huddled down on the floor, putting his hand through the shallow hole to grab the suitcase. With a few tugs, it was out and sitting right next to us.
The brown leather was cracked and worn, with two black leather buckles that once held it together but now existed only as remnants. The metal latch, bronze covered with black grime, must have been what I’d seen through the crack, which was amazing because now that is was out of the dark and into actual filtered light, it hardly shone at all. The pungent odor, moist earth and mold, permeated the air.
 “There it is. Now what?” Jesse asked.
“We open it.”
“How do we do that, Obi Wan? You got a key in those jean shorts of yours you ain’t tellin’ me about?”
I rolled my eyes. “No. I’m hoping…” I tried flipping the latch and it didn’t budge. “Damn.”
“Did you really think it was gonna be that easy? Like we find some thousand year old suitcase under some creaky old house and it was just gonna open?”
“Maybe.”
“You’ve been watching too many old X-Files episodes.” He pushed off the floor and onto his feet. "Let’s get outta here. I’m sure the party's going on as we speak. We better go or we’ll hear about it for the next month.”
Jesse was right. Who cared what was in an old suitcase anyway? If it had been buried, it was probably with good reason. What could it contain if it was left behind? But still…I glanced at it again, willing it to open. I tried the latch one more time for good measure. Nothing.
I sat back on my knees, and then sighed. “You’re right, Jess. Let's go.” I stood up and Jesse held out his hand again. He smiled. This time, it wasn’t as a friend or because he was being protective. This time, it was because it's what couples did, held hands. And it was weird that we'd gone into this house as friends and we were leaving as…well…what? I wasn’t sure. But something different. He pulled me close, and whispered in my ear, “Maybe we can get some alone time after the party.” His lips brushed against my neck, his breath hot on my skin. My nerves tingled and my stomach fluttered.
Click.
I shot a look at Jesse. I froze.
“Did you hear that?”
“Never have I wanted to say 'no' more in my life.”
We both looked at the suitcase. We took a few steps in its direction. We sat there, watching it as if we half-expected something to jump out of it. I knelt down beside it. I examined the latch. Everything in me wanted to scream or vomit or run like hell. But instead, I fingered the latch, trying to understand how it just “popped” open.
“It’s like…” I shook my head. What I was about to say was ridiculous and I couldn’t believe I was saying it. “It’s like it wanted us to open it.”
“That’s crazy. It’s a suitcase. It’s not alive. It can’t want anything.” Jesse stood behind me, placing his hand on my shoulder.
“I know how it sounds.” I glanced up, my eyes wide.
Hands shaking, I opened the lid of the suitcase, unsure of what I might find. Peering in, I sighed with relief at the contents: a scrapbook, a teddy bear, some old worn combat boots, and a ring.
My shoulders relaxed and I chuckled. “I started thinking some pretty weird things just now. I’m so glad it's just normal stuff.” But even as I said the words, my gut was telling me that nothing about this suitcase or its contents were normal.
Jesse sat down next to me, crossing his legs like a second grader at circle time. “So, let’s see what we’ve got here.”
We pulled out the scrapbook, as large as a world atlas, and cracked it open, the smell of old paper and something…electric emanated from the pages. Nothing seemed at all strange about the pictures. Until we looked more closely.
We studied each picture, page after page, and noticed that they seemed to be “off”. Normally photo albums were thematic in some way. They were about one family or one year or one time in a person’s life. These followed no pattern at all. They had different people, different places, and as odd as it was, seemingly different times. And even crazier…some even looked like different worlds. But that was…impossible.
As we neared the last page, a meticulously folded paper, yellowed with time, fell into my lap. I opened it up and read the words out loud.
“To whomever holds this,
I hope you are well. If you are reading this letter, it means you have uncovered the suitcase. It and the contents within are extremely special. Let it be known that you did not find this suitcase, it found you. It led you to this point and it trusts you completely. It is now your responsibility to keep the suitcase and its contents out of the hands of the people who are looking to destroy it. It needs to be kept in a safe and remote location. When I am able, I will come find you and take my suitcase back. But I can’t until it is safe to do so. Until then, please know that you are charged with a big undertaking and you will be rewarded. For now, this is all you need to know.
~D”
Jesse’s eyes met mine. Then he let out a belly laugh that could have shaken the walls. “Are you kidding me? You think this is real?” He held his side. “Oooh, this is a mysterious suitcase, keep it safe or they'll find you, muwahahaha,” he said in a sarcastically low voice.
“Whatever. You’re such an ass.”
“If you’re trying to get me to kiss you again, all ya gotta do is ask.” He winked.

I shoved my elbow into his ribs and looked back down at the scrapbook, flipping the pages back to the beginning. I wondered what memories each photograph held.


Saturday, June 22, 2013

The Memory Project





Hello all. I am super jazzed to tell you about an upcoming project that I am hosting on my blog. It's called "The Memory Project" and here is the gist.

I asked a few of my fellow wonderful and talented writer friends if they would be interested in contributing to a short story collection in the tradition of the great Josh Hewitt. Actually, after World's End…well…ended, I was depressed. I had so looked forward to seeing what all my friends (and some new at the time) had written that when it was over, I kinda had the same sads as when LOST ended. YEAH! FOR REALS! IT WAS ALMOST AS BAD!

So, it wasn't long after that I decided to do something similar. It might not be as epically awesome as Josh's, but I could put together something. So I enlisted Josh to help me brainstorm some ideas. I think what I came up with (and he approved of) was pretty damn intriguing. But even cooler, is how it became something completely different after all was said and done.

Here is the premise:

A girl finds a scrapbook in an old abandoned house, opens it, and she looks through it, and we as readers get to experience the things that happened in those pictures, through this girl flipping through pages. BUT then I thought it would be cool to have objects, and these would be held in a suitcase, along with the scrapbook.

So every writer was given a picture or an item that they would write about. The only rule was that it had to be about the picture somehow. Other than that, I left them to their own creativity.

Then I read Josh's story. And I knew it would be good, but I did not expect the twist and turn that it took me and thus altered the direction of the project. Add to this that the writers I asked to participate are all so completely different in scope and genre, that this project soon took on a life of its own. No longer was it about the scrapbook, but the suitcase that held it and the rest of the contents.

I don't want to spoil it, but I will say this: it will take you readers on a journey through space and time, between worlds both within our realm and out. It will make you laugh, cry, fear, and tense. All good, hearty feelings that make you feel alive.

It's what would happen if Twilight Zone and Ray Bradbury had a baby who grew up to be a Twilight Vampire but met Eric Northern and Sookie Stackhouse. With a little Cameron Crowe thrown in for some sweetness. So, basically epic.

So, if you are waiting for when it will go live…


Why Friday? Because what better night then on a #writeclub night? Right? I thought so, too. Then a story along with the picture it was inspired by will be released every other day after that.

Here are the talented writers that agreed to join this project. Follow them all on twitter for awesome.

Beau Barnett               @INukeYou
Julie Elizabeth Hill   @jlizhill
Megan Paasch            @MeganPaasch
Trisha Schmidt          @seeredwrite
Andrew Patterson     @M_A_Patterson
Megan Orsini               @morsini
Josh Hewitt                  @the_j_hewitt
Reggie Scott Whitley@societyofsix
Dee Romito                  @writeforapples
Julie Marcinek            @jmarcinikglsd
Jess Montgomery      @JessyMontgomery
Julie Hutchings           @HutchingsJulie
Kristen Strassel           @KristenStrassel
Angi Black                     @AngiNicole722
Suzan Teall Headley @WhiteGardenia27
Darci Cole                      @darci_cole
Amy Trueblood          @atrueblood5
Amanda Aszman         @AmandaShayne
Kasey Leavitt               @thedharmadiva
Jessica Meyers            @mixeduppainter

Follow the hashtag #TheMemoryProject and me, @CareyTorg for more information!

Lates. xoxo

Friday, June 14, 2013

Excuse Me, But I Think I Got My Feelings On You

Emote: 
 intransitive verb \i-ˈmōt\
Portray emotion in a theatrical manner.



I haven't posted a blog in some time, so now that I have my summer free, I hope to update this more often.

On that note…wow. What happens in one year is pretty amazing. My life has changed dramatically. Last year I was just querying my first finished manuscript and learning about the business. I hadn't even tweeted yet. Strange. Now, I'm a newly divorced single mom trying to figure out up from down, I have an agent intern gig, my second novel is almost complete and still searching for an agent. But I am wiser about all of these things in many respects.

Weird thing is, this year has presented me with many emotional challenges. My feelings are raw and out there, and I'm finding that writing has become quite difficult. And it sucks. Because I hear so many people say "Write your feelings on the page" and "get those feelings out" and as much as my feelings really would like to be set free into the cosmos, I can't. I have a hard time letting go. I have a hard time not getting caught up in my feelings. Both good and bad.

Many people have asked me this year, "Are you happier now?" I really don't know how to answer that question. In many respects, yes. I can be more true to myself. I no longer need to apologize for what I want and need in my life. But in some ways, I struggle still. Loneliness has a way of eating at your soul, small bite by bite. And there are days, that I'm quite lonely. Like today. And then, blessed be, there are days when I feel loved and cherished.

iClipart,grunge effects,roses,in bloom,nature,love,emotions,symbols,Valentine's Day,romanticSo why not pour my emotions into writing?

I realize, like with most things in life, there is a sweet spot. Even for writing. I can get caught up in happiness and joy and the feeling of "YES! My life has finally arrived!" and then I'm too giddy to really write seriously. Then there is the feeling of complete sadness and the feeling like I want to crawl under my covers and never come out. And when I feel like this, my writing suffers for it, because the only thing I want to feel is better.

iClipart,grunge effects,roses,in bloom,nature,love,emotions,symbols,Valentine's Day,romanticSo there is this place where contentment and realism resides, and that is where I do my best writing. I can call on the memories of the strong feelings and write them into my pieces, but I'm unattached enough that I don't find myself wanting to dive into a vat of Haagen Daaz. And I think that's ok. Because if I wrote when feeling all my feels, I would stop midsentence and drink whiskey or eat cake and then my novels would NEVER be finished. It's a fine art, this writing thing. And takes a delicate touch, much like surgery. I guess you could say writers are the surgeons of words.
bare trees,nature,plants,seasons,snows,winter
 I have always been convinced I truly feel things stronger than many others. And I think many writers have this tendency. I don’t know why that is, but for me, I suspect it was because of losing my brother (who was my best friend) at an early age. I learned from the get go that life isn't easy or fair, and that bad things happen. So every sunset is extra beautiful, every dawn is priceless. Every wind, lap of a wave, falling leaf, ember of a flame is so brilliantly beautiful and I love every second of every day. When you realize every moment is a gift, you tend to see things differently.

So by all accounts, I should take things in stride, right? Wrong. Instead, like that sunset or a snowfall that's been untouched by tracks of any sort, I drink in all my emotions because those too, are what it takes to feel alive. And happiness and pain are part of the wonderful journey of life, even when it's excruciating. And I have certainly had some of those feelings lately.

black and white,dandelions,fields,flowers,Fotolia,grasses,nature,outdoors,plants,puffs,skies,springs,summersAnd these feelings are the very things that drive us as writers. We need these feelings to understand the depth of our characters. Because what are books if they aren't stories of the human experience?

So, I think sometimes, we have to take pause. Revel in both the joy and the sorrow: the butterflies of a new love, a first kiss, the dreams and hope of what may come next. Conversely also: the silent breaking of a heart, the wound of unrequited love, the devastation of loss. Because these are what our worlds are built upon.

So I won't feel guilty for taking a break and letting my emotions envelope me as they tend to do. I won't consider it a personal failure if today, or tomorrow, or a month from now I need to stop writing for a bit, because my characters deserve the best of me and my full attention. Otherwise they lack their own depth and passion. That's unfair to them. That's unfair to the reader.

So, to all those writers like me who can't (for their own reasons) just "write it out", you have permission to feel. To emote. To cry. To do a cannonball into the ocean if that's what you want.
And when your feelings aren't as consuming, write again.  Because the world needs your words.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Interview with ANGI NO E!

My first author interview! I really would love to start spotlighting the wonderful writers both newly pubbed and not yet pubbed on a regular basis. I figured everyone of us can be both teacher and student, sharing our knowledge with others while we soak in their wisdom at the same time.

So, with that idea in my mind I asked the wonderful Angi Black aka Irene Rose to answer a few writing questions. I first met her as we began going back and forth writing while tweeting. It was the early manifestations of what is now a phenomenon: #writeclub. You can follow the hashtag or follow @FriNightWrites on twitter. Angi also happens to be one of the time keepers for Write Club. Now we have an amazing friendship and she is someone who is not just someone I tweet with, but someone who's critique and feedback has become important to me. She's amazing and so real and I am super glad to have her featured here on my blog. So without any further ado...

Meet Angi Black:

Tell our readers a little about you.
I'm Angi. Hi! And I dance, I sing, I act, I write. I teach at a performing arts school and holy cow, I'm a Renaissance woman. Heh. Who knew? I also spend far too much time solidifying my hippie ways greening up the Earth and volunteering.

My background is that I've been in theater since I was a wee tyke. I'm not Irish. I don't where the came from. Anywho, I have always written. Since I can remember, I've been that girl with a notebook and pen, jotting stuff down. I journaled and wrote short stories, usually romance with naughty bits. :) But I love mysteries too. I'm just not as good at writing them. Yet.

For fun - I write. LOL What a horrible answer. I dance and have singing parties at my house during the day. I love movies and select TV shows. But my number one thing to do for fun is travel. I love to travel and roadtrip and all the things like that.

Also - I'm southern, so if you come to my house I will feed you. Plan accordingly.

(I am on my way. No. Seriously. Packing my bags as we speak.)

What was the first thing you ever wrote?
Like ever? Well, in elementary school I wrote a book called 'What's in the Trunk?' I had to bind it and illustrate it too. It was a school wide contest, and I won! So far it's my only one-run publication.

 Have you ever gone back to it?

No, I haven't ever revisited it.
But if you mean real books, the first thing I ever finished was LOVE IN REAL LIFE. I have gone back to it. I can't leave it alone. it's my book baby and I'm planning a series around it as we speak.

What is your preferred genre to write? Read?
I love to write about kisses. I love first kisses and ...other things. I love the smexy times. But about that, I love the interaction of relationships, the little things that happen when you know someone. Like the first time someone remembers how you take your coffee. That's a big moment.
I love to read - well, lots of things. I love YA, NA, Adult. I love contemporary to paranormal and back again. My favorite two books are The Vampire Lestat by Anne Rice and The Great Gatsby. My tastes vary, but what I love are the characters. I want to fall in love and make a new friend. I want my heart broken and someone who makes me believe in love. I'm a very greedy reader, I need to be moved.

What inspires you? Where do you find your ideas for your writing?

Music is my number one inspiration. But really, the day to day stuff does too. I try to guess people's backstory or even in my own life, what if I had just made one different choice. BUt the number one thing that inspires me is the chance to be someone I'm not. It's the same thing with theater and dance. I can write about anything I want and that character takes on a life of her, or his, own. and since there's a bit of me in each character, a little piece of me gets to become them. And I love that so much.

Walk the readers through your writing process.
I used to pants everything. Just sit down and write. And it works. I'm a fast drafter. But for Nano last year, I plotted for the first time. Holy cow. It worked so well. I had to go back and fill in after, but the story came together so much better for me. I've plotted out my book since and they feel much more coherent.
I still have an affinity for pantsing though. So through the week, I work on my plotted manuscripts. But during Writeclub on Fridays, I pull out one of my pantsed projects and go to town. It keeps my mind fresh and makes it not get dreary.
The other thing about my writing process is that I write everyday. I try to write 1000 words everyday. Even if they're complete crap, I at least did some writing. It never leaves me a time when I think, oh god, it's been a week. I'll never get back to it now. If I've done a little bit, it keeps me moving.

Have you ever gotten "stuck" in your WIP? (I am currently going through this) What has helped get the writing flowing again?
Oh yeah. I wrote a historical romance last year and there is a very big, dramatic scene at the end. I had the worst time getting to it. It sat open for two months. I wrote another entire MS in the meantime. Finally, I just knew I had to finish it. And the first draft was complete trash. I mean the ending was unbelievably bad. She did this. Then this happened. His reaction was this. Just terrible, all passive.
But when I went back to revise and read through, it was done and the inspiration came. I was able to fix it and it's actually my favorite part of the book now.
My advice, just push through. Most artists start with a sketch and and the color later. There's no reason writing can't be any different.

If you became the next JK Rowling, how would your life change? How would it stay the same?
Oh, it would change a lot. First, people would say - you write for kids??? Second - monetarily, my kids would get to have a different life. I would have a different life. I would travel more and my house would get the love it needs. Oh, and I'd have a housekeeper! All win.

(And build a huge writer's retreat in her backyard where all of her writer friends would be invited and hang out. Ok, she didn't actually SAY that, but I am pretty certain she was thinking it. I got that vibe anyway.)
The ways it wouldn't change is that I would still teach dance for basically no money. I would still volunteer. I would still write and spend inordinate amounts of time on Twitter with my writing family. I'm me. I worked had to figure out who I am, I don't see any reason that part of me would change, no matter how much money is in the bank.
Oh, but I would only shop for clothes at ModCloth.

What has been your favorite character to write? Why?
My favorite character to write has been...wow, that's a hard one. I think it's the male MC in my NA book from my pen name. His name is River and I simply adore him. He's brainy and beautiful but completely awkward. But even with all that, he tends to be a bit smug. He's witty and completely googly in love with Ellie. He's sensitive but still a man. Know what I mean? (oh yes....yes...I do)
He's a tie with the LI in my book SUGAR-COATED DECEIT, Jason. He's is so confident and cocky, but a good guy. He's also sexy as hell and knows exactly what he wants. I wish I had his confidence. He was so much fun to write because I knew he was bold, but still, the things he said sometimes surprised even me. And I think those are the best kind of characters.

(I can attest that Jason is definately the best kind of character. You want to read this book. You just DO! And you will need to keep a fan nearby. TRUST ME!)

Thanks for interviewing me, Carey. I feel like I rambled and I sound a bit crazy, but it was my first interview. :)
xo, Ang

You did a fantastic job! It was so fun getting to know you a bit more. You are a doll! Love you. *muah*

Be sure to follow Angi on Twitter and read her fabulous blog here.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

You Just Keep Me Hanging On...


Hi all. It has been a while. For many things. For my writing. For my inspiration. For my blog. All of it. Even my tweets have become less writing centered and more life focused. There’s a good reason for that. Because right now, life is taking more center stage right now. Yeah, life. What can I say? She’s a spotlight hog. Anyway, even though she is doing her damnedest to throw every conceivable object my way, I am sitting here dodging them like someone moving from left and right hooks. Hopefully, I can keep up before I get a nasty shiner.

And these blows are not just coming for me personally. But in my writing as well. I have really tried to be inspired to write. I am standing in the middle of Inspiration Avenue trying to get hit by anything at all. At this point, even bird poop would be something. It’s not that I don’t have ideas. I have them. Lots of them. It is that I simply have no desire to write. And I think it has a great deal to do with the fact that my MS, the one I am currently querying, has reached a stalemate.

I am sitting on two full requests (for over a month now) and just sent out a partial. And I think it has me stuck because I don’t want to move on. Because I love that story so much. I believe in that story. And dammit, every single time someone reads it, they all say the same thing…”This is really good. This will get published.” And yet, no agents seem to agree.


Every time I try to explain my situation and my frustrations, people always ask the same things.  First, many repped writers regale me with stories about how they queried x amount of agents (usually way less than what I have) and how they tried x amount of months. Then I hear about pubbed authors like JK Rowling or Stephenie Meyer (who both were flukes so they are really bad comparisons) and people say “They queried 13-16 publishers (respectively) until their yes. Then I want to laugh. Are you kidding? Like 15 queries is a lot? That’s comparable to a lottery winner saying I bought fifteen tickets and won a kajillion dollars…so you buy 15 tickets and you could win too. 15 is NOT THAT MANY. I know they are trying to be helpful and tell me how long it took them, but it sometimes makes me feel worse. And that’s not what either one of us want. Then come the inevitable questions.

 Are you querying agents?

 How long have you been trying?

 How many have you queried?

Have you had any requests?
 

How many?

Do they give you feedback?

Here are those answers.

                       67 queries (plus some in contests/online crit)

43 rejections

18 requests (7 partials to fulls)

24 no response

That is a percentage of about 20-24% request rate. Which is pretty damn good. So, saying that there is no interest is not the issue. Many would argue that if you sent out that many queries and you haven’t been picked up or that you aren’t getting much feedback, regroup and re-read because there may be an issue. But with a 20%, which is a great request rate, and I have been getting feedback. And it has pretty much said that the writing is strong and they enjoyed reading the story, it just wasn’t something they LOVED. And there really is nothing to do about that. It isn’t a case of needing an R&R to fix something. It’s that for whatever reason, they are just not excited enough to rep it.

The feedback is similar: couldn’t connect, don’t love it enough, sweet but I’ve seen it before, funny but not what I am looking for.

And that's it. Nothing much more than. At least if there was something horrible and they told me I could fix it. I can’t fix anything because there is really nothing to fix. Which should feel good, but makes me feel awful.

And what is worse is that I read agents blogs, tweets, etc and most say the same thing. If it is good enough, if they love it enough and believe in it enough, they will offer. And no one does. So it leaves me in this strange place.
 

Do I keep writing, even when it is quite possible that all my ideas are plain and simple. Virtual vanilla on a page? Or do I leave the writing to those that have the million trillion ideas oozing from their pores. Thing is, I write what I love. And what I love is the everyday. I grew up watching romantic comedies and sweet contemporary movies with witty sarcasm and a dose of sugar. So that’s what I enjoy writing. Love and romance and real women with the pressures of every day societal expectations thrown on them. I love exploring the question of “What does it mean to be a woman today?” My writing is cynical because I am a touch cynical. But it has hope, because I have a lot of that too. But that isn’t exactly “cutting edge”.

I love writing romance because secretly, I hope one day I will have a romance like my characters do. I write the stories that I hope will happen to me, and women like me, one day. And maybe that’s what I’m doing wrong. Maybe romance isn’t enough anymore.

Maybe it has to have bondage or vampires or evil villains plotting to kill all humans. Or sad stories that end in tragedy. Or witches. Or superheroes. Or steampunk. Or zombies. Dear Lord I hate zombies.

I don’t know. But it makes me sad every time I think about it. My poor book. My heart in 85 thousand words. Never to really be seen. My voice never really to be heard.

And so, when I sit down to write, instead of the inspiration of a new story, my heart hangs heavy remembering the story that may never see the light of day. To never grace a bookstore shelf.

And people will say self-publish. And I consider it. Really, I am. But there’s something in me that says, “If it isn’t good enough to be picked up by people who really know this business, and really know what they are doing, then I need to accept that and move on.

I am pretty sure this is why I am stuck. This is where my head is at. Rejection is tough. Whether it was that time I tried out for Arsenic and Old Lace, auditioned for the lead part in choir, asking the cute guy I crushed on forever to prom, or asking an agent to read and love your story.

At the end of it all, I will keep trying. Because that is what is in my nature to do. But sometimes, I just want to feel the pain of it all. I need to. Because without that pain, I wouldn’t understand how amazing good feels.
And I really pray, someday, pertaining to my writing, good and I will meet. And we'll have coffee. And she'll stay awhile. We will see...