My Brain Is Taking a Break

Ack! My post is scheduled for tomorrow, and my mind is blank. Not a single pithy idea is pinging around in my head. So, I’m just going to blather on about what’s going on while my creative brain is taking a vacation. I’ve finished the manuscript for my latest mystery, IF ONLY, which is a crossover novel between my Sam Westin Wilderness series and my Neema the Gorilla series, and trust me, it was not easy to mix those two very different settings and groups of characters, but I believe I pulled the blend off smoothly, although it took me a long time.

But then I ran into two snags. One, my editor is very busy and has been sick, so my manuscript has been held up in the final edit. Two, I planned for this book to be positioned in both the Sam Westin series and in the Neema series, cleverly eliminating the need to write another book for each series. But it turns out that Amazon will only allow me to place the book in one of my series, which then caused a need to make cover changes and dream up creative ways to make it clear that the book also fits in the other series.

I still have all the minutiae to complete after I make final manuscript changes: register ISBN numbers for both print and ebooks, make an ebook version for Amazon with links to my other books, make an ebook for Draft2Digital without those links, write the description for the book page, find appropriate keywords for the listing, etc., etc. Being a self-published author can be tedious, but at least I’m in control and making far more money than I did with a traditional publisher.

So, while I’m waiting for the final edit to arrive on my desk, I’ve been giving my brain a break with reading. I always read, and although I tend to prefer mysteries, I also read all sorts of other books, and I often read more than one at once. Right now, I’m reading two very different books, and they are both unusual picks for me. First, Jodi Taylor’s The Long and the Short of It, which is a collection of wacky humorous short stories. I rarely read short stories, and even more rarely read humorous stories, but these are much more entertaining to me than most, as the plots involve historians who travel back in time and accidentally muck up the details of historical events. Second, I’m reading Camp Zero, a post-apocalyptic story about groups of people who have been posted in the arctic for mysterious reasons having to do with discovering pristine air and livable places for humanity as the southern half of our planet devolves into climatic and political chaos. However, in Camp Zero, it’s clear that men, and not necessarily honorable men, are in charge of all these experiments, so it’s never clear what is going to happen next.

These make a great break from my normal reading. Lately I’ve been plowing through Sara Driscoll’s FBI K-9 series, which has great suspense and action as the protagonist works on life-and-death cases with her canine partner. I will definitely return to that series later. I adore stories that honor the abilities and intelligence of animals, although my cats often express the wish there were many more books that feature feline heroes.

Soon IF ONLY will be out, and my attention will then be diverted to marketing, which I am generally terrible at. But for now, my mind is having a great time in the virtual worlds created by other writers.

4 thoughts on “My Brain Is Taking a Break

  1. I enjoyed this post because I recognize what’s happening. Whenever my brain goes off, don’t know where, I just assume that it’s looking around for something interesting to get excited about. It will come back, things will right themselves, and I’ll be on to the next topic with enthusiasm. I’ve given up trying to understand any of it. And I alway like to know what other writers are reading.

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  2. Pam, I’m in the same state. I just returned from a month-long vacation and have been doing all the things to get caught up. My goal is to dive into the next Hawke book November 1st and focus on the book all month with the hope to have the first draft done to get ready for release in January. Hang in there! Always after a tough book it is harder to get back in the creative flow for the next one.

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  3. Lovely post, Paty! Unfortunately the site has gone rogue and though it says I am logged in it will not let me comment because it says I am not logged in! Grrrr… Computers really do hate me.

    So – here is what I would have said! — Paty, it is like you are writing from the inside of my brain. I’m struggling to finish a simple little contract novella, one which I could have finished in a couple of weeks at one time, but now… the brain simply will not cooperate. I’m just about ready to have a rogue T-Rex rise from the ornamental lake and eat the entire cast of characters! Unfortunately , this is not the first time this has happened, so I say with authority this too shall pass. Hang in there, think of other things and let the brain veg out for a while. You are too good a writer for this situation to be permanent.

    Susan …committing crime with style! http://www.JanisPattersonMysteries.com http://www.janispattersonmysteries.com/ …always a good story! http://www.janispattersonmysteries.com/http://www.JanisSusanMayAuthor.com

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    1. Susan, this is Pamela’s post. I had to upload it for her and forgot to click her as the author. I have since done that. So it is Pam who is inside your brain and not me. 😉

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