To talk about COVID, or not?
I’ve been thinking lately about my book. It’s finished. I’ve edited it to death. I’m probably going to self-publish within the next year. The set-up involves a 17-year-old werewolf who leaves her Pack, and is pretending to be a human at a Scottish boarding school. I started writing it about eight years ago, but the world looks and feels like a very different place now. Currently, there is no mention of COVID, no face masks, no hand gel. On the one hand, this feel inauthentic—how can I write about teenagers, my main target audience, without addressing what they have gone through for the last couple of years? On the other, people use books as a form of escapism. They might not want to read about what they have been living, but rather yearn to escape into another world for a bit of relief (I know I do on occasions).
I’ve been thinking lately about my book. It’s finished. I’ve edited it to death. I’m probably going to self-publish within the next year. The set-up involves a 17-year-old werewolf who leaves her Pack, and is pretending to be a human at a Scottish boarding school. I started writing it about eight years ago, but the world looks and feels like a very different place now. Currently, there is no mention of COVID, no face masks, no hand gel. On the one hand, this feel inauthentic—how can I write about teenagers, my main target audience, without addressing what they have gone through for the last couple of years? On the other, people use books as a form of escapism. They might not want to read about what they have been living, but rather yearn to escape into another world for a bit of relief (I know I do on occasions).
Then, of course, there is the question of how I would do it. Can werewolves and vampires and witches catch COVID? Can vampires get it if they drink from an infected human? What does this do to their mental health if, with every meal they have, there is a risk they will catch a deadly disease? Do they keep drinking or try and quit? These are intriguing questions that I’m itching to explore. It could dramatically change the dynamics of my characters’ personalities and my world-building, and take them to new, interesting places.
So, do I go back and edit again? Or publish it as it is, set before the pandemic, and set the next book either during or after the pandemic? Or, just leave it as it is. People want to escape, so let them escape. We get bombarded enough with COVID-related life, how about we leave the books we read as COVID-free zones?
Any thoughts?
When TikTok distracts
Crikey, what kind of a rabbit hole is TikTok? I signed up last week, mainly because I’d kept seeing articles and blogs pop up about how cool the BookTok hashtag is: so many authors having fun, and connecting with other writers and readers. Fabulous, I thought. I’d love to find my tribe, I’ll just have a quick peek…six hours later, I’m still there.
Crikey, what kind of a rabbit hole is TikTok? I signed up last week, mainly because I’d kept seeing articles and blogs pop up about how cool the BookTok hashtag is: so many authors having fun, and connecting with other writers and readers. Fabulous, I thought. I’d love to find my tribe, I’ll just have a quick peek…six hours later, I’m still there.
What the hell happened to my day? All my awesome plans for writing at least a chapter or two? TikTok sucks you down that rabbit hole (don’t get me wrong, it’s a tonne of fun), and spits you out feeling dazed and confused.
Will I be back? Hell yes. Do I need to pinch my kids’ timer that limits his time on Roblox? Hell yes.
Welcome to my First Blog Post!
Well, the website is done, copious amounts of tea have been drunk, and my awe of techie people who create websites as simply as a witch-like snap of their fingers, has grown immensely. This blog is going to be a place where I can share my writing journey, the ups (you know, the ones with the amazing mountaintop views), the downs (those depressing days where I get five rejections, my words come out like brain-farts, and I can’t, for the life of me, see my way out of the plot hole I’ve just dug for myself), and all the bits in-between.
Well, the website is done, copious amounts of tea have been drunk, and my awe of techie people who create websites as simply as a witch-like snap of their fingers, has grown immensely. This blog is going to be a place where I can share my writing journey, the ups (you know, the ones with the amazing mountaintop views), the downs (those depressing days where I get five rejections, my words come out like brain-farts, and I can’t, for the life of me, see my way out of the plot hole I’ve just dug for myself), and all the bits in-between. Hopefully, in detailing what I did and didn't do, others can avoid those holes I dived into, or copy anything that turned out okay. Writing can be lonely at times, but blogs are where I’ve found a community. We help each other. That can mean a lot these days.