I would have to run slap into an entire expository infomercial about clothes and shoes right at the start of the next bit of word count. Oh, well. It's a first draft. It's supposed to be bloated, and extra data gives me more to work with when I come back on revision.
Right?
::growls::
Right?
::growls::
no subject
Date: 2007-02-18 01:51 am (UTC)Barbara Hambly said something that hit me as entirely clever, on a panel about writing in other creators' series (Star Wars in her case). She writes a chapter of just the infomercial/previously-on-Star-Wars stuff. During the second draft she extracts sentences from that chapter, sprinkling them early on in the manuscript.
I shall now make myself do this on my current project, and I have you to thank for the reminder. Historical fiction is haaaard and these are ways to inform/educate/not-bog-down.
no subject
Date: 2007-02-18 03:17 pm (UTC)(And what you said about historical fiction--yeah. I have a feeling this one is going to kick my butt.)
no subject
Date: 2007-02-18 11:59 pm (UTC)I'm balancing this, too, as there's historical fiction (tapestry rich, driven by details excavated from source materials) and then there's adventure in a historical setting (a lighter hand with the denseness). I want to write the latter, but the research becomes interesting in itself ... and it's not necessarily a story, though it is compelling.
no subject
Date: 2007-02-19 01:38 am (UTC)