What The Moon Brings – New Wattpad Short!

I got invited to perform in a Public Domain Variety Show last weekend. Since I believe in saying yes to new things, I accepted.

The only prompt was creating a work based on or inspired by something published in 1923, which entered the public domain at the beginning of this year.

See the lists here!

Being both a fan of and afraid of Lovecraft, I picked What The Moon Brings. Itโ€™s a nightmarish short story that Lovecraft diehards think might be he wrote something based on a dream.

It seemed like itโ€™d be a fun challenge to take the piece, and genre flip it into something dreamy and romantic keeping as many of the same words as possible.

Itโ€™s a fun exercise. Try it with anything. I promise youโ€™ll be impressed with yourself.

Read what I came up with on my Wattpad account here: https://www.wattpad.com/myworks/196936181-what-the-moon-brings

Completed Wattpad Story! Power Play

Got my first completed Wattpad story published. Woot!

It’s a romance. A sexy romance, if ya know what I mean.

new book by Elena Landis

Read it here. https://my.w.tt/kAIQ3GPnhX

Vote. ๐Ÿ… Comment. ๐Ÿ’Œ You know, things you’re supposed to do on social platforms.

Synopsis:

No one takes a beautiful woman seriously. Admiral Rosalie sacrificed everything to earn command of the Ganymede Terraforming Project. She established leadership through ruthless pragmatism and being better than everyone else.

When the Fleet Admiral replaces her entire staff to give his son an advantage and possibly her job, Rosalie gets more than she bargained for in her new Chief of Staff, Thomas. He certainly is handsome, but she’s learned that handsome men tend to be dangerous with agendas. Is he an informant for the Fleet Admiral? Can she trust him not to sabotage her for his own gain?

Thomas goes into shock when he sees his new Commanding Officer. He thought he was signing up to work for the best. Is a woman like this even capable of running a base this size with a mission this important?

*****

There will be sex scenes without warning. If that’s not your cup of tea, this isn’t the story for you.

Beta readers wanted. Constructive critiques are welcome. We’re all friends here. =)

Adventures in Wattpad – How to Tell if You’re an Optimist

Have you ever read a story and thought, “I can do better than this.” Then you realize the story had over a million views. Then you decide that you should jump into that bandwagon.

I set up a Wattpad profile after hearing about it on a podcast. (The Creative Pen.) It sounded like a new Kiwibox, except on mobile and without the games.

Back when all the kids were chatting on AOL instant messenger, my friends found this website called Kiwibox. It was a place for amateur writers to post their stuff. It also had a well-done web games section.

So while my talented, awesome friends worked in their stories, practiced and got feedback, I played internet pool.

Now that I’m more mature about it, I realize I was somewhat jealous. Not consciously, but I’m the back in my addled teenage brain I wanted to write and publish too. I just didn’t have any ideas for stories. Nor did I have the discipline to write.

I’m still not sure about that discipline, but I’ve got a notebook with 97 pages of story ideas so far. (Yeah, I’m one of those people who write page numbers in a spiral notebook and leave space for a table of contents in the front.)

But I digress.

After discovering Wattpad, I made a profile and started reading. A ton. Some of the stuff is brilliantly original. Some of the material is well written if cliche.

It’s a beautiful place where you aren’t writing for money. You can try different things and see what people respond to. It’s lovely.

After several months of this, I decided to write something. Not the book from NaNo 2017 I’m still editing. (It’s a scary trainwreck and progress is slow )

I started a story with a brilliant idea about a series of letters from a missing girl to her friend that were never sent, but she replies like there were letters sent back. Her sister finds these and asks the friend for help. It was going to be full of conspiracy theories, mental health concerns, and littered with clues to what really happened.

As I sat down to type it all out on my phone, I realized that was way too complex to throw up as a rough draft on Wattpad. It needs all sorts of help before making sense. So instead I started writing a Cinderella retelling. Except Prince Charming is an idiot and picks the wrong girl. (Because what sorry idiot uses a shoe as the only clue to find their one true love? I mean even hair and eye color would have helped.)

So I write. I create fun cover art. I try writing a blurb. And it’s exciting!

Yay!! Stuff for the world to see!!

Now here’s the trick to telling whether or not you’re an optimist.

My stores have 0 views. Not one person has even read the first chapter. But I still check every day. Nothing. For months.

Maybe tomorrow someone will read it. Maybe not. Maybe I’ll have seven stories complete before even the first view. And that’s okay.

Because writing is practice. The more I do, the better I get. Even if nobody ever reads anything I put up, that’s fine.

If I really want someone to read something I write, I’ll trick my cousin into beta reading NaNo 2017 after I edit it. (I really need to name it. The working title makes no sense for the story.)

Anyway. Thank you for finishing my ponderings. If you want to read my stuff you can find it under ElenaLandis on Wattpad.

If you find yourself in the same boat, drop a comment with your username. I’d love to check it your work too!!

Happy July Camp Nano, everyone. I hope your project is coming along. Even if you don’t win, you still started. And that deserves to be celebrated. ๐Ÿ˜˜

I Finished the 1st Draft of My First Novel – Now What?

[Stream of Consciousness – Edited for Grammar]

I finished my first draft of the first novel I’ve ever written. I am underwhelmed. I expected fireworks and general pride like I conquered something or returned home at the end of an epic quest.

I am pleased, to be sure. But it’s a quiet feeling. (I struggle with finishing what I start so finishing this should be a big deal.)

In general, my attitude is “what’s next?”

To my thinking, there are 3 things you can do with a novel once you write the first draft.

  1. Edit it for proper publishing
  2. Put it on the internet for feedback
  3. Stuff it in a drawer (or turn it into a scarf)

So this being my first completed rough draft (I got 30k words into a romance novel for a Camp NaNoWriMo earlier this year) what do I want to do with it?

The goal has always been to self-publish. (I’ve always been a stick it to the man in every way possible sort of gal.) But I’m hesitating. Do I need a rest? Should I hold off for the rest of December and start editing when I get back from vacation in the new year?

How long is it going to take to edit it? Will it ever be “good enough”? I guess I will find out.

I’m inclined to break for the rest of the week and then decide what to do after finishing my regular work (you know, the stuff you get paid for.)

But there is momentum there. And a quiet excitement. I want to write more. Part of me is disappointed that I finished Subversion. I guess I can always work on something else in the idea backlog, but I’ve gotten extremely attached to Lari and Venn. They’ve become like friends that you can never see too often.

I suppose if I were to organize the next steps, it would be edit. (There is conflicting advice on the internets about whether to do grammar first or last. My book from college (that I don’t remember ever opening or even what class it was for) just told me yesterday that your first edit should be grammar. That way it won’t distract you when you are working on the more important stuff.

But then Joanna Penn said edit for grammar last because it’s the least important.

I think I’ll try the grammar first camp and see how that works out. Otherwise, I suspect it will distract me and make the process take forever.

In the meantime, I am now free to start figuring out the plot of Dearest Melissa which I am planning on being my first foray into Wattpad.

Here’s the thing about Wattpad. It was exactly like Kiwibox when I was a kid. All my school friends were writers (I enviously listened to their awesomeness and tried to help with edits once) and put their stuff on Kiwibox. I just played the games. So I’ve been looking for a modern version of it and heard about this new-Kiwibox app.

I started exploring what it could do, and some of the stories have beautiful ideas. Not the best execution, this isn’t a thing were professional authors publish for free. It’s amateurs, like myself. But pushing through the issues the ideas are fabulous.

Anyway, I think I’ve clarified all this in my head now. Thanks for being such an excellent listener! Many hugs.

Steps will be:

  • Break for rest of week
  • Start grammatical edits next week
  • When feeling the need to write, work on new story
  • Fix gaping plot holes and unnecessary characters when finished with grammar.
  • Find other readers for feedback (wattpad again?)
  • Cover art
  • Write copy
  • Publish to Amazon

Thanks again and I hope you have a beautiful holiday season!

(Remember to be kind to retail employees. Whatever you’re frustrated about is probably not their fault, and they’re working insane shifts to take advantage of the holiday madness.)