Bear with me, folks. It’s been an odd period, these six months since we moved here to Paradise-By-Sea. Somehow, this shift in location has turned into the sea change I’ve been searching for over the last five years or so. It’s prompted changes at every level, from simple matters like the change of phone number through to re-evaluations of the way I conduct my life, my aims, my behaviours…. all in all, it’s keeping me busy.
Several friends have fallen by the wayside, either because of the increase in distance between us or the final stages of the natural atrophy that the relationships have been experiencing lately. Others have become more prominent. We’ve altered our finances. Our work situations have undergone drastic and fundamental change. We’re a family in evolution, and in many ways, I also am evolving into a different beast than the one who started the year.
Much of that evolution is artistic. Nanowrimo has proven to be a bust—I’ve managed 13000 words of the Cirque project, but my heart’s not been in it, and in the end it was too easy to put it down and not pick it up again. Perhaps in the New Year I’ll revisit it—it’s a decent enough idea, and I know where the story goes. But setting aside Corpse-Rat King to do it was a bad idea, especially with the first draft of that novel being so close to completion, and I’ve taken up the cudgels again with an aim to completing it by the end of the year.
I’ve rediscovered my interest in cartooning, and have filled a small bunch of notebooks with thumbnails and sketches that Luscious is currently prodding me to complete properly. I’m still reading for Midnight Echo #4, and looking forward to making some final decisions early in the New Year—if you’ve been meaning to submit, do so before you run out of time-- the sub period finishes January 31st, but if I wasn’t a patient man I could probably be thinking about filling the magazine now. And there are more novel projects planned, but none so close to the Oz SF heartland that I expect to be flogging them off at a Swancon near you.
2009 has been a very quiet year for me, artistically speaking. I’m still popping up here and there—you can read a brand new story, , Rabbit, Run over at Dark Recesses this month (if you really want to drive an editor barmy, start your story's title with a comma....) and The Claws of Native Ghosts has been chosen for the upcoming Australian Dark Fantasy & Horror Volume 4. Last weekend I joined the Queensland Writer’s Centre as a guest for their regular weekly writing race. I’ve also accepted a commission to provide the Centre with an article entitled Plot or Pants? on the differences between tight plotting and my own aimless methods. Compared to my relatively high profile in Australian small press SF circles over the past few years, however, I’ve been almost invisible, and things are likely to stay that way for the foreseeable future. My literary interests are moving further and further away from the things I have produced in the past. Frankly, I like the distance, and I have aims and desires that are not simpatico with the Australian SF small press, so there’s no need to be in quite so severe a proximity.
By this time next year I’ll be 40, and if half the birthday cards at the newsagent are to be believed, I’ll have just started my life. So perhaps it’s just a mid-life crisis, or perhaps I’m just cleaning out my closet, but one phase of my life has most definitely ended, and the one that is beginning has different colours.
So bear with me while all this stuff gets flung about in the washing machine of my life. I’ll undoubtedly emerge one sock short, with a shirt that wasn’t the colour it was when it went in, but I’ll be clean and smelling slightly of lemon, and that won’t be a bad thing.
Hey, Lee.
ReplyDeleteIs the tentacular logo on the site publishing ", Run, Rabbit" (great read, too, BTW) a subtle clue to your new literary direction? It is, isn't it? A Cthulhu Collection. I knew it!
Cheers,
Jason
Hi Lee--
ReplyDeleteThis is a very interesting post, and good to read. Glad to hear you're still scribbling, one way or another--and that "Paradise-by-Sea" is having such a transformative effect on you. Lucky bugger!
Btw, I hope you guys were not offended that we didn't bug you while we were in Mandurah for a holiday. We didn't want to disturb you guys, or be the kind of people who invite themselves over regardless of your readiness to receive such visitors. All the same, we had a fine time, played lots of board games, drank lots of coffee in scenic locations, saw dolphins, admired pelicans, and generally had a lovely time, and drank a toast to your good selves, and feeling, as I say, insanely jealous that you actually get to live there.
Anyway, I hope we did not cause any offence. Didn't mean to.
Best,
Adrian :)
Jason: sadly, a Cthulhu collection is..... not likely. There are some horrors Man is not meant to experience, and me writing Cthulhu pastiche is one of them.
ReplyDeleteAdrian: no offence at all! I wouldn't place any obligation on anybody to come and visit. You're away to have a holiday, not to do a duty. I'm glad you guys had such a great time.