by Janis Patterson
Travel is wonderful. Travel is broadening. Travel is fun. Travel is enlightening. Travel can be used as research for an upcoming book - and therefore be made tax-deductible!
Travel can also be very problematic for the professional novelist.
I try to adhere to a writing schedule - a rough and occasionally flexible schedule, admittedly, and have been known to be somewhat slip-shod about keeping it (hey, I’m only human!) but schedules do work best when you’re at home and settled into a routine. Travel can knock all that into a cocked hat.
The Husband would rather fly everywhere we go; as I have an intense dislike of being treated as not-too-bright self-ambulatory cargo, I prefer to drive if at all feasible. The results turn out to be pretty much equal. Whichever way we travel, though, I refuse to go without a computer. (Yes, I am spoiled. And semi-obsessed.) That way I can make notes, keep a trip diary if the trip justifies such, and at least appear to be holding to my schedule.
The Husband calls it my security object. I loftily reply that I haven’t yet started carrying it with me to the grocery store - though I haven’t yet admitted that sometimes it can be a near thing.
While the stated idea of taking a computer with me is so I can get at least some work done on the work in process (which does have a fast-approaching deadline), perhaps the greatest danger traveling poses to a novelist is the storm of ideas which attack you. I have a projected writing schedule for approximately the next two years. Then I go on a trip and everything goes wonky, as it is a very rare trip when I don’t get at least five or six workable plots, plots which call to me with the seductive whispers of excitement and creativity.
So, like a good little magpie snatching at something shiny, I make notes and jot down ideas, create a file for them on the computer and tuck them away in a remote corner of my hard drive. And, I’ll be honest, sometimes I forget them... but sometimes I don’t. Some of my best and best-selling books have come from these ‘vacation attack’ ideas.
Anyway, as we are leaving in the morning, I have to go finish packing. All those ideas are lying in wait.
(P.S. - for those of you who are following my republishing blitz, I am happy to report that it is going perfectly according to schedule - a book, freshly edited, freshly edited and as often as not with a new cover - released every other Wednesday since the middle of January! THE EARL AND THE BLUESTOCKING (#15) will go live on 19 July, and INHERITANCE OF SHADOWS (#16 and a multi-award winner) on 2 August. Plus - drum roll here - my second audio book A KILLING AT EL KAB and my third CURSE OF THE EXILE are now available at Amazon and Audible!
8 comments:
You are a whirlwind! I love reading about your inspirational journey!
-Sofie.
Travel safe.
Janis,
Congrats on the re-issuing of your backlist! Hope you enjoy your travel.
You're amazing! I don't know how you get so much done! Anyway, I know what you mean about brining a computer with. Whenever we leave for any vacation, my laptop computer is a must to come with. I may not get as much writing done as I'd like, but I still keep up my contacts on social media. Now that I have a new laptop computer, since the old had a bad battery, I look forward to using it more often away from home, and even at home when not using the desktop!
Love your blogs. Totally agree about your observations on air travel. In more colorful language.
Mary
M.E. Bakos
I love to travel. Keep us informed of your adventures. Incidentally, I hate to fly. Cooped up in a tube with hundreds of other flyers isn't my cup of tea, but sometimes it's the only way. I'd prefer to drive.
Love this post. I don't like to fly even if it takes longer to drive, but sitting in a tube is a great place to write. Mary Hagen
pg slot 6g มาแรง ที่สุด ในตอนนี้ เป็นเรื่องที่น่าสนใจอย่างมากในวงการเกม PG สล็อตออนไลน์ในปัจจุบัน ซึ่งมีการพัฒนาและนวัตกรรมที่ทันสมัยเข้ามาเพื่อให้ผู้เล่นได้สัมผัสประสบการณ์การเล่นที่ยิ่งใหญ่และเพลิดเพลินไปกับความตื่นเต้น
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