Steve’s Update 11/29/2019

(This column is posted at www.StevenSavage.com.  Find out more at my newsletter.)

Hello all, let’s see where I am!

So what have I done since last time?

  • Way With Worlds: The Gods and Deities Book is past the halfway point writing-wise! So it’s just keep going – heck this might be out before the new year!
  • Chance’s Muse: I am checking the (hopeful) last draft of the print book and the ebook is formatted.
  • A School Of Many Futures: I’ve written out past Chapter 5!
  • Seventh Sanctum: Sadly, not much – Chance’s Muse is sucking up “Sanctum Time” and I should have planned for that.
  • General: Thanksgiving plus a few things around the house – and sadly some friends and families having challenges.

What’s next?

  • Way With Worlds: Again, keep writing.
  • Chance’s Muse: Go over the latest print draft, and if that’s OK . . . launch it!
  • A School Of Many Futures: Finish editing up through chapter 4 then keep at it. I may try a huge blitz of doing whatever I can.
  • Seventh Sanctum: I think I have to accept that until CM is done I won’t do anything on this. Lesson for next time – CM would have been easier if I’d focused on it exclusively as opposed to my multiple Sanctum projects.

Steven Savage

Cooking With Steve: Root Vegetable Mash

(This column is posted at www.StevenSavage.com and Steve’s Tumblr.  Find out more at my newsletter.)

Gonna take a break from posting my healthy recipes and post this for Thanksgiving – this is sort of “Mashed potatoes plus,” putting together lots of root vegetables.

The parsnips add a great flavor, and I suggest swapping in other root vegetables like rutabagas, and maybe kick it up with garlic.

It’s fast, simple, different, and a way to impress people!

  • 2 medium potatoes, diced (peeling optional)
  • 2 medium sweet potatoes, peeled, diced
  • 2 parsnips, peeled, diced.
  • About 4-6 cups of water

To prepare:

  1. Put all ingredients in a pot and bring to boil. Cover loosely and keep at a good boil until everything softens.
  2. Place vegetables in dish and reserve about a cup or more of the water.  Mash vegetables, adding water as needed to get a creamy consistency.
  3. Serve with butter, spread, or salt and pepper.

Steven Savage

It’s Pitches All The Way Dow

(This column is posted at www.StevenSavage.com and Steve’s Tumblr.  Find out more at my newsletter.)

Ever seen a good book pitch? Something like “A wizard with a deadly disease tries to reconcile with his past. Before he dies, can he make peace with supernatural entities and his own family?” The idea of a wizard facing mortality is my jam, so I’m for this.

Have you started watching a show based on a great episode pitch, or seen one on a wiki that you used to expose someone else to a show? I love those, there’s an art to something like “The mismatched trio faces a murder mystery on a floating city that might explain the past of two – and the future of another!”

These are great. They’re basically elevator pitches for books and shows, episodes and comics. Sure, some can be BS, but others have that excitement you can feel, where the person making them was into it. Sure they may be into a summary, but they’re into it and you feel it.

As I’ve worked on A School of Many Futures, I thought about so many of these pitches sounded exciting. Many is the time I’d see a pitch and think “is my book going to be that exciting?”

This also got me thinking about Randy Ingermanson’s book on Snowflake plotting a scene. Though it’s best to read the book (it leads by example), he notes the importance of engaging scenes.

I realized an engaging scene should have an engaging pitch.

And wouldn’t an interesting chapter (like an episode) have an engaging pitch?

Then I realized, no, I should look at the chapter, at the scene, and make a pitch for it to help me write it. If I wanted an exciting or interesting chapter or scene, make a summary that sounds interesting to guide you.

This (with my Deplotting work) really helped me with the novel, especially as I’ve been working to get back on track after a complicated summer. Each chapter was more engaging. Each scene was a mini-story packed with things happening – even when characters were arguing (they argue a lot). Thinking in pitches made sure I kept things interesting and kept me exciting.

(If you didn’t read my Deplotting column, basically I realized I write fiction best when I come up with arcs, place events in chapters, and treat chapters more as backlogs. Scenes emerge more easily for me.)

I think this is a great tool for any writer to improve your work or get you out of a funk. Take a look at that scene and make the pitch until it’s exciting – then write to the pitch! Look at that chapter you’re not sure of and ask what summary you’d want a fan to make – then write to that.

Make your novel or short story interesting stuff all the way down.

Of course I’ll let you know what further insights I have, but this was not just useful, it was a lot of fun.

Even when my characters argue, it’s a lot more fun when you have a good pitch about their petty B.S. It becomes interesting and fun B.S.

Steven Savage