
Mid-to-Late Morning, Tuesday, January 23, 2024, Madison, New Hampshire

Hi, everyone. Itโs almost late morning here in Madison on a cold but otherwise lovely winter day. The current temperature is 32ยฐF (0ยฐC) under partly sunny skies. With the wind blowing from the west-northwest at 1 MPH (2 KMH) and humidity at 69%, the feels-like temperature is 39ยฐF (4ยฐC). Today, we can expect mostly cloudy skies and a high of 37ยฐF (3ยฐC). Tonight, light snow showers will pass through Carroll County and the surrounding area. The low will be 21ยฐF (-6ยฐC).

As you can see from the forecast, it will snow in the vicinity of Madison and North Conway tonight, with more of the white stuff expected to fall tomorrow. Oh, well. Itโs winter. Itโs New England. Snow happens. Iโll get used to it eventually, just as I got used to summer thunderstorms in Florida. (I never quite grew to like โboomers,โ mind you, but I learned to adjust my daily routine to the rhythms of the subtropical wet season.)
On Writing & Storytelling: The โOne with the Emailsโ Chapter Moves Forward โ One Email at a Time

Even though yesterday’s novel-writing portion of my workday got off to a start a bit after 2:30 PM, I managed to add approximately 853 new words to Reunion: Coda. Iโd set a goal of 1,000 words, but Iโll take the ones I produced because I was happy with the results. I crafted a lovely email from one of my two โleading ladiesโ in the novel โ Maddie, who is Jimโs love interest in the set-in-2000 chapters of Reunion: Coda. (The other major female character is Martina Elizabeth โMartyโ Reynaud, who appears in the chapters set during Jimโs high school days in early 1980s South Florida.)

Now, Iโve mentioned in many of these On Writing & Storytelling posts that there are times when I regret my decision to write an epistolary chapter in Reunion: Coda. Iโve played a bit with that literary device before, including in Reunion: A Story, but never on such an ambitious scale. Iโm attempting to show, solely through emails, how the relationship between historian/college professor Jim Garraty and classical pianist Madison, aka Maddie, evolves and becomes more romantic even as theyโre separated by nearly 3,000 miles of Atlantic Ocean whilst Maddie is in London to record a new album with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra at Abbey Road Studios.
As soon as Maestro Masur stopped the orchestra, I got up from my piano bench and walked over to Evelyn, who looked like she wanted to crawl under a rock. I put my arm around her shoulder and whispered in her ear, “Don’t worry, love. It’s not the end of the world. You’re a brilliant clarinetist, and you can nail this glissando. Just take a deep breath, relax your fingers, and trust yourself. You’ve got this.”
Maddie to Jim, Reunion: Coda
Here’s an excerpt from Maddieโs latest email to Jim, whose responsibilities as a tenured professor of history at Columbia University donโt allow him to join Maddie in the UK:

My Dearest Jim,
Hullo, love. I just got back into my hotel room after eating a quick dinner at Haxells Restaurant & Bar, which is downstairs in the Strand Palace itself. I had the Salmon Supreme, a sweet potato croquette, sprouting broccoli, and salsa verde. For dessert I had an orange and rum tart, served with lemon sorbet and burnt meringue It was a bit…decadent and more than a bit expensive, but itโs not often that I get to come back to London or stay in a ritzy Soho hotel. Besides, I put it on my travel expense account, even though I sometimes fret about indulging too, too much on the Philharmonicโs Mickey โ or Dime, if you prefer.
Anyway, all of us, including Maestro Masur, our executive producer Heinz, the sound engineer, the album editor, and certainly my fellow performers and I, are happy with how well the recording sessions went today at Abbey Road. Or, rather, how well things turned out in the end with the recording sessions after a fewโฆshall we sayโฆbumps on the road.
As you may or may not know, Gershwinโs Rhapsody in Blue is not a particularly long composition. On average, it has a running time of about 17 minutes, although some ensembles play it so that it runs a bit over 18 minutes, depending on the orchestration and the quality of the musicians. Itโs not as long as, say, Beethovenโs Fifth Symphony or Tchaikovskyโs Pathรฉtique, but itโs not as simple as, say โTwinkle, Twinkle Little Star.โ

I wonโt bore you with the details, Jim, but it took us 15 takes โ and several hours, and lots of swearing on the part of Heinz and even some of us in the orchestra. Evelyn Lee, our principal clarinetist (she was appointed to that position less than two years ago after she impressed Maestro Masur and the audition committee โ which consisted of the principal player in the woodwinds section and eight other members of the Philharmonic โ when she played Mozartโs Clarinet Quintet in A Major) is โ rumour has it โ having marital problems, so she missed a note in the glissando. It was just one note, but it was a total cockup. Of course, Maestro Masur had us all stop playing and start over from the first measure. He didnโt toss his baton at Evelyn, curse at her, or even raise his voice, butโฆif glares could killโฆ.
As soon as Maestro Masur stopped the orchestra, I got up from my piano bench and walked over to Evelyn, who looked like she wanted to crawl under a rock. I put my arm around her shoulder and whispered in her ear, “Don’t worry, love. It’s not the end of the world. You’re a brilliant clarinetist, and you can nail this glissando. Just take a deep breath, relax your fingers, and trust yourself. You’ve got this.” I gave her a reassuring smile and a gentle squeeze and then returned to my seat. I hoped that my words would help her regain her confidence and composure and that the next take would be the last one.

Well, Professor Jim, it wasnโt quite that easy: Evelyn recovered from her slip-up, but there were a few other instances where the strings played a bit too fast, or the brass section came in either too early or too late. It wasnโt until Takes 14 and 15 that Heinz, Maestro Masur, and the sound engineer were chuffed with our rendition of the โRIB.โ
โWhat does that mean in terms of when are you coming home?โ you might ask.
Well, dearest, it means that we have two completely good takes, and because we donโt need to re-record any bits tomorrow, that means that we are flying back to New York on Friday, 8 March.

There is more to Maddieโs email than this, of course, but youโll have to read the novel to find out what else she has to say to her dear โProfessor Jim.โ (Trust me on this โ youโre going to like how witty, romantic, and playful Madison can be with the narrator/protagonist of the Reunion Duology.)
Action This Day

What is my game plan for today, you ask? Itโs simple, really: Today is a working day โ albeit a somewhat chillier one than Iโd like โ and I am a creature of habit. So, Iโll stick to my routine of blogging in the morning, take a break to go outside and get some sunshine while I have a chance to, prepare some lunch and read a bit between 11:30ย AM and 1 PM, then get back to working on Reunion: Coda until 4:30 or 5 PM. Iโll write Jimโs response to Maddie today โ that much is certain โ because thatโs how the chapter is supposed to unfold. Ideally, Iโd write two emails rather than just one, but that depends on how much time and energy I spend on the one that must be done this afternoon. If I can write another email โ even if itโs a brief one โ thatโll be great.

If notโฆwell, thereโs always tomorrow, folks.
Well, I donโt have anything else to share, so Iโll wrap up this post here. Until next time, stay safe, stay healthy, and Iโll catch you on the sunny side of things.
Comments
9 responses to “Musings & Thoughts for Tuesday, January 23, 2024, or: Another Snow Day Looms on the Horizon…and the Epistolary Chapter (Slowly) Moves Forward”
Have a great writing day.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m about to start writing Jim’s response to Maddie’s latest email. I’ll probably get seriously into the “actually writing” bit in 20-30 minutes. A bit later than I’d like, but still within my window for working hours.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Congratulations on the 853 new words. It is great you had a good writing day.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Today was better, though. 1,154 words on the first draft…added a few more during a second pass at that email from Jim. The amount of time spent on writing AND the number of emails written (one) were similar yesterday and today, but the word count was slightly better today.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That is great! It’s going well.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I think so, yes.
The word count today was lower…750+, but I was writing a simulated (and simplified) email in the voice of one of the characters, so I accomplished what I wanted…or, at least I think I did. (Whether or not I did…we’ll see how readers react to the novel.)
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s coming, Alex. That’s a happy thing. ๐
LikeLiked by 1 person
I hope it comes out “good,” though.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Getting it down on “paper” is the hard part. You can then edit it to make it shine. You can’t edit was doesn’t exist. That’s what I tell myself as I stare at a blinking cursor.
LikeLiked by 1 person