Cry Uncle
~ Albert Einstein
Age wrinkles the body. Quitting wrinkles the soul.
~ Douglas MacArthur
tries.
~ James A. Michener
~ Richard Bach
If you’re going through hell, keep going.
~ Winston Churchill
you won’t find one. I know. I was searching for somebody smart or famous, maybe
not Paris Hilton or Kim Kardashian, but any minor celebrity would do, that
would justify our decision to abandon a book that we’d been writing.
for the better part of three years. Anything, including a thumb wrestling tournament
on cable TV, was enough to divert our attention. We kept talking through
scenarios and occasionally even writing a couple of scenes.
It happened after I’d finished the first draft of a scene that included a
heartfelt speech by one of our favorite characters. I mean it was the kind of
declaration that would make lesser men stand up and cheer – except it had
absolutely no business in the book and made little or no sense.
Basically it was time to hold up the white flag of surrender and say this book
is going nowhere – fast.
hard? Probably no to the first question; definitely yes to the second and
third. We’re capable of writing grand stories with deep themes, even if we
often choose to eschew great pronouncements of metaphysical meaning (if I even
know what that means). I don’t remember who said it, but somebody (not Paris,
Kim, or even Honey Boo-Boo), once said, “Not only do I not want to write
the Great American Novel; I don’t want to read it.”
service for a story that was dead on arrival. We killed it. No wanted posters
for the murderer are necessary. Nor even a moment of silence. Frankly, it was a
relief.
to try and make it work. But maybe I’m getting older, maybe a little smarter,
maybe listening to the Southern half who doesn’t have much patience with guilt
trips helps. But I realized that by pulling the plug on a story that wasn’t
ever going to work, it freed us to write one that did.
you ever quit a project?
Sullivan Investigations Mystery
Murder Off the Books Kindle – Nook – Smashwords – Trade Paperback
Murder Takes the Cake Kindle – Trade Paperback (exclusive to Amazon)
Riley Come Home (short story)- Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
Moonlighting at the Mall (short story) – Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
Brianna Sullivan Mysteries – e-book series
I Try Not to Drive Past Cemeteries– Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
The Dog Days of Summer in Lottawatah– Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
The Holiday Spirit(s) of Lottawatah– Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
Undying Love in Lottawatah- Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
A Haunting in Lottawatah – Kindle (exclusive to Amazon this month)
Lottawatah Twister – Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
Missing in Lottawatah – Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
Good Grief in Lottawatah – Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
Summer Lightning in Lottawatah – Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
The Ghosts of Lottawatah – trade paperback collection of the Brianna e-books
Book 1 – I Try Not to Drive Past Cemeteries (includes the first four Brianna e-books)
Book 2 – A Haunting in Lottawatah (includes the 5th, 6th, and 7th Brianna e-books)
Romances
Love Lessons – Kindle – Nook – Smashwords
I hear Kenny Rogers singing in the background.
"You gotta know when to hold 'em. Know when to fold 'em…"
Oh, maybe that was the quote you were looking for.
I used to finish every book I started; however, I decided life was too short to spend time reading (or doing) books(things) I didn't enjoy. so now, if I'm not enjoying myself, I QUIT, without guilt.
Thanks LD Masterson and Pam Hopkins.
Love the Kenny Rogers song — perfect for this blog.
And me too, Pam, I don't finish books I don't enjoy. I'm just working on getting rid of the guilt 🙂
Marian, the Northern half of Evelyn David
Evelyn, it's hard, that's for sure. I'm not sure I've "quit"…but they've been pushed so far to the side they've fallen off the earth never to be seen again. The difference is, you're moving on with a clear head now. The ones I"ve shoved to the side (with good reason, I suspect) still mess with my head.
Love the quotes, too!
Marian, I haven't really quit books, stories, poems, but if they're not working for me (if I've really worked at them and they're still no-go), I set them aside and move onto something else. Sometimes I can come back to a piece I had laid aside many years ago and find that it suddenly works for me. Perhaps I've found the missing piece to it, or maybe I'm just in a better place to write it. I'm a big stick-to-it, don't-give-up type of person. But sometimes letting something go fallow for a while is just what it needs to become fertile again.
Thanks Laura and Linda. You're right that some parts of the story we "quit" have elements that can be used somewhere else. I always say that my favorite scene in our first mystery, MURDER OFF THE BOOKS, was cut and somehow, someway, it's going to show up some place 🙂
Marian
Sometimes, it's just all right to stop, and find something else. As you've said, you never know when it will show up again in another form.