I always found some hesitation with starting new projects, even if I enjoyed the idea. I wonder why this is. Since medical drama is your wheelhouse, how often do you find yourself wanting to "take a break" from it?
Ooh, horror. Psychological stuff is harder! The brain is a mysterious thing and getting into someone's psyche can take a toll.
I think it's a comfort thing. The longer you write a story, the more comfortable you feel with it. Once you finish it and are facing starting a brand new project, there's the fear of, "Can I pull this off? Will it be as good as my last story?" I feel that way even when I'm excited about the idea. At least with my medical drama, I've gotten to the point where I trust in my own ability to do it justice, even when I know it's going to take a lot of research. I look forward to the challenge. That's probably why I went with My Brother's Keeper over Fallen Angel - they're both ideas that will challenge me, but in different ways. MBK is still solidly in my wheelhouse, whereas Fallen Angel is totally new territory for me.
I probably say I'm ready to take a break from medical drama every time I finish writing a particularly intense one, but I always go right back to it within a few months LOL. I finished A Heart That Isn't Mine (medical drama) in November 2019, took a break to write The Year Without a Pandaskunk (not medical drama), and then went back to Heroic Measures (medical drama) in April 2020. Road to Bethlehem started out being a break from medical drama and then kind of turned into a medical drama, which is why I thought I was ready for another break from it. But here I am, back at it again. LOL
How many of your premises were ideas from other people? It seems like the ones that came from other people are your least favorite stories. Oh Encarta '95. World Book '98 on CD-Rom was also one of my research tools, so I understand this completely! lmao, you needed to call up Lurlene and tell her that you needed some teen drug addiction stories, stat!
Only a couple that I can think of offhand, but yes, those are probably my two least favorite stories of all time LOL. I obviously liked the ideas enough at the time to try writing them, but I just wasn't as committed to them as I am with most of my own ideas. With Silent Desperation, I just didn't really know what I was doing. The other one like this was my first AU, a long-lost sibling story called The Other Child, and that one I just ran out of steam on and wrapped it up too quickly so I could be done writing it.
LOL I think addiction was too scandalous for Lurlene. Her books were all pretty wholesome.
I guess we need a new hashtag around here. #TeamKevin! What do you think made you put off writing a Kevin story for such a long time?
#TeamKevin! I just never had a good idea for a Kevin novel. The closest I've come is with Guilty Roads, which feels like a Nick/Kevin story because a lot of the focus is on Kevin... but since Kevin gets shot in the head in Chapter 3 and has been in a coma ever since, he doesn't really do enough for me to consider him a main character LOL.
I'm about to blow your mind, lol. Brunet is male, brunette is female. Luckily, "has brown hair" is a perfectly acceptable equivalent, whereas "has yellow hair" is not. This might be one of English's more bizarre borrows from French language, since adjectives get changed to match the genders (and quantities) of nouns, but our nouns aren't gendered. I think Spanish, Italian, and Latin may do the same thing, but I'm not as familiar with them. If anything stuck from my years of French, it was definitely that Nick is blond and not blonde.
How bored would you have to be to go back and fix stuff like that? (I'm channeling Howie, lol.)
I think I actually discovered the brunet/brunette thing at the same time as blond/blonde. (I obviously did not take French LOL.) I don't tend to use that word to describe men with brown hair though the way I use "blond" for men... mainly Nick LOL. Like you said, "brown hair" sounds a lot better than "yellow hair."
I don't think I would ever get bored enough to go back and fix stuff like that in anything pre-Broken. I did get bored enough during quarantine last year to go back and fix typos in some of my post-BMS novels. I had highlighted every mistake I came across when reading them on my Kindle as I was working on my 20th anniversary blogs, so when I decided to start putting some of my stories on AO3, I thought I better go back through them and fix that stuff before I posted them. I have not gotten bored enough to go back to Broken and BMS because the number of highlights is overwhelming LOL.
Watching TV is a hobby, I think. I haven't ever actually gotten many follow-up questions. I think it's all about how you frame the initial response? But I understand the shyness aspect of it. Writing is fairly personal. What happens after you win the Young Author's competition? Does it get published?
Well, good! Then I have more hobbies than I thought LOL.
Writing is definitely personal. I don't have any non-fandom friends who write for fun that I'm aware of, but maybe some of them have secret hobbies too LOL.
A copy of the winning Young Author's books would be put in the school library so other kids could check them out, and the winners would get a trophy or plaque. In 8th grade, I won first place for the whole district, and my grandparents had my book professionally bound as a hardback as a gift for me. That was the last piece of fiction I wrote before I started writing fanfic, and it was the perfect bridge into what I'm best known for now - it was a cancer story LOL. Another girl in my class had won first place the year before for a story about drunk driving, which gave me the idea that if I also wrote a tearjerker about a serious topic, I would have a better shot at winning. Well, sure enough... my plan totally worked LOL. That was the start of me writing medical drama.
I love that you listened to the Braveheart soundtrack so much while writing Broken. Why was that?
Also Linkin Park, how emo.
The Broken era is when I really got into listening to music while I wrote, so I started with what I had, which was the Titanic soundtracks and apparently Braveheart. I don't remember if I actually owned the Braveheart soundtrack before Broken or if I bought it while I was writing Broken for that purpose, but I have always loved that score. James Horner is one of my favorite movie composers. I needed something sad and dramatic to listen to while I angsted my way through that story, and it fit that mood well.
I've always loved Linkin Park. But yes, very emo! I listened to a lot of LP and Evanescence while writing Broken too LOL.
Maybe it depends on how long those "breaks" are? Or whatever you would like to call it; you're the writer after all.
LOL I call them "focus fails." But being able to focus fail and go back to actually writing when I feel like it is part of what makes it fun for me and not something that feels like word. I don't ever want it to feel like work.
Yes, references to early-2000s pop culture! Those are always hilarious to look back on. Technological advancement is wild! Have you ever watched the "Kids React" episodes on YouTube? Whenever they pull out old technology, it is hilarious.
Yes, it's crazy! Writing a story set in 2008 has been interesting because, to me, 2008 doesn't feel that long ago... and yet, I find myself having to fact check so many little details to make sure I'm not writing about things that didn't exist yet then. Questions I've looked up include: Did people have smartphones then? (The first iPhone came out in 2007, so yes.) Did most households still have a landline phone then? (Yes.) Did TMZ exist? (Yes. I had fun browsing TMZ's website from 2008 via the Wayback Machine yesterday. It was actually way more user friendly than TMZ's current site because there weren't a ton of ads slowing it down!)
I love the Kids React videos. I'm assuming you've seen the Kids React to BSB one? And BSB reacts to Kids React to BSB? LOL
That sounds like it was painful! Glad you made it to the top, injury aside, and have a good story. How often do you tell this one?
I don't think I've ever told it online before, but I've told it a few times in real life.