Vertigo

After a death-strap cage match among Microsoft Word, Dragon Naturally Speaking, my Roadwarrior headset and me, I finally got a clean typescript of the troll story off to the Carleton student who has kindly offered to give it a first read. I asked her to read first of all for vertigo: If she finds that she is overcome by disorientation and vertigo, then she should stop reading and we should talk.

I also overcame my coming-back-from-a-month-of-not-writing inertia and wrote the first sequence of the CIA/Reality Show story. It felt good to get back to work, although rust…in…joints…

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Banzai!

Often it’s the insensitive oafs who just take something and start plodding forward, unaware of all the things that could go wrong.
—David Allen, Getting Things Done

Starting June 1, I will write a novel a month for a year and blog about the experience, with able assistance from illustrator and animator Mozhi.

I will start with a plot suggested by my three-year-old daughter, who told me a story one evening about a family of mechanically-inclined trolls who travel to our house each night in cars and buses, break in using wrenches, ladders and WD-40, and subject us to a series of complicated practical jokes.

The second plot is based upon a dream in which my long-estranged great uncle demands to meet me at a Pismo Beach-themed restaurant and hands over a fifty-year-old postcard in which the anonymous sender promises to kill him in exactly fifty years. This is the first I have heard of it. He seems to think I will be able to help.

In the third plot, the entire U.S. intelligence establishment is outsourced to a reality show.

My hope is that I may have absorbed some useful habits of mind from National Novel Writing Month, Getting Things Done, Agile software development and Harold Lloyd films. Failing that, I may have to fall back on my rich store of oafish insensitivity.

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