Phooey

I just finished reading Leven Thumps and the Gateway to Foo by Obert Skye.

Grade: B

This is another book that I really wanted to like. I bought it new, which I only do if a book sounds particularly interesting. And to give the book its proper due, I have to admit that it is interesting. The made-up creatures in the book are great. I love the idea of a magnificent tree growing over a home to protect the child who lives there, and I even like the walking, talking toothpick that it becomes. I also love the idea of a cute little creature known as a sycophant that’s with you night and day, feeding you candy that it pulls out of nowhere. The imaginary land of Foo is said to be populated with all sorts of interesting beings, like rants and lithen, and I would have liked to learn more about them.

The real people are another story. All of the adults are horrible, but not believably horrible or “love to hate you” horrible, just unpleasant to read about. The main character, Leven, is wishy-washy and sort of pathetic. He meets up with Winter, a nit from Foo, who can freeze things with her thoughts. She’s cool, but her character isn’t so developed that you can really feel like you know her.

Fate works overtime in this story, creating amazing coincidences and conveniences for the main characters that are, at times, too much to be believed. As someone who once wrote a story that depended heavily on Fate, even to the point that it was another character in the story, I can understand what the author was trying to accomplish. I don’t think it worked any better for him than it did for me.

Overall the book isn’t too bad, but I wanted more from it than it was willing to give. I’m curious about the sequels, because this story might just be background for a more exciting tale set in Foo, but I won’t go out of my way to get the next book. If I see it on sale someday, I might buy it. I’ll take my cue from the lithen and leave it to Fate.

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The Decision

We are still back in the year 2006 at the beginning of the month of November. It’s late at night and I’m wide awake, scribbling wildly in my shabby green journal, struggling to keep the pen moving fast enough to spell out my thoughts.

November 1, 2006

Have you ever for a moment seriously tried to believe in something completely impossible? My novel is about believing in the impossible, though I did not intend for it to be so. I am reminded of something that happened to me when I was a child. Perhaps I was thinking of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (C.S. Lewis) or maybe I just had nothing better to do, but one day I sat in my room, looking at a picture of a unicorn drinking from a stream. I thought about how real the water looked, about how realistic the shadows were, how close to actual motion the picture was, and I tried to will myself into the scene. As I tried, this feeling welled up from deep inside, a feeling of hope and possibility and awe.

Though I ultimately failed to break into that alternate reality and escape this one, the feeling persisted. Indeed, it is still with me today. In the deepest, dustiest, darkest corner of my heart, I feel that if I could have believed it absolutely for even one second I would have found myself standing next to a unicorn.

So how fitting is it that the subject of my novel is believing in impossible things when the goal of writing a novel in just a month is so daunting as to appear impossible? As I watched the minutes tick by on October 31st and midnight rolled around, I felt a curious sense of blankness. Where I had been looking forward to this in October, now I felt the impossibility of it in November. How was I going to write it? Thanks to my fellow CT writers, I was shamed into writing. I had nothing else to do while I was at the meet-up and I would have felt strange leaving immediately.

So I wrote. I wrote garbage. I gave myself permission to write garbage, five pages of it. I did not care if my thoughts were in order or if my words were arranged grammatically. I did not care about spelling. I did not care if I repeated myself or skipped over parts. If I could not come up with the well-dressed word that I wanted, I used its raggedy cousin. I put my faith in the value of quantity over quality. I concentrated on the story. I just had to tell the story.

But my five pages became a mere 1200 words when typed into the computer. I refused to fall behind. I wrote more garbage. When I could not take any more, I went to bed. Then the magic began. Thoughts started popping into my mind, one after the other. Where before my novel had an unbridgeable hole in its center, there were now people and happenings, relationships I had not anticipated, thoughts I could barely recognize as my own. The story really began to unfold.

Now we have returned to the year 2007, but it is the above journal entry that made me decide to participate in NaNoWriMo this year, even though I previously said that I wouldn’t. It reminded me that writing is a leap of faith. You have to believe that you will accomplish your goal no matter how impossible it seems. It’s like that scene from the third Indiana Jones movie, the “leap from the lion’s head.” Indiana Jones had to have faith that he would not fall when he stepped off the edge of the cliff. When you’re writing a story, you can’t see all the way from beginning to end, but you have to trust that if you proceed the path will eventually reveal itself.

I don’t know that I have it in me to write salable material, but I do know that I need to write for my own satisfaction. It’s just part of who I am. I also know that the only way to become a good writer is by writing a lot.

Last year NaNoWriMo pushed me to take the leap of faith and also to write a large quantity of text, neither of which I’ve been able to manage since. I think I need the kick in the pants. There’s the risk that it will have the opposite effect and cause another 4-5 month dry spell, but I’m willing to take the chance. I still remember the sense of excitement that I felt as the novel began to unfold and I would like to feel that way again.

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201

This is my 201st post! I wish that my 200th had been about something more exciting than spider solitaire, but I didn’t plan ahead. No matter. It’s simply wonderful to have made it past the 200 mark.

Now let’s go back in time to the night of November 1, 2006—the beginning of last year’s NaNoWriMo. I was so energized by my first day of writing that I couldn’t sleep. I turned the light back on, grabbed my shabby little journal, and wrote about the experience. It must have been about 3:00 a.m., so please be impressed by the coherency.

November 1, 2006

There is nothing like writing a story to make you ponder the relationship between cause and effect, stimulus and response. It makes me wonder how many people are out there, just like me, persistently misunderstanding the scope of their own control. We fret over those things over which we have no control, such as the actions of other people. Yet in those things that we can control in the course of our everyday lives, we often feel that we can only react to outside stimulus.

It’s a common thing in fantasy novels for the protagonist start on his journey because of something that was forced upon him. Frodo did not find the ring or ask for it. It was given to him and then darkness descended upon him and he had to react. But it is important to realize that we can instigate our own adventures. Even Frodo did that. He didn’t have to take on the task of saving Middle Earth. It may have been outside forces that pushed him, but he could have gone in any one of infinite ways.

It is scary the amount of control that we have. I could decide today that I will not go to work and instead, I will pack up some necessities and live out of my car for weeks. I could plan a trip to Greece. I could create any kind of adventures for myself. I could not control its every event or eventual outcome, but I could instigate it. I could cause it to be.

How much power I have!

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Just Say Solitaire

I am vulnerable to suggestion. All my Faithful Reader has to say is “Spider Solitaire” and I’m gone for hours, lost in Game Land.

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Journal-Ism

One of my old journals is falling apart. I’d like to throw the raggedy thing away. There are only a few parts I care to remember, so I’m going to post those and then toss the rest.

I guess late last year I was just starting to get into rhyme mode because I found this limerick.

Have you heard of the cat who was black
Except for the patch on his back?
It was white as the snow
And he hated it so
He hid himself deep in a sack.

And there were lots of silly couplets. I wrote them as a warm-up. I wanted to write a song and I thought it might go easier if I started with a nonthreatening subject like my cat.

He’s a cat from outer space.
Come to tame the human race.

His fur is as black as the sky at night
Except for a heart-shaped patch of white
So cute upon his belly.
His breath is always smelly.

He chews the carpeting down to the tacks.
He’s fond of curtains and eats them as snacks.

I didn’t finish the song. I didn’t even get very far with it. That’s the weakness of journal writing. Journals aren’t intended to be read, so there’s no reason to finish things.

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The Story, Part VII

It’s Sunday and time for a tiny bit of story. For the start of the story and links to other installments, see this post.

His high mood lasted until the following week at breakfast. He was eating scrambled eggs and toast while reading the local newspaper. The headline—Local Man Dies in Fiery Crash—didn’t elicit any real interest. He always hated reading about death and disease. As he was browsing the page, the name of the victim seemed to leap off the page. It was Vincent Torelli of 33 Winding Way. Phil read the story in stunned silence, remembering the spreadsheet in Mr. Gabriel’s office. If it was just a coincidence, it was the damndest coincidence he had ever heard of. Continue reading

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Those Darn Cats!

Now let me tell you something about my cats. They are both furry little puke machines, yet they each have their own special style. Gross but true, you can usually tell whodunit without actually witnessing the event.

M, our boy cat, is an overeater. He practically inhales his food. You can tell that a nasty pile is his because the food is not only undigested, but also unchewed. We have to feed him from a plate, rather than a bowl, because the flat surface forces him to handle the food pieces individually.

Z, on the other hand, has always behaved herself with food. She throws up because of hairballs. That doesn’t make it any less disgusting, but it earns her some small measure of forgiveness. Her contributions are usually of a liquid nature, with a hairball on top, like a garnish.

What on earth, you may ask, made me want to write about such a revolting topic? Well, Z does some peculiar things when she’s throwing up. Yesterday, for example, she did this weird pivot thing. Imagine that there was a clock face on the floor and that that cat was its hour hand. She was standing on the edge of the rug, heaving, and with each heave she turned an hour or two, moving the projected landing site of her hairball from the safe zone (the hardwoord floor) to the danger zone (the carpet) and back again. Sick, huh?

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Kind Fate

I went to the grocery store today to buy a few odds and ends. A couple of things might have rung up at the wrong price, but there was no one at the customer service desk and I didn’t feel like waiting, so I just went home. Fate kindly tried to make up the loss to me. There was a crumpled-up dollar bill on the ground near the exit and another 12 cents next to my car.

Thanks for the $1.12!

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Remember This!

After reading my previous post, my Faithful Reader theorized that we’re still together only because of my memory gaps. In other words, if I remembered all of the horrible things he has done over the years, I’d dump his ass ASAP.

I may not remember them all, but I remember plenty, and now that I have a blog on which to record them, I think Faithful Reader had better behave himself!

๐Ÿ˜‰

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Memory

My short-term memory is great and always has been. But there are occasional glitches in the system, moments that fail to register while hundreds of others dutifully line up in the chain of day-to-day memories that are cataloged in my head. I don’t understand why, but it happens just frequently enough that I can’t trust even my most recent memories.

My long-term memory has always been poor by comparison. Over time, the majority of nifty facts I picked up in school have evaporated from my brain, both those facts which I expected to forget, like how to conjugate certain French verbs, and those which I expected to remember for life, like how many oceans there are on Earth. Yes, it seems that an entire ocean leaked out of my memory unnoticed. It’s only back because one evening I wondered if I was smarter than a fifth grader and watched the TV show to find out (I’m not, by the way).

So I can’t trust my memory, short-term or long-term. That’s one of the reasons why I love the written word. Every time I write something down, that’s one more thing that I don’t have to worry about forgetting. The blog takes it one step further. Not only is it a record, but it’s a searchable record.

Technology is so cool.

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