Author: kwohler

  • Dispatches from the Trenches – Week 1

    NaNoWriMo 2012The NaNo War has begun.

    I’ve been here since the writing began a week ago. Most of us are still in the thick of it. Some are waiting for inspiration. Others have thrust themselves headlong into the fray, hoping for a chance to make a run of it and achieve victory. It’s been hell.

    At kickoff, I met several of my fellow WriMos. Some were veterans I knew from previous wars, but we also had some green recruits. Things looked promising. But that was before the writing began.

    The horror. Dear God, the horror.

    (more…)

  • The Un-NaNo Solution

    By the time this gets posted, National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) will have begun. But not for me.

    Last year was my second attempt at NaNoWriMo. After failing the first year, I met 2011 with determination and attacked NaNo with gusto. I took a full week off of work at the start. I hit it hard. And by November 30th I had 50,000 words.

    They weren’t great words. In fact, I had written several scenes by the seat of my pants, unsure where they would fit within the structure of the novel. I had sub-plots that died out. I had characters who remained under-developed. And when I looked back on my story, I realized that several things were happening TO my main character, not BECAUSE of her.

    I wanted to start editing my mess of a zero draft, but first there was Christmas, then one thing, then another. The year flew by. The next thing I knew, my friends were talking about NaNoWriMo again.

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  • Fera Profanum (Flash Fiction)

    By the time the McPhereson Carnival and Circus Cavalcade left the county, six children had disappeared with it. Each of the kids had been orphaned, and had no real family to speak of. They were county kids, the kids who lived outside of town. If not for the fact that one of them had been my best friend, Flick, I might never have noticed what was happening.

    The carnival train arrived in the dead of night, its whistle piercing the veil of sleep and awakening every child. We listened as the clickity-clack, clickity-clack of its wheels gave way to a long screech of metal on the track as the brakes slowed the train’s progress.

    The days leading up to the carnival were a wash at school. We did nothing but dream of the coming festivities. We bragged about who was brave enough to ride the most frightening rides, who was skilled enough to win the midway games, and how much of the carnival fare we were likely to eat. (more…)

  • Finding a Voice

    Character dialogueJust ask Christina Aguilera or Cee Lo Green. Finding the right voice isn’t as easy as it seems.

    One of the hardest things for me to do with my writing was to find a voice. It wasn’t until I started writing a blog on a regular basis that I discovered I have my own style of writing.

    In case you haven’t read a lot of my posts, my voice is pretty straightforward. I use a lot of short sentences. I make a lot of asides. And I use conjunctions at the start of sentences — a grammatical no-no, but it’s the way people talk.

    When I write stories, my voice isn’t the important one. I hear a lot of voices. I hear the voices of my characters as they talk to one another. I hear them when they argue. I hear them when they tell me to kill the cast of Jersey Shore… oops. No, those are different voices… (Kidding, folks!)

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  • Hero of Light

    This week at Hero Hypertext, we’re having a live chat with veteran superhero Candela, and discussing her new book, Learning to Fly: a memoir, which comes out next week.

    Candela from Learning to FlyHero Hypertext: As they say on television, our guest needs no introduction. Everyone in New Chicago is familiar with her. She’s saved the city more times than anyone can count. Candela, welcome to Hero Hypertext.

    Candela: Thank you so much, Gary. I’m glad to be here. I’ve been reading your blog for years. You have a great site.

    HH: That’s nice of you to say. I’ll be sure to sign the check for your endorsement before you leave. 🙂

    C: Seriously. You’re doing great things for the caped  community.

    HH: So, let’s jump right into it. You’re retiring at the end of the month, is that correct?

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  • The Boxing Kangaroo and the Professor

    Folies Bergere, Boxing KangarooThere’s an old story that a boxing kangaroo is only good until it gets punched. After that, they don’t want to fight anymore. (Don’t ask me where I heard it. My head is filled with useless trivia like that.)

    The same thing happened to me. Kind of.

    All my life, I’ve been lucky. When I told my parents I wanted to be an English major, they were very supportive. When I told them I wanted to go back to school and get my master’s degree, they encouraged me. My folks were always the type to say, “You can be anything you want to be.”

    Of course, that’s not strictly true, is it? As kids, we believe we can be anything. It’s not until later that we realize we all aren’t athletic enough, clever enough, or artistic enough to make those dreams come true.

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  • Prized Collection (Flash Fiction)

    “Revenge is a dish best served cold.” ~ An old Klingon proverb

    Throughout SpiralConXIII, from the registration tables to the dealer hall, a congregation of geeks gave homage to their respective pantheons. The major religions (Star Trek and Star Wars) were well-represented. As were newer flavors of geek chic, from Firefly to Stargate to the newest incarnation of Battlestar Galactica. I even spied a couple of fans kicking it old style, wearing the Colonial Viper pilot outfits from the ’78 series.

    And there were superheroes. God help me, they were everywhere. It was like walking into a spandex factory. Ever since Tobey Maguire had suited up in Spider-Man, superhero cosplay had slowly taken over conventions.

    Once home to only the nerdiest of the über-nerds, sci-fi and fantasy conventions used to host masquerade competitions featuring Tom Baker lookalikes, space troopers, elves, and dwarfs (back when The Lord of the Rings was a book, not a movie).

    Over the past couple of decades, cosplay had morphed into a cross between a fashion show and a fetish porn website. Girls and guys who looked more likely to be hanging out at the gym or the beach rather than a comic book store paraded around in outfits that showed off their boobs and/or butt-cleavage. I resented the hell out of them.

    The pre-registration line was already long. I tried to be patient, but I had waited all year for SpiralCon. I had a roll of hundred dollar bills in my pocket and an entire room filled with memorabilia just waiting to join my collection.

    Last year, I had been on a quest for a 1974 Mego 8″ Superman action figure. They were rare and I hadn’t seen one since I was kid. I heard through a friend that a vendor had one still mint in its original window box. But another SpiralCon regular — decked out in full-on Iron Man armor — refused to let it go. Every time I raised my offer ten bucks, he went up twenty. It was frustrating as hell. In the end, he raised the price to a place where even my sizable discretionary spending could not boldly go. I walked away humiliated and without my prize, determined to do better next year.

    I finally made my way to the front of the pre-registration line, grabbed my lanyard with all-access pass, and made a beeline for the dealer hall. Every inch of the hall that wasn’t filled with foot traffic was lined with tables and booths hocking every kind of collectible prized by fans. There were books and comic books, new and rare; DVDs, vintage videotapes, and bootlegs; action figures and vehicles; t-shirts and costumes; and original artwork. I could have blown my entire wad (of cash) before getting five feet into the hall.

    Everywhere I looked were a variety of fanboys and hardcore collectors. I pitied the fanboys, who came to the con with fifty bucks or so, hoping to buy that one rare comic for their collection or a limited edition action figure. When it came to the real deal — the vintage, high-dollar memorabilia — they could look but could never touch.

    I used to be one of them, forever wanting and never buying. But after my failed marriage last year, I decided to forget about keeping up with the Joneses. Instead of buying a big house, a new car, and two-week vacations in tropical paradises, I saved my pennies for this opportunity to reclaim a piece of my childhood.

    I Jedi-Forced my way through the shifting crowd, even as a variety of geek treasures caught my eye. Here was a vintage Star Trek lunchbox.  There was a Six Million Dollar Man Steve Austin action figure — mint in box! I paused at an original signed Alex Ross painting of the Justice League. But I steeled my resolve and forced my way to the far north corner where this year’s coveted prize awaited me.

    The vendor who had been selling the Superman figure last year promised me a special treat. He had secured an exceedingly rare Star Wars Boba Fett action figure prototype.

    Originally, the Boba Fett figure was supposed to have a rocket that fired from its jet pack. Before it went to mass production, it had been redesigned because it had been deemed unsafe for children. I was one of the millions of kids who pre-ordered it by mail only to find the rocket was firmly secured into Boba Fett’s jet pack. As a kid, it had been a huge disappointment. But now, as an adult, I was on the verge of scoring the real thing.

    I found the vendor’s booth nestled into a corner. Not a great spot for drive-by traffic, but plenty of room to showcase his one-of-a-kind merchandise. I re-introduced myself and asked him if he brought the Boba Fett prototype.

    “Sure thing,” he said, sizing me up. “But it’s not going to come cheap.”

    He went behind a make-shift wall and returned with a small box no bigger than his hand. He carefully opened the end and slid out a small, gray figure in a plastic bag. I may have involuntarily moaned.

    “The real deal,” said the vendor. “Working rocket-firing mechanism. You push in the little projectile, click the lever on the back and POW! — the thing shoots out your kid sister’s eye.”

    “It’s a beauty,” I said. “I’ve heard prototypes exist, but I’ve never seen one. This is like … ”

    “Nerdvana?” he offered.

    I nodded in reverent silence, and was about to ask him how much he wanted. I would have sold my car to own the damn thing, but I didn’t want to tell him that.

    “Is that a Boba Fett prototype figure?” I heard someone ask from behind. The vendor looked up and nodded, going into his spiel again.

    I looked over my shoulder and saw Iron Man. Not just any guy in Iron Man armor, but the same SpiralCon regular who had outbid me for the Superman figure last year. I felt my stomach drop, knowing that this guy would likely do it again.

    “How much?” asked Iron Man. He pushed his way through the crowd and was now standing by my side. Somewhere in the pit of bowels, something gurgled.

    “I can’t sell it to you,” said the vendor. “This guy’s buying it.”

    Iron Man turned and contemplated my existence for the first time. He didn’t remember me from the Superman bidding war.

    Dismissing me out of hand, Iron Man turned back to the vendor and said, “I’ll give you five thousand for it. Right now.”

    The vendor seemed tempted, but I could easily see he wanted to sell it to me. I had been hoping to score the figure for less than three thousand. Five was out of my price range. There had to be a way we could both win here.

    “Five thousand seems fair,” I said, giving the vendor a conspiratorial wink. “I could go that high.”

    The vendor cocked his head, ever so slightly to the side, like Cmdr. Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation trying to process some new piece of information.

    “I’ll give you six,” said Iron Man.

    “Seven,” I said.

    “Eight.”

    “Nine.”

    Iron Man turned to me and growled. “You’re killing me, fanboy. This is my entire stash for the convention. I blow this here, now, and I’m done for the year.”

    “The offer is nine,” said the vendor.

    “Ten,” said Iron Man, and from the hushed crowd surrounding the booth came a collective gasp.

    “Too rich for my blood,” I said. “I can’t go higher.”

    The vendor walked off with Iron Man to work out the particulars for payment and the crowds dispersed. I made my way to the next table, feigning interest in a mint set of all 12 issues of the Watchmen mini-series. When Iron Man left, I walked over to the vendor.

    “I know I promised it to you,” he said. “I’m sorry, I just couldn’t turn down that kind of money.”

    “I understand. It’s business. I didn’t want it that bad.”

    “You drove up the price, though. That was pretty mean. What do you have against that guy?”

    I told the vendor about the Superman action figure and last year’s bidding war.

    “Oh, yeah. I remember that! That was you?”

    He went back behind the wall to his hidden stash and returned with a bag.

    “This is for you,” he said. “No charge.”

    I peeked inside the bag and saw a vintage 1974 Mego 8″ Superman action figure staring back up at me through its windowed box. A little piece of my childhood, coming home with me.

  • The Creativity Well

    Creativity WellThis has been a good year for writing. Thanks, in part, to the Cafe, I’ve written — and completed — more short stories this year than the past five years combined. And one of my new stories has been accepted for an upcoming anthology.

    Yet, even with all this writing, I still have more stories to write. (There’s always another deadline.) Right now, I’m working on a short story for an anthology about djinn.

    It’s a cliche that readers ask writers where they get their ideas. The question frustrates some writers and enrages others. (Personally, I don’t think anyone has ever asked me. Maybe they don’t think much about my ideas.) (more…)

  • Meanwhile, at the Hall of Justice…

    Justice League
    Even in the Justice League, there are secondary characters who need to tell their stories. Artwork by Ed Benes. © 2007 DC Comics, all rights reserved.

    Writing a story involving multiple characters is never easy. Heck, it’s hard enough writing a story about one main character, knowing there are going to be secondary characters moving in and out of their story. But the bar gets raised when — to the writer’s surprise — several supposed secondary characters begin to cry out for attention.

    This is what I call the “Justice League Effect.”

    In the comic book world, there are two types of superhero comics: solo titles and team books. Some characters (think Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman) are big enough to anchor one or more solo titles. But other characters never have enough fan support to manage it.

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  • Judgment Day

    “I don’t know the key to success, but the key to failure is trying to please everybody.” ~ Bill Cosby

    The Stand and Left Behind
    Two very different books about the Apocalypse. My mom read one of them. I’ll let you guess which.

    More than a decade ago, I thought I had what it takes to be a writer. I had studied English, with an emphasis on creative writing, at a liberal arts university in the Heartland. I went on to hone my craft for several years, writing — but never publishing — several short stories. And after starting and stopping a couple of novel-length manuscripts, I decided it was time to take the plunge.

    If you’re a frequent visitor to the Confabulator Cafe or my blog, The Creativity Well, you’ve probably heard me mention my not-so-great first novel, and how I never found someone to publish it. Today, you’re going to understand why it remains unpublished.

    You see, back in 1997 — when I decided to write my magnum opus — I fancied myself to be the next Stephen King. And the novel I wanted to write was not dissimilar to King’s great doorstop-of-a-novel, The Stand. My manuscript, tentatively titled Devotion, had a huge cast of characters from all walks of life, coming together to confront a great evil in a small town in rural Kansas. (more…)