I’m a sucker for anniversaries and commemorations. It’s probably an
offshoot of my love of history or, rather, perhaps my love of history
makes me keenly aware of dates and things. Ten years ago this summer, my
family and I took a vacation. It was on that vacation that I began
writing what would become my first novel. It’s called Treason at Hanford
and it features Harry Truman as the protagonist.
Not knowing how
to write a book, I fell back on my experience writing my thesis. A key
to that endeavor was a common file in which I kept the status for my
professor. I figured if it worked for a thesis, it should also work as a
novel. I did not want to take my laptop—vacation, remember—so I bought a
good, old-fashioned composition book. I also brought some post-it
notes, pens of many colors, and a pencil.
Ten years ago this coming Monday, 27 July, I started. It was a
brainstorming session. I had the vision of a single scene. This scene
was crucial and I made a decision that has led to a pattern ten years
on: I would write all first drafts chronologically. This scene took
place later in the book. With my copious notes and in this comp book and
obsessive dating, I finally got to that scene on 21 May 2006. It was a
long wait, but it was oh so earned.
I have read through this comp book/journal more than once in the
past few years. I go back to it when I was feeling particularly
discouraged in 2008-2013. You see, while I wrote this first book from 27
July 2005 to 1 June 2006, I didn’t start and finish another long
project until May-June 2013. In these years, I used to joke that it’s
taken me longer NOT to write my second book than it did to write my
first. That was a bad stretch, I’ll admit, one in which I dreamed about
writing and wrote about writing much more than actually writing.
That last thing was something I swore not to do once I started back up in May 2013. I us
And
I’ve rarely done it since. In the past two years, I’ve started and
completed seven longer projects and I’m not sure how many short stories.
Maybe I needed the discouraging time to get me going. I don’t know.
There are days, here in 2015, when I wonder what my professional author
life might have been if I had actually completed books from 2006 to
2013, but I don’t dwell there. I see 1 May 2013 as my Writer’s New
Year’s Day. That was the day I decided I would pick up the pen again,
write, and complete things.
And I’ve not looked back since.
But it all started ten years ago on Monday. 27 July 2005. One of the most important days of my writing life.
So, do y’all have a specific date that you can point to and say your writing career started on that day?
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