Archive for November, 2009

Photographs and memories

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

I've mentioned the universe here before, right?  And how sometimes it steps in?

Picture the scene: Saturday night, after midnight, Galiano Island.  A cozy cottage, the sound of the ocean and of a nearby creek barely noticeable over the rain. Fresh from a long bath, Cori starts getting her camera ready for the next day, which includes futzing around with a recalcitrant memory card.  When it was in the camera it was reading as full, in the computer it was reading as empty, that sort of thing.

And then something happened and there they were: some 300 photos from last fall and winter.

I think we both gasped.

These were the photos that we thought had been lost through a technological failure.  Photos from last fall, from camping in the summer of 2008 (well, not me…), from the snowfall of last December.  Xander's birthday.  My birthday.  Christmas morning.  The baby beluga.  We had discovered them missing (there's an odd sentence) on Christmas day last year — we were both crushed, but… we moved on.  We thought there might be a way to get them back, but we never really pursued it, as if we were both concerned that, so long as we didn't try and fail, then there was still a possibility that they might be recovered.  So long as we didn't fuck it up, there was still a potential for those photographs, those memories, to come back.

And in that cottage on Galiano, a short walk over rocks to the shore, there they were.  As if by magic.  Photographs.  Memories.  What had been lost was found.

And as 38 slips behind me, I can't get that thought out of my mind.

While you wait

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

I'm generating a longish post about this past weekend, about the wonders of Galiano Island and a once-in-a-lifetime reading which, sadly, most of you missed.  I'm also,  however, working on a review.  So while you wait, why don't you turn to this Round-Table about ChiZine Press on The Afterword, with Brett, Sandra, David Nickle and myself.

Sometimes…

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

… the universe — and good people — provide.

It turns out that, through the intercession of the universe (in the form of Lindsay and Peter) we'll be celebrating yesterday's novel delivery on Galiano Island in a lovely cliff-side cottage.

This has all come together in the last twelve hours, so there's a fair bit of rushing around to be done, but I'm soooooo looking forward to it.

And to my reading, tomorrow afternoon at Galiano Island Books, 3 pm. If I look peculiar, it'll be because I'm relaxed. I hope you're able to recognize me…

Signed, sealed, delivered

Friday, November 20th, 2009

I have waited a long, LONG time to be able to use that header as a blog post.  And as of about five minutes ago, I can.  Finally.

Yes, the new novel is off my desk, delivered to Random House (well, delivered to my agent, who will midwife it to its proper home).  And I could not be happier.

It's been a long road.

The concept for the new novel (which, no, doesn't have a title yet) goes back to late 2003, a stormy midwinter night that had me thinking about fathers and sons, and the power of reading.  I had the idea in-hand and in-mind when I was wandering BookExpo in 2004, and had several long conversations about it with prospective editors.  I wrote a one-page summary of it in late June, 2004 (which resulted in a two-book offer and deal with Random House Canada), then a 25 page outline a few months later.  I settled in to write it in 2005 and… well, I wrote the opening about 38 times.  I also wrote, as a result, a half-dozen short stories and two novellas (one of which was published by CZP as, yup, The World More Full of Weeping).  I made the ever-important initial breakthrough in mid-2007 and spent a year writing, flat-out.

Yup, a year.  That's four times as long as the first draft of Before I Wake took, which is appropriate, considering that the first draft of the new untitled novel (which I'm going to refer to as "untitled" from here on out) is more than four times as long as BIW.  I worked on it at home, in New York, in Toronto, and finished the main of it somewhere in the mid-Atlantic.  The closing scenes were written after several months of intense typing (350,000 words in longhand — my illegible scrawl — takes a LONG time to type), over the Labor Day weekend last year.  

Since then, I've been revising.  That's a year of cutting.  Tweaking.  Rearranging.  The sort of work that starts with a chainsaw, and finishes with a scalpel.  A full year of revision, before my editor even had a glimpse (though, admittedly, that work wasn't quite… dedicated.  And I seem to have lost a few months this spring.)  In that time, I've adored it with the tender, heartbreaking love of a gob-smacked parent, and hated it with a white-hot fury.  There were times I savoured every word, and times I wanted to set the whole thing on fire and walk away.  All of that, by the way, is both perfectly natural and par for the course.

Crucial to that process, and key to just how good I'm feeling about it now, is Cori, Her Esteemed Editrix herself.  She knows exactly what works, and what doesn't, sees flaws before I do (and knows how to fix them) and, most crucially, knows how to ask the right questions.  It's her fault I didn't deliver the book in August as I intended to — it's to her credit that the book is SO much stronger than it would have been had I made that deadline.

Ah, deadlines.  I've actually lost track of how many I've… blown through and/or ignored.  Oh well.  It's done now.

It's done now!  What a thing to be able to say.

Even if it isn't precisely true.  There is still work to be done, and work I'm eager to get to: working with an editor, honing and polishing, is one of my favourite parts of the writing process.  It's engaging with the most focussed, most dedicated reader your work is ever likely to have, an opportunity to look at the questions that such a reader will have at the only time you can actually ADDRESS them, and their underlying issues.

So, what now?

Well, I'm going to mark the occasion by (checks watch) going to work in a few minutes.  I'm going to write a couple of overdue book reviews and catch up on some reading.  There's a commissioned short story that's been hemorrhaging red ink for a few months that desperately needs triage, and a new short story to write in the next few days, a bit of a Christmas gift to my Toronto readers.  And then there's the next novel to start.  There's a trip to Galiano for a reading this weekend, and I would imagine a boozy dinner involving a large steak and larger quantities of gin.  And a nap.  God, I'm looking forward to a nap this afternoon.

And in ten days or so, I'll have my editorial first pass.  So it goes.

Right now, though, I'm basking.  

A nice thing before bed…

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

A bit of a shout-out from Cory Doctorow (who was at Bakka before the launch on Saturday) at Boing Boing.

And now, after that dubious attempt at limited hipster cred, I'm to bed.  Tomorrow promises to be a momentous morning, but more on that anon.

The pre-game ritual…

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

… in all its ragged glory:

smoking pic

This was Saturday afternoon, just before the event at Bakka Phoenix on Queen Street. I was too lazy to cross the street for the sacramental Red Bull, but that's probably all right: as it is, I went substantially longer than either Dave Nickle or Claude Lalumiere (hey, tell me I've got 20 minutes, I'm going to use twenty minutes!).

Thanks to everyone who came out — it was a packed house.

And if you weren't in Toronto, there's always Galiano — this Sunday at 3 pm, I'll be reading and signing at Galiano Island Books.  So if you see a guy who looks like the above loitering in the shadows near the store at 2:55 pm, don't call the police — I'm supposed to be there.

In the meantime, though…

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

As I start to pack, I've got a few links to shut down:

This afternoon's event at Bakka Phoenix, info here.  Unless you're in a departure lounge, this is your last chance to see me in Toronto.

My review of the new Stephen King, in the Globe and Mail.  Short version: wow.

A blog post, about yours truly, from FB Friend Monica, who I got to meet IRL on Thursday.  Which was very cool.

As it begins…

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

… so it ends.

A week ago right now I was taking to the air, en route to Toronto, suffering from too little sleep and the hectic haze of last minute packing.  And today, I'm suffering from too little sleep, and putting off the return packing for as long as possible.  Hence the blogging.

Seven days in Toronto passed in a blur, and not just because of the… significant… quantities of alcohol involved.  But then, these weeks always do: many people to see, many things to do, many things to get done.  Among the highlights this week: hanging out with Peter (and introducing him to Californication), hanging with Saint Jimmy and his lady, meeting with my agent, my editor, my publisher, the head of the company, my other publisher, one of my review editors, my RHC publicist, the art director at CZP, etc, luxuriating in a king hotel bed to finish the new Stephen King (now THAT'S the way to work), a lovely Giller night, a good (if sparely attended) event at Indigo Yorkdale…  It's been a busy week.  But then, they always are.

I come away with a sense of accomplishment, a renewed sense of purpose (to say that the folks at RHC are excited about the new book would be a grave understatement), and a faint tinge of melancholy: there are always people I didn't get a chance to see, things I didn't get a chance to do.  But that's what return trips are for.  And it's very possible that my next sojourn to Toronto will be part of my book tour…

It was a good week — busy, productive, inspiring — but it was an unusual week, too.  Not my typical trip to Toronto in a lot of ways.  I'm sorry to leave, but it's going to be so good to be home.

Sunday morning, EST

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

I would still be asleep were it not for housekeeping knocking on the door fifteen minutes ago. Still, 8 solid hours — when was the last time that happened? And a good night's sleep the first night in a hotel — that NEVER happens.

So now the coffee is perking, I'm stumbling around the hotel room, and preparing for a day of mixed hanging-out and working. There are worse ways to make a living.

Especially when one factors in interviews like this, published in this morning's Times-Colonist.

Safely arrived in Toronto…

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

… and about to tuck in for the night, I thought I'd do a quick re-post of the events that are (part of) the reason for the trip:

Thursday November 12, 7 pm — I'll be talking about, and reading from, and signing, the book at the Indigo at Yorkdale Mall.

Saturday November 14, 2 pm — I'll be participating at the group launch for ChiZine Press's fall titles at Bakka-Phoenix on Queen Street, with Dave Nickle and Claude Lalumiere. More reading, more signing…

And more anon, when I'm not running on 3 hours sleep. G'night, y'all.