Skip to content

Tag: writing

The end is near

Image of a crow's wing

I’ve turned the corner, y’all. I’m almost done with a draft.

Fair warning—this one is going to be full of a lot of angels. Witch-friendly angels, witch-father angels, but angels.

Early spring

Path with trees and power lines, early morning, springtime

There’s ice on the puddles, but still it’s early spring.

It’s been a long winter for most of us. I haven’t had the plague hit my family, thank the gods, but I think everyone’s been touched by that and the US political upheavals of the turn of the year.

But I’m halfway through a draft of the fourth book of my series, and this one’s going to have an angel in it.

Red sun

Red sun rising in fir trees

The red sun rose like a portent this morning.

On the West Coast, California, Oregon, parts of Washington are burning. My country is falling apart.

May cooling rains contain this fire.

And if my country can change this much this fast—maybe it can change this fast for the good.

Another world is possible.

Another book is on the way, possibly as early as Samhain.

Finishing the harvest

An apple tree with apples

I’m finishing the line-edit for the third book in the series today. This part is one of my favorite things about writing, refining line by line: mostly cutting and moving punctuation, sometimes moving words.

The picture of the apples is from a few days ago. A bear came and ate nearly all of them the other morning, climbing through the tree to get them. I’m okay with my neighbors getting most of my apple harvest.

I’ve named the third book The Way to Witch Farm.

Nearly apple harvest

Apples on a tree

I haven’t had a lot to say—what’s to say about the political world, in essays and social media, is being said by other folks.

I’m on the third draft of the next book, which will feature some impassioned Antifa folks and some protests, as well as Hekate and everyone else. In the meantime, this day of the new moon, I watch my apples ripen.

Distancing

Trees and azalea by my house I’m starting week six of my personal pandemic lockdown. For my day job, I’ve been working from home since early March, and I went into full social distancing mode mid-March.

I feel lucky I live in Washington, where the COVID-19 response has been relatively sane. And, honestly, for me as a writer, social distancing hasn’t been as hard as for some of my friends.

I’m an ambivert and thrive on getting a large chunk of time alone. I have to be self-disciplined, or I’d never get any writing done, so after a few days I’m not the person who stays in bed all day. (I’m also lucky my neurochemistry supports me here.) In normal times, the need to write means I have to sit on my social butterfly tendencies. Now, in this new, weird, loose time, it’s easier. Also my editor slipped one of my deadlines. A lot has been slipping lately. That feels good in some ways (I tend to be stressed; it’s good if I can relax and slow down) and bad in others.