Hrm hrm hrm.
So I've decided that Harry Potter does a poor job of representing the magic-school genre, which is fertile ground for writing and which I feel must be wrested from the tyrannical grip of one JK Rowling for the betterment of writing in general. To that end I have become to compose a story that is equal parts The Lord of the Rings and Looking for Alaska with heavy doses of the Bible, American Idiot, and Persona3. In brief the main character is a girl whose magical ability is noticed by a representative of a school in the Boundary Waters between her freshmen and sophomore years in high school and who despite initial resistance ends up attending where she becomes friends with another girl named Bombay Ginny (Gin), who is in many ways Alaska in messianic clothing. The more interesting angles of the story come from the lead's interaction with Gin, through which both of their characters develope. The story explores various facets of revolution as well as how teens approach faith, love, friendship, sexuality, and just about everything else that is both interesting and important. Quite a bit of work, I'm aware, but if John Green can do it in 220some pages I think I can do it in under a thousand. The original thurst of the project was to create a Lord of the Rings level of backstory, which I have been diligently assembling as often as I've been actualy writing. There's quite a bit of speculative chemistry and physics that goes into the explanation of just how magic works, as well as some economics and history behind the underpinnings of magical society and the economy of the magical word. In fact, the goal is to provide enough information for Appendices A-F, which comes out at six, if I can count properly, though the better test will be to see how it compares to Tolkein's appendices on a word-count level. I feel that between the explanation of how magic works and thorough explorations of the politics of the magical world as well as its social structure and economy I ough to chew through quite a few pages, never mind history and all that.
On a narrative level the story is told exclusively in the first person by the lead--I call her Mary, but have yet to decide whether to reveal that as her name, or whether it even matters--in the present tense, except for numerous digressions and narrations of past events as well as some snippets of history that she presents in fairy tale form.
The writing itself has proceeded exceptionally smoothly, which leads me to believe that I may in fact complete this project, which would be a significant accomplishment after the fractured nature of the writing that I've done over the last...four years.
In other news, here's the summer reading list, as accurately as I can recall it--
Read:
In Cold Blood - Capote
My Own Country - Verghese
Outliers - Gladwell
Kafka on the Shore - Murakami
Looking for Alaska - Green
Fahrnheit 451 - Bradbury
Reading:
Darkness at Noon - Koestler
The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle - Murakami
Midnight's Children - Rushdie
Dune - Herbert
Last Orders - Swift
The Power and the Glory - Green
The Trial - Kafka
The Red Badge of Courage - Crane
The Economist - weekly, cover-to-cover excepting on the art exhibit article
Monday, August 10, 2009
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1 comment:
Your blog keeps getting better and better! Your older articles are not as good as newer ones you have a lot more creativity and originality now keep it up!
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