Fiction and Non-Fiction

Month: March 2025

Farewell to March

This has been a very mixed month. From a day-job and business perspective it’s been a great month. I had a client go-live and apart from some initial hiccups it’s been a very smooth experience. So smooth that as we move into April we are already starting to plan how to increase the volume.

On the writing and publishing front, it hasn’t been so productive – possibly because the work events not only took up time, but also because they required a huge amount of mental effort. By the end of each day when I typically do a big piece of my daily writing I’ve been too mentally exhausted to focus on the story, or what the characters want to do next. The result is that as of the middle of today, I’m still five hundred words behind where I was in February, and a long long way from my targeted word count for the month.

The one benefit is that I’ve managed to work out some story blocks in my head so when April begins I can do a reset and move forward. I also wrote a short story for a magazine that hadn’t been in my plan. It’s a themed magazine and the March theme just happened to resonate enough that before I knew it, I’d written a thousand words to start it off. Then it stalled a little before a burst in the past few days which let me meet the submission deadline.

At one point in the past week, I was leaning toward saying good riddance to March. Now I’m a little more relaxed and I’m okay to say farewell to March.

Bracketology

I’m not usually a follower of March Madness until the Final Four, and only then if it involves a team I’m interested in.

This year is different as I joined two March Madness pools. One for the men, and one for the women. While I haven’t watched every game, I’ve certainly kept myself aware of the results. If you’ve done these pools before, I’m sure you’re familiar with going through the match-offs and predicting the winners of each game all the way through to the championship final, and predicting the eventual winner.

My knowledge of basketball is, at best, limited. When I first moved to the US and lived in southern Connecticut it was about the time Geno Auriemma and the UConn women were beginning their dominance. The UConn – Tennessee rivalry was always in the news. For the men, Duke, maybe Duke, and quite probably Duke. I’m sure there were other teams in the mix, like UConn in 2004 when both the men’s and women’s teams were National Champions – a feat they repeated in 2014 if Wikipedia is to be believed.

The surprise this year, to me anyway, has been the preponderance of SEC teams as top seeds. I always consider the SEC as a football conference, yet here we have Alabama, Auburn, Florida, and Tennessee in the top six NCAA rankings, with another ten SEC teams in the final 64.

As I live in SEC country, they took the edge in the matchups although I didn’t have the courage to pick against Duke until the Elite Eight when the play Alabama. We’ll see just how good I am on April 6 and 7 where I have UConn to win the Women’s Championship game and Auburn to win the men’s.

Unexpected Treasures

This past weekend I was completing a back up to my portable hard drive when I noticed a folder with the name Compiled Drafts. The name didn’t ring any bells in my memory but I surmised it was the destination folder for when I compiled stories from Scrivener. That made the folder several years old as I changed my whole approach to manuscript generation and storage about three or four years ago.

When I looked at the contents of the folder it was like unwrapping a special present at Christmas.

There were thirty-four files in the folder. Some of the filenames I recognized as stories I’d written. Looking at them, most were partially completed – probably a version I printed out to work out where next to take the story.

Other file names were strange.

For example, the document A Higher Order didn’t even sound familiar. When I checked my stories master list spreadsheet, it wasn’t on there either.

So I opened the document and started reading. The story is about a librarian. And I have no recollection of writing it, although I must have done because my name is on the title page and in the metadata as the owner of the document. There were another six or seven stories like that and I’ve moved them all into my master list and story folder structure.

When I wrote in January about the number of unpublished short stories I had, these few weren’t even on my radar. Now I have more to consider and work with.

That’s the sort of problem I like!

A New Name for an Old Concept

I’ve been meaning to write about this for some time, but always seemed to get distracted with other topics until now.

Several years ago when I was first coming to grips with the note taking application Obsidian, which I’ve written about previously, I came across the term transclusion in the documentation. That had me scratching my head until I read further and discovered it’s a way to reference another document from the current document, and have the contents of the referenced document displayed.

A light bulb went off in my head and took me back several decades to my programming days. It’s the same as the COBOL INCLUDE statement.

A colleague once remarked that every industry renames concepts on a semi-regular basis. He’d built a good career around training and consulting on the impact of those name changes. Files, records, and fields becoming tables, rows , and columns – that sort of thing.

While I was checking some things for this post, I learned the Obsidian help now talks about how to embed a file. Transclusion isn’t mentioned, which I think makes it easier for the non-technical user.

Still, it’s interesting to see that sometimes, even the new names get replaced.

Reflections on Learning

Over the past few weeks I’ve been taking a study course on a very specific area of the writing craft. It’s called the rule of three.

Essentially whenever you describe something in a story, the most effective way is to describe it in a block of three. To use an example from a piece of my recent writing – Judy smelled the smoke now. The bitter tang of burnt wool, seared yarns, and charred wood.

There are some rules around this as well. You shouldn’t chain two sets of three immediately after each other. That becomes a list and readers mostly skip lists. Well, not totally. Research shows you read the first, second, and last items on the list and your eyes just skip past everything in between. Pretty much all the top writers use rule of three in some way, shape, or form.

I was thinking about that as I read through the stories that make up my latest science fiction story collection – Where Infinity Begins. There are six stories in the collection, some of them written four or five years ago before I learned about rule of three. And it shows.

Usually my final read through of the stories in a collection is to check for spelling and character consistency; height, eye color, hair color, that sort of thing. I try to avoid detailed editing for two reasons. Firstly editing like this is my critical voice at work, and secondly, I’d rather be writing new stories than rehashing something I wrote a year or more ago. This time though, probably because of the class, I was very aware of rule of three and where I hadn’t used it, especially in the older stories. So in this editing session I did do more than just correct spelling.

In places I added that third element of description and I think the stories are better for it. That’s only my opinion though. Grab a copy of Where Infinity Begins and let me know what you think.

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