Getting your priorities right

{I’ve decided to put the post on overwriting up on my blog – when I finish it}

In the meantime, it’s wonderful to know that the authorities over in Kelantan State have their priorities right in the fight for justice. In this world of increasing crime and rising prices, of incompetent contractors, of people who steal the metal manhole covers and endanger our lives, of violence and corruption, rape, child murder by paedophiles – the authorities home straight in on dastardly crime and criminals who devastate the – um, well, let me see.

Er, just who was the victim again? Just who suffered from their crime? Er, what was the crime?

Never mind, it doesn’t matter. I am sure that we will all sleep more soundly knowing that 4 transvestites are now in jail for 7 days, after paying fines of $1000 rm and pleading guilty to (dare I mention it?) the heinous crime of crossdressing.
Oh, and one wonders just how some of these desperadoes (there are actually 16 of them; the others have not appeared in court yet) are going to pay their fines. At least one is being sacked or suspended from his government job.

Really impressive, you enforcement guys over there in Kelantan. Pat yourselves on the back for a job well done, keeping the world safe from the attack of the sarong and evening gown.

Next time I’m over there, I shall wear my shirt and trousers and lace-up shoes. I’ll borrow a tie from my husband. Will you arrest me too?

Rogue Rainlord


I have just finished another run through of the manuscript of Rogue Rainlord – or whatever this book 1 will finally be called – and I still found some examples of overwriting. (In early drafts, I invariably underwrite.)

I didn’t forget any dogs this time – but I did forget one important detail. I sent a character off to get help, and then failed to mention what happened to him. Rather an important omission at this late stage! Fortunately, easily fixed.

Anyway, at last, I am happy with Rogue Rainlord. In fact, I think it is a brilliant book. Yep, I am at the peak of my love affair with this story. There is adventure and battle and war; excitement and despair and hope, a deeply touching love story, two very different men so consumed with hubris and their own agendas that they do not not recognise the evil they do, or in fact care. Generally lots of big things at stake in a world gone awry.

There were times when I knew it was terrible, and I thought I would never wrestle it into shape. But – with considerable help from my beta readers – I have arrived at a story that I am proud to have written. And possibly because it gave me so much trouble, I think it is one of the best things I have ever done.

Tomorrow I will say more about overwriting and underwriting. In the meantime, here’s the very beginning of …

Chapter One.

It was the last night of her childhood.

Terril, unknowing, thought it just another busy evening in Opal’s Snuggery, crowded and noisy and hot. Rooms were hazed with the fumes from the keproot pipes of the addicted and fuggy with the smell of the resins smouldering in the censers. Smoky blue tendrils curled through the archways, encouraging a lively lack of restraint as they blurred the air.

Everything as usual.

Terril’s job was to collect the dirty plates and mugs and return them to the kitchen, in an endless round from sunset until the dark dissolved under the first cold fingering of dawn.

Her desire was to be unnoticed at the task.

Her dream was to escape her future as one of Madam Opal’s girls.

Once she’d thought the snuggery a happy place, the outer courtyard always alive with boisterous chatter and laughter as friends met on entry, the reception rooms bustling with servants fetching food from the kitchens or amber from the barrels in the cellar, the stairs cluttered with handmaidens as they giggled and flirted and smiled, arm in arm with their clients. She’d thought the snuggery’s inhabitants lived each night adrift on laughter and joy and friendship. But she had only been seven then, and newly purchased. She was twelve now, old enough to realise the laughter and the smiles and the banter were part of a larger game, and what underlay it was much sadder. She still didn’t understand everything, not really, even though she knew now what went on between the customers and women like her half-sister, Vivie, in the upstairs rooms.

She knew enough to see the joy was a sham.

She knew enough to know she didn’t want any part of it.

And so she scurried through the reception rooms with her laden tray, hugging the walls on her way to the kitchen, a drab girl with brown tunic, brown skin, brown hair so dark it had the rich depth of rubies; a timid pebblemouse on its way back to its lair with a pouch-load of detritus to pile around its burrow entrance, hoping to keep a hostile world at bay. She kept her gaze downcast, instinctively aware that her eyes, green and intelligent, told another story.

Distractions and writing

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When I am working, there are times when I am easily distracted. Sunbirds will do the trick, anytime. When they come and perch on the gingers outside my study and start chirping and sipping the nectar, the novel gets temporarily ditched… I mean, who can resist a peek?

Unfortunately they are never still and are very hard to photograph. Still, that can make for an arty photo shoot, right?

Plain-throated (aka Brown-throated) Sunbird. Think of them as Asia’s answer to the hummingbird (which is not found outside of the Americas).

The Bestselling Books of all Time! *

*Well, in Fantastic Planet since they opened shop in 2005….

This sf/f bookstore in my hometown (Perth, Australia) has just published a list of their top 100 bestsellers. And there is Heart of the Mirage at number 74. You can see the whole list here, but before you look, see if you can guess any of the top ten and let us know in the comments section! Two of the ten are Australian authors.

71…Where’s My Cow?, by Terry Pratchett
72…Iron Council, by China Mieville
73…Blue Dragon, by Kylie Chan
74…Heart of the Mirage, by Glenda Larke
75…The Rabbits, by Shaun Tan and John Marsden
76…Chasm City, by Alastair Reynolds
77…Spin, by Robert Charles Wilson
78…Geodesica Descent, by Sean Williams
79…The Android’s Dream, by John Scalzi
80…Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card

So where do you come from?


Here’s the map of one year’s visits. Everywhere from Papua to Nome, by the look of it – taking in Outer Mongolia, Samoa (or is it Tonga?), Cape Verde Island, Iceland, the Sahara and the Maldives along the way.

Three weeks ago I registered with Google Analytics, which supplies a great deal more info.
The highest number of visitors were Australian, followed by in order by Malaysia, United States and U.K. Rather lower came Canada, China and France, then a whole list with just a handful of hits. In the States, there were more hits from California than anywhere else; in Australia, Perth headed the list. In the UK, it was St Helier. In Malaysia – the folk from Ipoh beat Kuala Lumpur, but when you include all the Klang Valley, Ipoh falls well behind.

Anyway, all of you, for whatever reason, thanks for dropping in.

Flower picking rage in Taman Cempaka

This morning, as usual, I went for a walk in out local park, Taman Cempaka. It is named after a popular local flowering tree, and a number of them are planted there.

The sweet scented flower is used in aromic oils, garlands and in Malay traditional medicines. In Bali it is used in offerings to the gods. Of course, there are always a few people who steal the flowers from the park trees, apparently believing that the word “public” means they have a right to help themselves, in spite of signs to the contrary.

(Like-minded people go fishing in the river that flows through the park, sitting right next to the signs that say: NO FISHING. Malaysians are very good at pretending laws either don’t exist or aren’t intended to include them.)

I usually walk with my husband, but he was busy this morning, so I was alone. I did stop to talk to one of our neighbours, though. While chatting, a couple near us were stealing flowers from a cempaka tree. Some people jogging past them made some remark in passing, which I didn’t catch, about what they were doing. The gentleman I was speaking to – who is 70 years old – explained to the couple that one wasn’t supposed to pick flowers growing in parks. He was polite and non-confrontational.

At which the man can charging at him like a pit-bull, his fist clenched into a fist, drawn back in a way that suggested he was going to let fly any moment. I was so astonished at this unwarranted attack, I thought he must be joking. He wasn’t. My neighbour attempted to be conciliatory. Mistake. This enraged the man still further. Nice fellow this one. His wife made ineffectual noises in the background.

It looked like escalating into an attempt to inflict real physical conflict, so I stepped in front of him. He continued to pour out venom and threaten my neighbour with bodily harm for, apparently, daring to suggest that he wasn’t allowed to steal flowers. I wouldn’t let him past. His fist, clenched tight, waved in the air past my ear, shaken at my neighbour as he pushed against me in his eagerness to get at his target. (He really did remind me of a dog straining on a leash at this stage – he paid me no attention whatsoever, any more than a dog listens when it’s riled.) My neighbour, without actually apologising for speaking the absolute truth, remained calm and softly spoken, suggesting that they shake hands and go on their way.

That enraged him still further. “We weren’t breaking the branches,” the wife said, “just picking the flowers.” As if that excused anything, least of all his aggression.

In the end, I grabbed my neighbour by the arm and turned away.

If I knew the name of the man, I’d write it here, but I don’t. Stealing is stealing, mate. Read the signs if you don’t believe me.

And I am left wondering if he beats his wife. I wouldn’t be surprised. Or maybe he just has early Alzheimer’s and the personality changes that go with it.

A violent man or a sick one, he certainly enlivened my morning walk.

Are you a writer who needs help?

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If you are, then one of the avenues open to you is to seek professional help – which, of course, comes with a price tag. If you are debating where you need this kind of help then you could do worse that read first the piece that Bibliobibuli has up on her excellent blog today, written by just such a free-lance editor, Rob Redman.

The editor also has an excellent blog here.

I hasten to say that I have no personal knowledge of how good or otherwise this particular editor is at editing, but his advice is definitely good.

To whet your appetite, here’s the beginning of the article:

This is how the story goes. Freelance fiction editing began to bloom a couple of decades back, when downsizing publishers sacked many of their in-house editors. Publishers were now more reluctant to take on manuscripts that were in need of development, and there were dozens of experienced fiction editors in need of work. It was only a matter of time before those editors began to advertise their services directly to hopeful writers. In an increasingly competitive marketplace, where more prospective authors than ever before compete for the attentions of fewer publishing houses, hiring an editor is seen as one way to increase the chances of success.

I think this has led to a slight misconception regarding the role of freelance editors, and it’s one that the less scrupulous editors are all too ready to exploit. You see, editors aren’t really there to help you sell your book, but rather to help you improve it, to develop your abilities as a writer, and progress towards that point where you can sell your book for yourself. Personally, I’d say that 90% of the critiques I do are about helping writers in the early stages of their development, rather than polishing almost-perfect manuscripts before they’re submitted to agents.

It’s best to think of an editor is as a writing coach, and the process of the critique as a focussed writing course, based around your novel.

Don’t Forget the Dog!

At the end of The Aware, Blaze has a dog, a marsh dog with webbed feet.

At the beginning of the second book of that trilogy, Gilfeather, the dog was still with her. Then, for a part of the story, Blaze the character was not around. When she returned to the story line, the dog was missing and I blithely wrote on to the end. Only when I went back to re-read, it struck me: what happened to the dog?????

So one of the things I had to do in the second draft of Gilfeather was bring back the dog...

Needless to say, now that I am writing the second book of this Random Rain trilogy and re-reading Book 1 at the same time, I am looking for missing dogs, cats, tics, accents, mysteriously changing eye colour and a whole heap of other stuff. Trying to keep a whole world and fifty characters straight in one’s head is, well, a headache sometimes.

So as I re-read Book 1, I am jotting down things on a white card with the title:

THINGS TO BE REMEMBERED

Here are just a few of the items I have put on the list:
  • Gibber rush comes twice a year
  • Reduner women do not drive pedes
  • Embroidery on carapace Baster pedes is red
  • Burnish – inlaid with mica
  • Ryka has freckles
  • Pede carving – done by sons
  • The piece of jasper!
  • Sandmasters can take zigger water
  • No ginger hair in the Quartern
  • Two days ride between Scarcleft and Breccia

…and so on.
Let’ s hope this time I don’t forget the jasper. It’s important.

Went to the movies…

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…today. And saw The Dark Knight. Brilliant. Loved it. Harrowing, but superb.

And Heath Ledger was outstanding, and I am not just saying that because he died so young, or because he’s from my home town. He deserves every bit of the praise he will get for this performance. Especially since acting through a mask of make-up must be difficult.

Yet why, oh why, does that seem to make his unnecessary death seem even more poignant?

Vale, Heath. I hope, somewhere deep inside, you knew you had turned in a performance people would remember for a long, long time.