2017! An unusual year for me. It started off pretty good, got
better, got bad for a while, then picked up again. At the moment I’m feeling
pretty good. I sure hope that rolls over into 2018. I don’t live a terribly
exciting life. One big surprise was being named as an influence by the new
mayor of New Orleans. That was nice. I was also featured a couple of times in
the local paper and nice things were said about my writing. Overall, though, it
wasn’t a big year for sales of my books, although I didn’t do much to push it
this year. I also did not submit as much as I usually do.
On the writing front itself, I did finish The Scarred One, a western novella/novel
that I started working on a couple of years ago. I also self published a print
version of my western collection, Killing
Trail, under the pseudonym Tyler Boone. In October, Cold in the Light, my first published novel, went out of print. I
went through it and did a fairly minor rewrite, and will be submitting it and The Scarred One for potential
publication in 2018. I’ve also got a novella called “The Razored Land” that I
want to submit next year. Finally, I wrote a lot of poetry this year, far more
than has been typical of me in the past.
This marks the 5th year that I’ve been keeping a
word count on my production. I wrote a little more than 50,000 words of fiction
and nonfiction intended for publication. That’s about the same as last year.
It’s up from 2015, when I did about 44,000, but down from 2013 and 2014, with
80,000 and over 100,000 respectively. I’d like to shoot for 100,000 next year, but
that seems unlikely since in the spring I’m going to be teaching introductory
psychology, which I haven’t taught in 20 years. That means quite a bit more
work for me.
Word count is actually pretty misleading for me, anyway. For
example, I spent a couple of weeks revising Cold
in the Light but actually took out words from its original count. How do I
figure that into a word count? Also, I don’t count wordage from my blog posts
or my journal, since those are not intended for publication. My journal for
2017, which does include my blog posts, is around 40,000 words. That’s down
from years past.
Besides writing, everyone here knows I’m also a big reader.
I mark my “year in books” from one birthday to the next, but Goodreads, of
course, does it by calendar year. According to Goodreads, I read 69 books in
2017, 17,720 pages, at an average of 257 pages per book. The shortest book I
read was Goodnight Moon, a kid’s
story, at 32 pages. The longest was the SF book, Earth, by David Brin, at 704 pages. My average rating across all
those book was 3.5 stars. The most popular book I read was The Girl on the Train, reviewed by over 200,000 people. The least
popular was reviewed by 0 folks other than me, and that was Incredible Football Feats, which was
published in 1974.
Some of my favorite reads for 2017: My Grandmother Danced, by Eve Brouwer, a wonderful novel told in
poetic form. I also loved Visions of the
Mutant Rain Forest, a poetry/prose chapbook by Bruce Boston and Robert
Frazier. My favorite YA book was The
Summer of Moonlight Secrets by Danette Haworth, although I also much
enjoyed Lad: A Dog, by Albert
Terhune. My favorite writing related book was Bestseller Metrics by Elaine Ash. A really fine, and uniquely
written, fantasy novel that I enjoyed was Helen’s
Daimones by S. E. Lindberg. A great short horror novel that I read was Dark Hours, by Sidney Williams.
I got back into Dean Koontz in 2017, after a couple of years
away, and enjoyed his Frankenstein series. I very much enjoyed Ravenheart and
Stormrider by David Gemmell. I loved me some Ed Gorman westerns. Perhaps my
least favorite read of the year was Big
Lobo, A Nevada Jim Western.
I don’t make resolutions anymore. There are certain things I
will try to do. I will try to read and write as much as I can without ignoring
my wife and son and other important folks in my world, and without losing my
job. I’ll try to eat good food but not quite as much. I’ll try for plenty of
naps and walks in nature. I’ll try to be a good person to the best of my
abilities. Hope you all have a great 2018.
Wishing You, Lana & son a wonderful year ahead, Charles!
ReplyDeleteNice yearly recap. I'm going to keep better reading records in 2018. I still gauge my writing in terms of word count, but a recent blog post by Dean Wesley Smith suggested another way is published things. If you go that route, he says, then you can account for daily varieties without 'falling behind' on some sort of annual word count. Finally, to be named as an influence...awesome!
ReplyDeleteCLoudia, thank you very much
ReplyDeleteS. D., neither word count nor pubishing things seems perfect. I hardly ever finish longer projects in one year, so I could have no publishing in one year and several in another. I guess any way has its difficulties
Haven't made resolutions anymore either, friend Gramlich ... Me just floatin along wherever it takes me ... Just came back from doin sum island hopping in the Southern Caribbean Sea ... St Thomas, St Kitts, St Lucia, Antigua and Puerto Rico ... then met up with "the kids" in Fort Lauerdale for XMas ... The kids are Paul and Leanne travelling North America by van for a year ... plus cat Benny ... smiles ... purrs ... here is their address: @paulleanneandavan ... Me back in Alberta now and "enjoying" the deep freeze here ... will post about my Caribbean travels soon ... Anyway, friend Gramlich ... Wishing you and yours a very happy and healthy New Year ... Love always, cat.
ReplyDeleteHave a blessed 2018! You are one productive writer (and reader)!
ReplyDeleteAn excellent accounting, Charles, and a wise one. Blessings to you and yours in the new year ~ and onward!
ReplyDeleteI think you are a good and kind man Charles. May you find a way to stay the course you set and navigate the shoals others wish you to head for. Be Well.
ReplyDeleteHello, Charles! Wishing Lana and you a very Happy New Year! I enjoyed reading your post, more so as I have set certain reading and writing goals for myself in 2018; two areas I totally neglected last year. I also plan to read more short stories and poetry.
ReplyDeleteCat, Looking forward to hearing of your trips. Have a great new year
ReplyDeleteSage, thanks man, and thanks for your travel reports. I get to live vicariously through them.
Erik, same to you, my friend.
Mark, thanks, man. I appreciate that.
Prashant, I've been reading more and more poetry of late
Hey Charles and Happiest of New Year to you. You have some impressive 'stats' there. I know 2017 is the year I have written the least and I wish to change that. I've crept out of limbo after 2 years and am settling happily in our new home at the sea, with it a number of changes are in motion, all good, all good *smiles* I feel it in my bones 2018 is going to be a good year for everyone so let's run with it.
ReplyDeleteI LOVED Earth by David Brin. Was it really that long? It didn't feel that long when I read it. Word counts can definitely be tricky. I only track them through a first draft, when I'm trying to add words, not eliminate them. Even then, though, there are many times when I write 1500 or 2000 words, only to decide that the scene isn't working and all those words disappear. Do I adjust my word count or not? Usually I do. Anyway, thanks for the post. Happy writing to you, and happy 2018! :)
ReplyDeleteWishing you and yours a very happy and healthy New Year, friend Charles. Love, cat.
ReplyDeleteShadow, excellent. I'm going to go with your mood and believe in 2018 too!
ReplyDeleteKathy, thanks for visiting. Earth was definitely pretty long but was enjoyable. Most of his books are lengthy but good reads.
Cat, thankee much
I kind of zombied through 2017, although it wasn't my worst year for recorded wordcount, so that's something. Definitely looking forward to 2018.
ReplyDeleteBest of luck to you too. :)
Angie
Wish you blessed years
ReplyDelete