November Writing Challenge Day 25

The Words: 1860 words today, despite planning to cut it a little short. The site I use to track my word count (https://prowritingaid.com/novel-november) tells me that I can write around 1300 per day instead of 1667 and still finish on time. I may just do that, since it’s been a struggle to hit par lately. I’m really glad I did this again this year, but it’s been rough!

The Story: Garend got a little indignant during today’s writing as he learned about some lies he’s been told all his life. I’m still writing about this class he’s in to learn about the history of Newland, but I think it might be about time to move on to something else tomorrow.

Total word count: 43,601

November Writing Challenge Day 24

The Words: 1759 words today. Passed 40k today, and we’re in the final week!

The Story: I kept going with Garend in a class about the history of Newland today, which gave me a chance to put into words the ideas I’ve long had about the origins of certain elements in my world but never really written down. Though I still have some decisions to make about some of the details, this is giving me a chance to explore it, and it’s really helpful. And since I’m not drafting an actual story, I don’t mind staying here for a while.

Total word count: 41,741

With 6 days left of NaNoWriMo, be sure to check out episode 5 of the NaNoMusical, where the stresses of the month catch up to the characters in my favorite song of the whole thing!

November Writing Challenge Day 23

The Words: 1491 words today. I had a Thanksgiving get-together today with my husband’s side of the family, so I took my Alpha with me and wrote around 500 words while waiting for everyone to arrive. When I was home later, I sprinted for 15 using the Sprinter site and got the rest of the words. I probably could have gone on to hit par, but I’m really tired. It was a ridiculously bananas day at church this morning! At least I’m still almost a full day’s word count ahead, which will be helpful on Thursday when my side of the family is getting together for Thanksgiving.

The Story: I’m having quite a bit of fun with a class that Garend has been put into in Newland, basically a history of the country and a history of one of their most intense secrets. Garend is barely even joining the discussion, but it’s the first time I’ve had a chance to really hash out this history, and actually, I am writing it 2 different ways, because I haven’t decided which will end up being the real history.

Total word count: 39,982

November Writing Challenge Day 22

The Words: 1717 words today using the Sprinter site again. I was really drowsy this evening, so I can see even more mistakes than I normally make when trying to type fast, but I still managed around 800 words in one 15-minute sprint, and then just set the goal to 867 words and wrote until I’d hit the day’s par.

The Story: I’m starting to jump around to some of the scenes I brainstormed a few days ago, which is at least one way to keep from dragging on in the same main “plot” that I’ve been writing for more than half the month, but isn’t my preferred way to write. So it’s sort of good, sort of bad. I know that my heart isn’t in this story anymore, which is sad, but the good thing about NaNo is that it gives you a reason to keep going forward for a short amount of time. Then I can stop and maybe never revisit this month’s writing again.

Total word count: 38,491

Book Review: Odd Thomas

Odd Thomas
Book #1
by Dean Koontz
Read by David Aaron Baker

My rating: 4 / 5
Genre: Paranormal thriller

Odd Thomas can see dead people, but he can also see dark shade-like creatures that tend to congregate at sites of future disaster. Between these two things, Odd is drawn to help bring justice for victims and prevent future tragedies. He works as a short order cook in a small town in California, and when he sees a large congregation of these creatures, which he calls bodachs, interested in a particular customer, he does his best to investigate so he can try to stop whatever future catastrophe might have drawn so many bodachs.

Leaving aside the paranormal aspects, this book is a thriller mystery and a race against time to stop a massacre. Adding the paranormal aspects back in, and the overall story here is engaging and inventive. Odd himself is a sympathetic hero, if maybe a little too naïve and Gary Stu-ish. He tends to draw people to himself by being a nice, quiet guy and has more than one mentor-type character. The background Koontz shows us for Odd make me happy for him that he has these other people in his life to counter-balance some truly awful parents.

I’ve only read one Koontz before this, and I loved it, but this time, I found that his tendency to describe things in way more detail than necessary slowed the story way down. There was also a lot of focus on sex and references to body parts for a book with a main character that isn’t sleeping with his girlfriend. And a couple of the major side characters I did not particularly care for. They were just over the top in their personalities. I listened to the audiobook, and I don’t know if it would have been better to read it, so I could skim some of the descriptions or worse, because then I would have struggled to get through some of it and taken a lot longer to read it. Either way, I enjoyed the book more than not and was actually kind of annoyed with myself for not clocking the slight twist at the end before it happened. Also, I am very glad that I had already read The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie before reading this book, because Koontz full-on spoils it! Overall, I like the world Koontz has set up here and Odd Thomas himself enough to continue the series. I think most people who enjoy paranormal thrillers would enjoy it, but just keep in mind the slowness.

Find out more about Odd Thomas

See what I’m reading next.

If you’ve read this book, or read it in the future, feel free to let me know what you think!

November Writing Challenge Day 21

The Words: 1835 words today in a single, half-hour sprint this evening with my daughter. I’m not more than a single day’s word count ahead, which is good, because I have a Thanksgiving event coming up in a few days, and though I definitely plan to make sure I get some writing that day, I don’t know how much I’ll have time for.

The Story: The stranger that brought Garend to Newland has now revealed the nation’s closest-held secrets to Garend. Even I felt weird typing these things out, since it’s such a major revelation, close-held secrets of my own. But it will all come to light someday, sooner or later.

Total word count: 36,774

Book Review: How to Speak Dragonese

How to Speak Dragonese
How to Train Your Dragon #3
by Cressida Cowell
read by David Tennant

My rating: 4 / 5
Genre: Middle grade fantasy

When another Viking training exercise goes wrong, Hiccup and Fishlegs find themselves at the mercy of Romans and a nanodragon named Ziggerastica.

This was my favorite book in the series so far. The tiny-but-arrogant Ziggerastica is a lot of fun, Hiccup meets the heir to another Viking clan who also provides some enjoyable moments, and we get the return of a dastardly villain. Though I’m not a huge fan of the formula these books tend to have with Toothless and Fishlegs screwing up and happening upon something they otherwise wouldn’t, I enjoyed the overall journey more this time. I was considering stopping with the series after this book, but I enjoyed it too much to not keep going. Plus, I really do enjoy David Tennant’s narration, and even his interpretation of Toothless is growing on me more and more. For that matter, Toothless himself, though so different from the movie version I knew first, is growing on me with every book.

Find out more about How to Speak Dragonese

See what I’m reading next.

If you’ve read this book, or read it in the future, feel free to let me know what you think!

November Writing Challenge Day 20

The Words: 1802 words today in two sprints, one with my daughter and one alone.

The Story: After yesterday’s brainstorming and really struggling to know where to go next, I just kind of jumped into a scene today that wasn’t even in my plans. But it got me going, and then I went from there to another, more connected scene, and finally got back to what would actually happen next with Garend from where I left off. But I skipped a day or two that was going to just be a lot of chatting, most likely. Of course, today’s writing also ended up just being a lot of talking. Conversations between characters seems to be my go-to when I don’t know what else to do. Oh well, I left off today right on the edge of a life-changing revelation for Garend, so tomorrow at least should be easier to get into.

Total word count: 34,939

November Writing Challenge Day 19

The Words: 1866 words today that were actually all in the form of brainstorming. I finally got to a point where the story, which was barely a story to start with, was going nowhere and I had to come up with some scenes to start into. Most of what I brainstormed were just things I already knew was going to happen because they coincide with “Power,” and I really want to try to include a few things that are completely unique to Garend, but I’ll go with what I came up with for now.

Total word count: 33,137
This is a good time to watch episode 4 of the NaNoMusical, where things really heat up!

November Writing Challenge Day 18

The Words: 1701 words today shortly before bedtime. It’s a good thing I realized yesterday that I don’t have a large enough lead to take more short days unless absolutely necessary, or I probably would have cut today short. I can’t really afford that, though, with holiday events coming up.

The Story: Because of trying to get the words out quickly tonight, today’s writing mostly consisted of a conversation between Garend and the person who brought him to Newland. She’s telling him a lot of things about his ancestry that he never knew (and that I didn’t know either).

Total word count: 31,271