Oh, editing, how I hate thee…

It’s a lot. Like a lot a lot.

Yes, I’m currently in full editing mode on The Way of the Fae, and yes, it’s going okay. No, I haven’t settled on a release date just yet, and yes I promise I’ll tell yall when I do.

If writing is consuming a delicious meal, editing is realizing you ate too fucking much.

If writing is the dream, editing is having that glorious dream dissipate as you wake up.

You get the point, I think, without me being too graphic… cause the mental imagery machine I turn on for November doesn’t wind back down again til the new year. Yay for that. And apologies for all the people who have to deal with that.

The worst part about getting it done in this time of year is that there are so many delightful distractions to pull me away… and you see how hard I’m resisting, right? I mean, after all, I’m here doing what… writing. more. stuff.

And now I’m feeling the guilt. I think I’ll go take a nap so I can return with a fresh focused mind. Or something.

 

Random Rant- Season of Outrage or Baby it’s numb inside

It never fails to amaze me that every year about this time, there’s some ‘controversy’ that pops up. Sometimes it’s Starbucks cups, Happy Holidays vs Merry Christmas, or the commercialization of the holidays- this year it’s a song from 1953.

Now look, I get that we live in a culture that has to always have something new to be angry about- it’s an easy way to display your biases so that everyone understands where you fall on the political spectrum and make a lot of noise without actually having to /gasp change anything for the better.

Let me be very plain. I do NOT care where anyone falls in this debate on these song lyrics. I have my own opinions, and I don’t particularly feel the need to go trumpet them. There’s actual things wrong in the world that I’d rather put that energy towards actually doing something about- like the fact that we are presently in violation of international law for repelling minors seeking asylum at our borders. That’s worth being upset about, in my book.

But screaming slogans on social media doesn’t fix that. I sometimes think part of the reason we have outrage culture is because we feel so fucking powerless to help or hurt anything going on around us. If I let it, the fact that there’s children who don’t know if they are ever going to see their parents again who will spend tonight inside a fucking cell will rip my heart into pieces. Because it’s horrible, inhumane, and cruel. And I’ve used my voice in every way I’m given to cause change to happen. But those kids are still all alone, and I can’t do a damned thing about it and knowing that, really understanding it, makes me feel ways I can’t even put into words.

So what do I do?

Well, what I hope lots of people are doing right now- finding common ground between myself and the folks that are a part of my world. Trying to remember to be a little kinder, a little warmer, a little more hopeful and pray like hell that the caring that is inside me can become just a little infectious, spark a little love and feeling about what it is to be human. To laugh together, and find places where we can all love each other for who we are, and forgive for who we aren’t.

I’m not going to lie, friends. This year it’s particularly hard for me to feed that spark in myself- for a lot of reasons that have very little to do with the political landscape and a lot more to do with the fact that the circle of people infecting me with hope and joy and love and kindness is shrinking. People are giving into this pointless argument over a song that I personally hate a little less than ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’ and for what? What do you gain, internet cool dude points?

I don’t get it, and I guess I probably never will. All I know is it’s making certain end of year maintenance bits very easy- if someone is out there blasting their opinion merrily away about this shit like it is the be all end all fight of the century, well, it’s like the trash taking itself out.

Thanks, I guess.

Dinnertime at Casa de Wellman

Sometimes, I feel sorry for Mr. Wellman. You see, I eat dinner quickly and tidily, and I rarely share, so the pups don’t really hang on my every nibble.

Rick… lingers… and is seen as the weakest link. It leads to fun moments like these. Enjoy.

 

  1. Oh hai mom.. you has foods?
  2. Dad.. I am starving corg. Must feeds me.
  3. There’s still some left, dad… feeeeeed me!
  4. Moooooooom.. dad isn’t sharing.
  5. Father.. I am a starving scruffpup.. I need food
  6. Depression.

Random Rant- Nope, not gonna do it.

Now that I’ve got the important things out of the way, like new books written and Tom Bodet, I’m turning to the serious issues, and what I’m about to say may be slightly controversial.

I’m not fucking matching my socks anymore. I don’t give a DAYUM if they are the same color or pattern. I might care about general height.

There, I said it, it’s off my chest now, and wow, do I feel better!

Look, at the base of things, I don’t want to dig in a drawer or a closet trying to find a perfectly fucking matched mate to a sock that no one but me and my corg sees. It’s a huge waste of time.

Match socks ahead of time? Eff off, I don’t do the laundry around here, and I’m not going to task Rick with hunting down my Hufflepuff socks only to find he’s got two different Hufflepuff prints matched and go off on the poor boy.

I tell you, I will wear Slytherin with Hufflepuff if I feel like it and I don’t care what you say.

I will try to keep things in the same fandom or solid color plus fandom, cause you know, I wouldn’t wanna be weird.

Wrapping it up

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Yup, that’s right… 44k words, with another 2k word count day. When the end is in sight and I’m tying up all those loose bits for all I’m worth, it always seems easier to hit and exceed the word count goals.

This part always puts me in kind of a weird mood I usually end up calling ‘shappy’. I’m glad that it looks like I’m going to make it again, and I’m sad to be wrapping things up and saying goodbye, in a way. At this point, I know I’ll have 50k words in the can by Friday, but I also know that this one’s gonna run a little over- there’s just a little bit more Cliche to work with here, and she is a MOUTHY one, let me tell you.

I have to say, this one has been entirely different from anything I’ve ever written- it’s the first time I’ve done adaptations plus completely original writings before, and I think it blends together pretty well. And for once, I’m looking forward to the editing cycle, how sick is that?

As always, I want to take a second and thank everyone who’s liked a post or laughed at a snippet or given me those words of encouragement. I’ve mentioned before that writing is a lonesome activity, and feeling folk cheering me on helps a ton.

The Terrifyingly True Tale of Tom Bodet

(and I know this doesn’t count towards my word count, but hey, it’s fun)

Circa 8am on Ritual Sacrifice with Pie Day

I have this odd little habit, this quirk if you will, of believing that it is downright rude to shove my hands into places one can arguably state hands should not go if I don’t know your name.

So, every turkey that I cook gets a name. This year, it’s Tom Bodet. (We’re sure he’ll leave the light on for us.)

Tom Bodet’s morning did not get off to a good start, and I think he knew it wasn’t going to get off to a good start, because he was very reluctant to uncross his legs. Which I suppose was kind of the trifecta, because there also wasn’t an actual turkey roasting pan to be found for Tom at three different stores this week, so we’re kind of making do with a lasagna pan and oh! Did they forget the happy little tag that tells me how much Tom weighs? Oh, yes, friends and neighbors, they did. Thank you, Smith’s, you dirty, rotten bastards, I hate you forever.

Once that was settled to my satisfaction, Tom thought they day was improving as I laved him with water, and then with garlic butter. We put a hole in that pleasant fiction when I began to stab him with an injection needle filled with, you guessed it, garlic butter. I may or may not have been laughing maniacally, reports vary. Five times in the chest, four times in the ass, and a couple more in his legs just for good measure.

But hey, I made it all better- I wrapped him up nice and snug in a plastic bag, laid him tenderly in a foil roasting pan, and tucked him tenderly away in a nice warm oven.

 

Circa 11 am on Ritual Sacrifice with Pie Day

Tom is slowly roasting along.

I really, really hate Smith’s (yes, the subsidiary of Kroger, thanks for reading) now- had to send the very good man Charlie Brown known as Rick for those last minute items. Can you guess what they had on the shelves in plenty?

Can you?

Aluminum roasting pans. I shake my fist at you, you black hearting pie ninjalooting bastidges. We hates you, precious.

Onward with the sides and appetizers (hot sausage cheese puff things and bacon wrapped shrimp. oh what, the pilgrims didn’t have ’em? They didn’t have cool whip either, and I’m not forgoing that, and they are delicious so there), when I got to the dilemma.

THE dilemma. The ultimate epic battle over… the dressing.

My mother is suffering under the delusion that celery is edible, and that without it, dressing isn’t. After much back and forth (I’ll make my own. No, I’ll go without.) I finally conceded the point and made dressing the only correct way, and then once my smaller casserole dish was filled, made it her way.

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And now.. couchlapse time… just putting things on to heat up or throwing things in ovens. Yeah, that’s right, ovens. Thanks to Dan and my excellent bosses, I’m rockin me a double decker this year, and it’s fucking epic mcawesomebadass, bitches.

 

Circa 8am- Day After Ritual Sacrifice with Pie Day

We all know that I didn’t flop on the couch, right? I mean, deep in your heart you already knew that that just wasn’t a possibility for me, cause as soon as I tried to flop on the couch, remote in hand… I saw the floor.

It. Had. Spots.

knowCompletely unacceptable and the sign of a dreadful home with a dreadful hostess in which you expect all the surfaces to be sticky and the food to be inedible and no one feels safe eating it. I couldn’t have that, I couldn’t let poor Tom Bodet down! All that he’d been through, he deserved his moment in the sun- and so I got up from my wonderfully soft and comfy couch, turned on the roomba, and started mopping for all I was worth.

And then- oh then friends and neighbors.. my spidey sense tingled. You see, Tom had at least another hour in the cooker… but you know, he didn’t come with a tag and maybe, just maybe, it would be a good idea to find that pesky meat thermometer and take a look at the situation.

So I get my thermometer and park myself on the floor, cracking the oven door oh so slightly to see if maybe I’m being entirely premature.

And there- oh friends and neighbors, there is Tom Bodet, in all of his golden brown glory of turkey magnificence.

That’s right, golden. Brown. Which is a color he has no right to be with an hour to go. Panicked, I shove in the meat thermometer (to the appropriate thickest portion of the thigh).

It read 180.

PANIC! 165 is the highest necessary cooking temperature, and Tom, that overachieving bastard, has gone way way way over that mark and is now in danger of being THAT bird.

The one that you chew endlessly, that soaks up cranberry sauce like a sponge. That has that faint aftertaste of sawdust.

“NO!” I screamed, wishing I could pound his chest for effect. “We’re not going to let that happen, damn you! Don’t you dare DRY on me!” Or something to that effect. Once again, reports vary.

I extract him from the oven, oh so carefully juggling his clearly not 18 pound mass with the overflowing plastic bag I cooked him in with the clearly undersized lasagna pan I roasted him in and set him on the counter to rest.

And I waited. To take my mind off waiting for Tom to cool enough to deal with the giant oozing mass of bagged turkey broth, I picked up my folks and got the appetizers going and served.

The moment of truth arrived. I drained off the bulk of the broth, reserving just a little to pour over the cut turkey and keep it moist. I cut open the bag, and sliced into the breast meat.

It looked okay. Still reserving judgment, I looked around for a guinea pig. My stepdad had not noticed the dangerous look in my eye (or he was kinda hungry or he was willing to be the test subject for Tom Bodet). I took him the first piece, and it was pronounced good.

Sigh of relief heaved, after which I force fed my mom and Rick, both of whom made appropriate mouth noises. It was clear that Tom Bodet and I had been saved by the grace of the giant plastic roasting bag, a pound of garlic butter, and my spidey sense tingle.

So Smith’s, you bastards, I still hate you. You cheated me and sold me an underweight bird that I have no idea how underweight he was, you held out on roasting pans until it was way too late, and your mama dresses you funny.

Of course, the company was such that even if Tom Bodet had been a horrible dry mess, we still had tons of good food and warm conversation and togetherness. Oh, and pie. It wouldn’t have wrecked the day.

But it’s way easier to say that after everything turned out fine 😉

 

Nothing stops the energizer bunny… it keeps going and going and going…

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Yup, that’s 30k you see there.

I did take some time this past week and got out of my office (!!!) and saw people (!!!!). I am very lucky to have gotten to reconnect with a very dear friend of mine that I hadn’t gotten to see in more years than I want to put a number to- and while chatting about how the book was going, I realized that this is something new to me. While I’ve always had an outline of which direction the wind was ablowin’, it was never something I could articulate with the level of detail that I can here. I’m typically good at beginning, middle, end, and end up wandering around a bit to let the characters tell me how they are going to get there.

Because the basis of this book is so different, and I get to write in so many voices, it’s a completely different experience. In the past 18 days, I’ve been a faerie queen, trapped in the body of a horse, a pair of wise guys, a cranky old Russian woman, and a few others that we’ll talk about later.

So far, while I’ve done more research for this book than any other I’ve written, I’m also having an absolute blast writing it.

And the folks that have gotten snippets of this or that have been wonderfully complimentary- for which I am deeply thankful, sometimes to the point of tears.

Writing is lonely. If you think about it a certain way, it’s a long conversation I’m having with the people that live in my head. To know that other people want to hear from them, too, is incredibly validating… like I’m not wasting all of this time and energy and imagination to no purpose- that the story will be heard.

Thank you to everyone who’s been listening lately. I love you all and couldn’t do what I’m doing without your support.

 

My way of saying thanks- Friday, November 16th only

OK, so by now it’s pretty clear that I’m kind of passionate about NaNoWriMo. This is my fourth year, and yes, I’ve won and released books from the work created in the previous three years.

I put up a <insert official day of aging word type here> promotion on Facebook to get donations for NaNoWriMo- mostly so I could get two bucks outta Zuck.

So imagine my surprise when folk starting giving.

I got to thinking about it, and decided I wanted to give something back. And what could be more fitting than the very kinds of work that the organization strives to help people like me create?

Tomorrow, for one day only, you can get a free Kindle edition of the Witch’s Daughter. I’m not going to say it’s the best book on the planet, I don’t have any delusions of grandeur. I took the advice of another author and decided to write the kinds of books I’d like to read. And I’m pretty sure I hit that mark. Most of the time.

And you know, if it happens that you like it, there’s two more books in the series.

Hey, reality is, I’m probably not going to be Andy Weir or EL James in the ebook success story game, and that’s okay with me. I like being Ari Wellman and getting to do it all my own way once a year. It’s creatively nourishing, I enjoy it, and sometimes other people get to enjoy it, too.

So if urban fantasy is your thing, I hope you’ll take a look and consider passing the word on. Nothing would warm my heart more than to think that this little story of mine is out there, spreading by word of mouth and connecting with people, even if it’s just for a moment.

Thank you all for your support, for myself and everyone who has a story in them!