Late Morning, Saturday, January 13, 2024, Madison, New Hampshire

Another Snow Day in New Englandโ€ฆ

Hello, there, folks.

Itโ€™s another wintry day here in New Hampshire. Currently, the temperature is 32ยฐF/0ยฐC under light snow. The feels-like (or if you prefer, wind chill factor) temperature is 25ยฐF/-4ยฐC. According to the Weather app on this PC, we are supposed to experience snowy conditions for the next two hours. Oof.

The forecast for today calls for continued rain and snow for much of the day. The high is expected to reach 40ยฐF/4ยฐC. Tonight, the winter storm affecting this part of the New Hampshire/Maine region will move away from here; skies will be mostly cloudy, and the low will be 29ยฐF/-2ยฐC.

On Writing & Storytelling: An Update on Reunion: Coda

Photo by Suzy Hazelwood on Pexels.com

Yesterday was not a particularly productive day on the Writing & Storytelling front. I was not able to start at a decent time; I needed to focus on other matters, including my food situation and trying to not get discouraged by the emotional upsets of the Big Move North. The then-looming winter storm that is bringing the aforementioned rain and snow to Madison weighed heavily on my mind, as was my need for lots of things that are either in the boxes still or that I must order โ€“ albeit reluctantly โ€“ from Amazon.

Cover Design: (C) 2023 Alex Diaz-Granados

If youโ€™re a writer โ€“ and I know that many of you who read this are writers, or at least bloggers โ€“ you know that stress and worry wreak havoc on the creative process. Well, yesterday I was worried and stressed, so even though I had a good plan in my mind for working on Reunion: Coda, I simply couldn’t focus well enough on the work because I was worried about, you know, other important matters.

So, not only did I not start trying to work on the manuscript at a decent hour (which I define as being between noon and 1 PM Eastern), but I did not write any new material for the epistolary chapter that I so confidently started in October, not long before I decided to take the plunge and move to New Hampshireโ€ฆin winter.

To be sure, I did work on Reunion: Coda for several hours (between 2 PM and 4:25 PM), but I was forced โ€“ by both my emotional state and the late start of the workday โ€“ to focus on the less sexy side of the writing process โ€“ revising and editing.

(Yes, I know. That less sexy side of writing and storytelling is, in a phrase oft-uttered or written by many of my fellow scribes, โ€œwhere the magic is really done.โ€  I know and accept that editing and revising is crucial if one is serious about writing anything intended to be shared with the world. Hell, I even do it when I blog. But it is hard, time-consuming, and often frustrating work, you know?)

Anyway, I ended up tidying up the text in the transatlantic email correspondence between Reunion: Codaโ€™s 2000-era โ€œleadsโ€ (Jim and Maddie) and tried to make my leading lady โ€“ as I like to call Madison โ€“ sound more authentically British without overdoing it. I also made a few seemingly minor corrections to the text so that I donโ€™t have to keep on going back on the Kindle Create app to fix โ€œbloopersโ€ after I publish Reunion: Coda sometime this year.

Action This Day

Since it is both raining and snowing, and the white stuff is covering everything in a white blanket of frozen water crystals (including, unfortunately, the front porch, the driveway, and the roads), I doubt that I will go outside today.  Itโ€™s too cold and cloudy to even go out just beyond the front door for a quick dose of sunlight, so I am just going to stay indoors today.

Will I try to work on the novel today to make up for yesterday’s lost productivity? At the very least, I plan to do that โ€“ as soon as I figure out what to eat for lunch. After all, we writers canโ€™t focus our attention on the task of writing a scene or coming up with good, even witty dialogue if we are thinking about preparing a meal or figuring out how to ration the food items we have in the fridge and pantry.

The only good thing about the Big Move North โ€“ from a first-time novelistโ€™s perspective โ€“ is that I was between 60% and 75% to the end of the story when I had to put the project aside on November 17 so I could focus on the packing away of my stuff into moving boxes. If you are a regular reader of A Certain Point of View, Too, youโ€™ll recall that I expected to release Reunion: Coda in time for the Christmas/Hannukah season because I believed I was nearing the โ€œfinish line.โ€

Well, that didnโ€™t happen, so now Iโ€™m shooting for a Spring 2024 publication on Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing. But Iโ€™ll only hit that target date if I donโ€™t have a lot of โ€œoff daysโ€ like yesterday.

So, yep. I plan to work today even though itโ€™s a Saturday.

As soon as I eat something, anyway.

Wish me luck, friends โ€“ cos I need it.


Comments

11 responses to “On Writing & Storytelling: Thoughts & Musings for (Another) Snow Day in Madison, New Hampshire”

  1. Something new for a kid from Florida, hey, Alex?

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I certainly wish you good luck. I can understand that things aren’t easy right now, the move, the cold, practical difficulties, but spring is coming, eventually.

    I can add that your photos are beautiful and atmospheric. We are currently having temperatures in the 60’s almost 70’s. But itโ€™s going to be 12 degrees (-11 Celsius) tonight and we are supposedly getting snow on Monday. It will be so nice for our dog Rollo but it could be a catastrophe for the rest of Texas.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m glad you like the photos; I had a minimal amount of training in on-the-spot photography when I studied journalism in college, so I know a few (very few) things about choosing focal points and the right camera angles before hitting that shutter button. My hands tend to shake involuntarily, and since smartphones are less stable than digital cameras, I tend to discard more shots than I share.

      As for coping with the move…today it’s been challenging, to put it mildly. It’s cold, the skies are cloudy and gray, and only over the past hour did the rain and snow stop falling.

      On the positive side, I did write one simulated email in the novel’s epistolary chapter. It even had some funny bits that made my friend Juan in New York laugh. So, there’s that.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That is good news about the writing. Here in Texas the the temperature have started to fall. It is 42 degrees and dropping fast, real feel 29. We went to the grocery store and people are clearing out the shelves as if a disaster is coming.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. You’d think that after that disastrous cold spell Texas had not that long ago and where lots of Texans died because the power grid failed and people froze in their homes, Republican Gov. Abbott and the state government would be prepared for bad winter weather. Stay safe, and stay warm, Thomas,

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Thank you Alex. Stay warm you too. Now it is 27 degrees, real feel 10, heading for 12 / real feel -5 during the night / early morning. Hopefully the grid holds this time.

        Liked by 1 person

      4. It’s 33 F here, wind chill factor is 23 F. Partly cloudy.

        You do have thermal undergarments, right? They help a lot.

        Liked by 1 person

      5. Ha ha “Thermal undergarments in Texas”. That reminds me, the grid better hold up.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. henhouselady Avatar
    henhouselady

    Have a productive writing day.

    Liked by 1 person