Timing is Everything

Me around age 12 with the giant Loch Ness Monster my mommy made. I named her Pressy, and she lived on my bed for many years.

Me around age 12 with the giant Loch Ness Monster my mommy made. I named her Pressy, and she lived on my bed for many years.

When I was a kid, I wanted to be either a writer or an architect when I grew up. Being a very rational teenager (no…really…I was…) I chose architecture because writing was akin to being an actress. Only the best and luckiest get to make a living at it.

I was an excellent draftsperson in the 1980’s. I could accurately depict plans for machining and architecture, and my lettering was good enough to pass for machine-generated. Unfortunately, my timing was off. Computer Aided Drafting (CAD) was replacing hand drawing. By the time I finished my degree in 2005 (Yeah…I left school and then went back) the only hand drafting was done just “so students know the basics.” Most of my classmates, when we had to hand-draft something, did the design then traced it. I was competent in CAD, but just barely. I used my architecture degree to teach spreadsheets and databases to architecture students, and soon after 2005, hubby and I had a couple of kids.

But sometimes timing works in my favor. Ten years ago I wrote a children’s book aimed at middle grade and focused on Scottish Highland Dancing. It was good. I might go back to the series, using my other pseudonym AmyBeth Drumnadrochit. But it wasn’t time yet.

Ten years ago, there was no such thing as “social media,” or at least it was in its infant form.  E-publishing was rare and new. The big six still ruled the publishing world. My Highland Dance story was very niche, and didn’t have a chance. (I did query once, and was of course rejected.)

In 2007, when I was pregnant, I returned to writing. This time I wrote romance, some of which was quite erotic, which was a great outlet for pregnancy hormones. Those stories are on the shelf. One is hubby’s favorite (Big Country) and I might rewrite it someday. Another story turned into the beginning of the Kingdom Come novels. It will probably never be able to stand alone…it’s a long rambling mess…but it was great to get me into the setting and work out the details of worldbuilding.

In 2010 I got serious about writing and getting published. I have several stories out now, and two more coming in the next month. This would not have happened just a few years earlier. It’s my social media connections and the ease of e-publishing that led to my publication.

So, it’s OK that teenage me decided not to be a writer.

It wasn’t time yet.

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Just Say N0! I mean YES…I mean…

Gnome SquareI’m a proud Steeleworker. No, I don’t climb skyscrapers and eat my sack lunch sitting out on a steel beam ninety stories above the ground (although that does sound fascinating.)

I’m a fan of Dayna Steele, radio and television personality, entrepreneur, business author and keynote speaker. I consider Dayna to be a mentor, and I look forward to her Daily Success Tip in my inbox every day. I feel quite proud when she shares a tip I’m already doing, such as not linking all my social media accounts, delivering a targeted message to each specific audience. Although I do sometimes post similar themes across several sites, I don’t have all my tweets go to facebook or vice versa. As Dayna says, “…each platform is different with a different audience – what you say and how you say it on Twitter is completely different than what you say and how you say it on LinkedIn or Facebook.”

Then every once in a while there’s a tip that just doesn’t fit me. Like getting up early. (I write at night and hubby takes the kids in the morning.) Last April, Dayna shared the tip “Say this now: Sure I can do that.” This is great advice, and I’ve said yes to many things, such as returning to teaching after my youngest was born, and proofreading for a small publisher to get experience and make contacts in the field.

However, I’m in a different position as a writer now. Three years ago, I followed some advice I found on Nelson Literary Agency’s website and I started this blog and proactively began to grow my proffesional network as a writer. In those years, I’ve gone from being a newbie wondering “Where can I submit to? Who will like my stories? What are the first steps?” to being a professional with several stories published a few more on the way.

Having developed an absolutely wonderful network of both professionals and amateurs in the writing world, from Science Fiction to Romance and everything that lies between or overlaps, I frequently come across calls for submissions or hear about opportunities to expand my writing career. At first, I said “yes” frequently, but now I have to carefully pick and choose which opportunities I look into. Sometimes, even though an opportunity doesn’t pay much, it’s either a project I really believe in and want to support, or it’s useful to me as professional development.

It’s very easy to get overloaded. I love writing, but as in any job there are necessary activities that aren’t as joyful as the writing itself. Although I’d love to believe that writing professionally means sitting down as the muse hits and producing great works of literary wonder, writing comes with commitments. When I’m choosing what projects to pursue, I have to keep in mind the commitments that go along with it, and make sure I can meet them. I need to figure in my non-writing schedule, such as parenting and being a good spouse. I also need to consider those unexpected hurdles that inevitably come up, such as being sick for eight weeks. (I started this blog post three weeks ago, and couldn’t concentrate on the computer long enough to finish it.)

The kids have two days of school left. I try to keep our summers light and fun. My writing schedule will change as the kids will not be in school. I have two stories coming out soon…

The House on Paladin Court is in the Urban Fantasy anthology Real World Unreal, part of the Theme-thology series of original stories by amazing authors.  

Cover 02 SulfuringsThe Remorse of the Incorporeum is in the Weird Fic anthology Sulfurings Tales from Sodom & Gomorrah, part of the Biblical Speculative Fiction series from Garden Gnome Publications. My story The Genesis of the Incorporeum appeared in the first Biblical Spec Fic anthology The Garden, and I plan to submit to the rest of the series as well.

I’ll share the covers and links when they’re available.

 

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The Abandoned Blog

1947577_10203287763537505_1492305998_nAbandoned no more. Sorely neglected, but conscientiously so.

Every Spring I teach Spreadsheets and Databases to college freshmen. A few days ago I gave my students their final exam and turned in final grades. I have also been sick for the past three weeks, which has made the end of the school year much more difficult than usual.

I made a conscious decision to let the blog go for a while. Teaching was a commitment that took precedence over writing, at least temporarily. I’m still deciding when/whether to give up the teaching gig to concentrate on my writing career. The phrase “don’t quit your dayjob” echoes in my ears.

I was about to call this post “I need to stop moving my own cheese….” then I realized that I already have a blog post, from August 22, 2012, titled “Who Moved My Cheese?” Yes, in that post, I also talked about being sick, that time with a perforated ear drum and Bronchitis. This time it’s an Upper Respiratory Infection, and on my doctor’s recommendation, I’m recovering without antibiotics. It’s not pretty.

In addition to neglecting the blog, I also let go of my daily writing habit. It hurts, but it was necessary. I followed through with a couple of deadlines, and I was able to temporarily postpone an editing commitment (an anthology where all the authors are editing for each other) as well as an interview (I’m being interviewed about writers and mental illness.)

Now, about that cheese…

A year and a half ago I confessed to abandoning The Kingdom Come Stories in favor of the Pangalactic Sojourners. A few months ago, I did the opposite. Essentially, I moved my own cheese. But I did so for good reasons… PG was stalled and needed something I couldn’t yet grasp. I took advice from Tiffany Reisz and chose one story that I thought would be a good first novel,  then prepared to polish and query it. (Let’s not get into the self-pub’ing debate here. Tis not for me.) That story was my 2013 NaNoWriMo project, and I’m quite proud of it. It is necessary for me to let go of a rough draft after it’s finished so I can read through it and make a round of edits before handing it to Beta readers. This is hard for me to do, but I turned my attention to another Kingdom Come story (Under the Radar) and then my attention turned to my teaching commitment.

We’re several weeks into this round of #ROW80, and now that the semester is over I can re-establish my writing goals. However, I am still sick and light-headed, so I’m not going to dive in too deeply yet. I did do Friday Flash today, but I have yet to look at my new editorial commitments. I have two short stories accepted for anothos that are in the editing stages, so those deadlines take precedence. I need to stay true to Tiffany’s advice and give most of my attention to edits of Jublilation of the Southern Cross and Hearthsong.

And I need to get healthy. Because none of this is going to happen if I’m still coughing so hard I can’t think.

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What? We Started Already?

Me and my physics teacher in high school, around 1988. No idea who drew Yoda.

Me and my physics teacher in high school, around 1988. No idea who drew Yoda.

Apparently I missed the first week of this Round of Words in 80 Days.

Just like last year, I underestimated just how busy Spring is. This year in my teaching job I’m re-using a lot more assignments than I have in the past. I need to do this more. In fact, it might be good to create specific assignments for the entire semester and re-use them every year.

When I started teaching, creating assignments was one of the most pleasant and fulfilling aspects of the job. I took pride in tweaking the homework according to what the previous assignment told me about my students’ understanding. Sometimes I’d realize that there was a topic I must not have covered well enough because the students weren’t doing it right on the homework. I’d make sure to re-touch with topic the next week (my class meets once a week) and the next assignment would include it.

Now, however, my creative energies go into writing, and that is where I want them to be. If I were to sit down and assess my long term priorities, I’d be working on writing and editing tonight instead of grading papers. However, my short-term priorities include the fact that I made a commitment, so…I grade away.

It took me a while to figure out “how” to teach a college course. For example, I love to design intricate, challenging exercises, but that doesn’t help my students gain a basic, beginner-level working knowledge of the subject. (I teach spreadsheets and databases.) I’ve learned that it is important to begin the semester with an easy assignment with an immediate due date so that students get used to turning in work on time, and so they realize that some assignments are very easy, but they still need to do them. I’ve been teaching for more than ten years now (with a baby break of a few years) and I’m still learning how to be a better teacher.

Now I’m learning how to be a better writer. Although I’d like to say I’ve found my groove, I think my career will be a constant journey of growth and change. My backlog of unedited rough drafts is a perfect example of how I need to alter the “groove” I’m in and make it something more productive.

Back in January for round one I made one of my goals to leave the recently-completed rough drafts of my two NaNo novels on the shelf for at least a couple of months. That was difficult, because my OCD brain wanted to stay in that world. I was, however, able to turn around and put my writing energies into a different story in the same world.

Then the day came (Ash Wednesday in March) when I allowed myself to go back to my rough drafts. This was supposed to be my priority; getting the stories ready to send to beta readers.

It didn’t work out that way. I only got a few chapters in before other commitments pushed it away. Short stories with deadlines, the aforementioned teaching job, kids, and other responsibilities took priority.

So, what should I say my goals are for this round? I have just three weeks left of teaching. Considering my OCD, it makes sense to let my brain stay in teacher-mode until the semester is over. And then…my priority will be to polish those two rough drafts. I’m not sure how that will translate into weekly goals. Perhaps devoting a specific number of hours or pages per week will be a good, measurable goal.

I need to thank both ROW80 and Tiffany Reisz. ROW80, because it keeps me regularly evaluating my goals so that I am both flexible and on-track. And Tiffany, because last year she told me “Pick one of those rough drafts, polish it, and query it.”

I’m working on it, Tiffany, I promise!

Just for fun, most Tuesdays I do Five Minute Fiction. In a week when I haven’t written anything, I can usually fit five minutes into my schedule to do a little flash. I’m a finalist this week (OK, only four of us posted and we’re all finalists lol!) so check it out and vote for your favorite!

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SciFi Q of the Day: Utopian Chickens and Their Motivation

Chicken picture shamelessly stolen from Geri's facebook albums because I'm pretty sure she'll forgive me when she wakes up and sees what I've done.

Chicken picture shamelessly stolen from Geri’s facebook albums because I’m pretty sure she’ll forgive me when she wakes up and sees what I’ve done.

SciFi Question of the Day: In a Utopian society, will chickens finally be able to cross the road without having their motives questioned?    

Facebook Answers:

  Mark Strock I always question the motives of chickens crossing the road

  AmyBeth Fredricksen Yeah, well, but that’s kinda your job…

  Matthew Brown especially the chickens with lips

  Perry Willis Only if foxes are the ruling cast.

  Alan Couture by the time there is a utopia chickens won’t know what a road is for they will go from egg to barbecue without seeing anything but cage.

  Sara LaMotte Ala “the matrix”, there is noooooo road……

  Kaith Rush They will be in little armored carrier suits crossing the fowl flight lines.

Google Plus Answers:

  David Litster  In a Utopian society, will I be able to ask any question that interests me, without it becoming about judgment?

  Carl Rauscher  I don’t think mankind is ready to learn what happens when you cross a road with a chicken. We can barely handle genetically modified corn.

  Charles Moore  Flying cars and/or teleportation. There will be no roads.

  James A Woods  Roads? Where we’re going we don’t need roads.

  Gerri Lynn Baxter  No. Because crossing the road makes a social statement depending on who is giving meaning to the chicken crossing the road. I have seven and a half pages of chicken crossing the road jokes to prove exactly such a point.

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ROW80: Final Check-In for 2014 Round One

~sigh~

ROW80LogocopyNot the best round for me. Mainly because I also teach computers in the spring, and although I love teaching and have done it for years, it feels more and more like a chore lately. I’d rather be concentrating on my writing. Also because of my health.

Most writers never quit their day job. I’m not about to quit teaching, even though we can get by on my husband’s salary. There’s also all the Mom stuff, which is, of course, life. However…

I’ve posted before about agonizing over what my ‘needs’ are, writer-wise, vs. diva-esque demands. I’ve heard advice from writers I admire and consider to be mentors that I should be able to use small chunks of time in whatever environment I find myself in to write. Both of those are very difficult, nigh impossible for me.

Does that make me a diva?

Perhaps…

Then I look at it a different way. I have on my desk the latest revision of my daughter’s IEP. That’s an Individualized Education Program for a child with special needs. It outlines the accommodations and changes that will be made so that she can get the most out of her education.

I have OCD. Not the personality quirk that makes me like things to be done a certain way, but an illness that sometimes keeps me from doing the things I need to do. I’ve dealt with it for many years, and I know what I need to do to keep myself level. Most of the time, I go on with my life in a perfectly normal way, and I can even forget I have a problem. But if something goes wrong, even something little, it can have a snowball effect that derails me for weeks.

So, yes. I create accommodations for myself. I make time for sleep, unlike so many people who pry their eyelids open with caffeine every morning. This cuts into my productive time, but without it, there is no productivity. I try to avoid overloading myself with commitments, but this is difficult. And, yes, when I write, I like to have a clear palate (other commitments all met) and a guarantee of no interruptions.

I also have PCOS. I might go into my infertility story someday… adopting our older daughter, and spending 10 1/2 years trying various techniques to get pregnant before giving birth to our younger daughter. I turned 43 this year, and we’ve switched from “let’s just leave our options open and see what happens” to “let’s take the medicine that could help me even though it slams the door on ever getting pregnant again.” I trust my doctor, and I won’t go into detail about what meds he prescribed, but they do have some side effects such as tiredness that have added to my list of things-I-need-to-accommodate in my life.

Tonight, I’m not being productive at all. No new writing. No grading papers. No editing for my friend. No revising my WIP. My brain is muddy. Every time I typed “commitments” in this post, I’ve spelled it wrong and had to use the spell checker. I already took a nap today, but I’m tired already. I’m going to continue to allow myself extra sleep for a few more weeks, and see if my body eventually adjusts to the change.

Some days, I tell myself I just don’t feel up to getting anything done. And yes…there are some real medical reasons behind that. But if I tried…I might be able to work through it. I see this in my daughter. She often just gives up, looking for the easy way out. Yes, she has some huge challenges. And trying does not mean she will succeed.

But not trying guarantees she will not succeed.

And if I don’t try to overcome my own issues, I will never succeed either.

  • Do something writing-related every day: This got worse towards the end of the round.
  • Do some actual writing every week: Yes…but barely. Sometimes just one bitty piece of flash, like Five Minute Fiction.
  • Engage with other writers every week: Yeah…I’m friendly.
  • Stay away from the NaNo story for at least a month: This goal has transitioned to…
  • Now that it’s been six weeks, return to the NaNo story for edits: I haven’t worked on Jublilation of the Southern Cross much at all. Other commitments are taking precedence.
  • Get sleep: With new medication, this continues to be a problem.
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Apophenia

Jacobs_Dream_James_TissotI see patterns in everything…

I’m trying to get back in the swing of writing. It is very true that if I don’t use it, I lose it. After being sick, non-writing commitments had to be met, and writing had to be relegated to the sidelines. I hate that. Someday, I want the writing to be the thing that is more important, pushing other commitments aside.

To help me get back in the swing, I wrote a short story called Apophenia. It’s the experience of seeing patterns or connections in random or meaningless data. I’d love it if you’d take a peek at it and answer my question about ellipses…

The ROW80 Goals this week:

  • Do something writing-related every day: Nope. Definitely failed this one. Again. But I kind of accepted that I’d still be playing catch-up with non-writing commitments, in particular giving my students a mid-term exam.
  • Do some actual writing every week: Some. Added to the short story I want to submit to an antho. I even wrote a couple pieces of flash for the blog.
  • Engage with other writers every week: Getting better. The SpecFic Writers community on Google Plus is nice and active. I’m trying to tweet more, too. I also have editing to complete for a friend.
  • Stay away from the NaNo story for at least a month: This goal has transitioned to…
  • Now that it’s been six weeks, return to the NaNo story for edits: I haven’t worked on Jublilation of the Southern Cross this week.
  • Get sleep: A huge challenge, always. On days I teach, I get derailed because my brain has to concentrate on the lesson plan, not my story outline. And instead of having a quiet, meditative morning, I’m busy and up and about. Later this week I have a meeting at my daughter’s school. They’re all used to a schedule where they’re at work around 7am. That’s almost opposite my own work schedule, but it’s me who accommodates them.

When is this round up? Soon, I think…

I’m ready to reboot.

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Support System

Image via Wikimedia Commons Photo taken and released under GFDL by Tristanb.

Image via Wikimedia Commons Photo taken and released under GFDL by Tristanb.

Today I posted a SciFi Question of the Day about toilet-paper alternatives. I’m getting some very…intriguing…answers on all four threads. I used to select one question each week to turn into a blog post, but I don’t do that very often anymore. (I cut back on my blogging to concentrate on getting a novel ready to query.) Of the four threads, I think “Three Seashells” has been mentioned maybe a dozen times. Several people have suggested air hoses, either to blast or suck off the detritus. That could have…issues…

My favorite, so far, thanks to Dale Thelander on facebook is “Sonic Bidets.” I may have to write that story…

I realized long ago that there’s nothing particularly special about my questions. It’s the answers that make them popular. 30,000 people on Google Plus aren’t tuning in to see what I’ve posted each day, they’re tuning in to read the answers other people come up with. I have a large group of regulars who almost always throw their two cents into the discussion, and plenty of people chime in only now and again. I have a couple of folks, like Michael Interbartolo, whom I specifically tag every once in a while (AKA send up the Batsignal) so we can get a real, scientific answer. Sometimes the questions are serious, sometimes they’re funny, often they’re both. Every once in a while some troll will say “Hey! That’s not a Science Fiction question!” and I ignore them. Or block them, if they’re rude about it. True, “Who let the dogs out?” or “Does your bologna have a first name?” are not innately SciFi-ish. It is the answers people come up with that make them SciFi. And, oh, the answers people give me…

Sometimes I hear writers on twitter thanking everyone who follows them, as if all their followers are humble, devoted fans. Tis not true. I follow some people (such as politicians) not because I like them, but because I want to hear what they have to say. I follow some people because we shared some intangible connection, solidified in social media. Following someone is not a sign of fandom. It is a different kind of connection.

I have 1,400 friends on facebook. I use my legal name there (AmyBeth Fredricksen) because it’s not just about my writing. Many of those 1,400 started out as classmates or work contacts. Many more of those 1,400 began as gaming connections (friends I added because we play the same game and can be allies.) But people are fascinating, diverse creatures. A friend (Juno) I met because we kept killing each other in Dragonwars has a similar sense of humor to mine, and his oldest kid is close in age to my youngest kid. He’s a regular contributor to the SciFi discussions. Whatever reason I might have had for friending someone on facebook pales over time, as the relationship continues to grow and change. Classmates I barely knew in high school now have interests and life stories that bring us much closer today, even though I’ve moved halfway across the country. People from work discover that we something in common besides the college.

Well over 30,000 people have circled me on Google Plus (where I use my pseudonym.) Many of them point to my SciFi Question of the Day as the reason for the follow. But this doesn’t make them my fans…this makes them part of the huge collective consciousness that makes this…makes everything work! Even if they never speak up or even click the ‘plus’ button, they’re important.

So, if I ever get to make a speech about how grateful I am that I get to be a writer, I will not only thank my fans, but my entire support system of connections, friends, family, and followers. You all rock. Hard. In a good way.

Thank you.

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3 Years

ROW80LogocopyIt’s 3AM. This is not unusual for me…I’m a natural nightowl. Actually, I’m a second-shifter. Wake up around noon, get stuff done and be active in the afternoon and evening, then have time to myself when I can concentrate uninterrupted late at night.

WordPress just wished me a happy anniversary. I didn’t realize it was that time already…

I’ll have to write a blogaversary post later. For now, my ROW80 update:

The ROW80 Goals this week:

  • Do something writing-related every day: Nope. Definitely failed this one. I was sick, then getting caught up on non-writing commitments (like teaching, doctor appointments, etc.) didn’t leave much time. That, and my brain is freshly fried from being sick.
  • Do some actual writing every week: Hardly any. The deadline for an anthology I want to be part of is coming up, and I need to finish that story.
  • Engage with other writers every week: When I was sick, I hardly posted on social media at all. I did my SciFi Questions of the Day most days, because that takes very little effort and the questions are the main source of my following. I’m even 6 days behind on my turns in “Words With Friends” and I usually play that twice a day. I’m editing for another friend, but again, the brain-fry isn’t good for that.
  • Stay away from the NaNo story for at least a month: This goal has transitioned to…
  • Now that it’s been six weeks, return to the NaNo story for edits: Yes, I dove into edits, but then brain-fry and other commitments got in the way. But it feels good to be back at this stage.
  • Get sleep: A huge challenge. Fortunately, I have a hubby who understands me and helps me sleep when I need to, even if that’s a weird time. Unfortunately, the rest of the world isn’t so agreeable. I hate explaining myself, and I hate making excuses. If I had a day-job…er…night-job…where I worked the graveyard shift (I used to, and liked it. I prefer swing, though, like 3-11PM) it would be easier to tell people “Oh, I can’t ____ then. I’m working.” Or… “I have to sleep during the day. I work nights.”

How do you tell people “I can’t ____. That is during my writing time.” ?

Or do you have as much trouble saying “no” as I do?

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I Want an Amtrak Residency!

#AmtrakResidency was designed to allow creative professionals who are passionate about train travel and writing to work on their craft in an inspiring environment.

Sign me up! I just sent in my application. (Of course, I used my real last name, Fredricksen) When I first heard about this, it was still in the intangible stage where Amtrak had acknowledged a random idea tweeted by a writer. Seeing it come to fruition has me excited far beyond reason…I have other things I need to do right now, like grade papers.

But the semester ends in a couple of months, and this writer/teacher will be free of scholarly commitments! I have my hubby’s buy-in. This is the perfect stage in my career for me to do something like this. I have a number of short stories published, and I’m in the revision stage of the novel-that-will-be-queried. I have the flexibility (IE no writing contracts with deadlines) to work on whatever I want, whether that’s one of the stories from the shelf, or a brand new tale.

Why? you ask, puzzlement wrinkling your sainted brow…

1) Time. Dedicated time for writing. Some of my best work comes out when I can binge and concentrate primarily on writing. I’ve had three successful NaNoWriMos, two ThreeDayNovel weekends, and a handful of other stunts I’ve pulled. I’ve always wanted to go to the moon or the ISS and be able to write, sleep, and eat whenever I felt like it, regardless of the clock. Since my first two choices are currently out of reach, an Amtrak Residency would be just right.

2) Inspiration. The lull of the wheels combined with ever-changing scenery is the perfect writing environment. Top that off with a private room so I’m not tempted to spend hours telling my neighbors about what I’m writing instead of actually writing, and we’re golden. WiFi on board means I can stay connected while I write, both to share the experience and ask questions like “If you raised chickens on the moon, would you have to import Earth dirt or could you adapt the lunar scrabble?”

3) Connections. I have made thousands of connections as a writer through social media and live events. The key to readership is not to convince random people to like my stuff, but to be as well-known as possible so that I can be discovered by the readers who do like what I write. Not everyone likes Science Fiction. Not everyone likes Steampunk. Not everyone likes Erotica, and there are plenty of people who would be rather stunned by my SciFi works with polyamorous romances. But I find ways to connect with these thousands of people, whether they’re just lurkers who read my SciFi Questions of the Day but never comment, professional peers who love to bounce ideas back and forth, or fans who’ve read and loved my stories. The act of tweeting and posting about the process of writing while on a train will open up my possible connections exponentially.

Why should they choose you? you ask, doubt tinging your usually supportive stance…

See the aforementioned connections? For an author who’s only published a few short stories, I’m pretty popular in the interwebz! My personal facebook page was where it started, when I posted a SciFi question of the Day just because I had a science/plausibility question I really wanted input on. Then I thought about which Mythbuster I’d want by my side if the lawn gnomes ever attacked, and it snowballed from there. I currently have 1,400 connections there; a combination of personal and writing friends. My author page on facebook is not nearly as interactive (facebook’s page design makes this problematic.) On twitter, I have 700 followers. A lot of those are fellow writers who are always ready to retweet something interesting.

My powerhouse of connections (which is not part of the application, sadly,) is Google Plus. I have been circled by 30,500 people there, and my posts usually prompt a plethora of great comments. I’m sure my friends and followers would be very interested in reading what I post from the train!

My Klout score hovers in the high fifties. What does that mean?

What is considered a good score? Let’s say that you have a Klout score of 32 – what does that mean? According to Megan, a score above 30 shows expertise in social media. Above a 50 is approaching social media thought leader status.

—By Donna Gilliland on Apr 13, 2011, interview with Megan Berry, Director of Klout Marketing

Not only am I a thought leader, but I’m eager to use my influence to share my travel-writing experience with the world. This is far different from saying “I took a train once. It was cool. You should too!” This is me tweeting and posting things like “I think I just witnessed my first cow tipping…is there a hotline to report that kind of thing?” or “I have no idea what time it is or where I am, but I just wrote 2,000 words in the last hour.”

You’ve been on a train before…right? you ask, a trace of sarcasm in your voice…

Yes. When I was growing up, I knew my father’s job title was ‘engineer.’ Then one day he took us to an event at work (IBM.) It was a model train show! I put two and two together and assumed my father drove trains for a living. After all, both he and my mother had extensive model railroad sets at home. Daddy’s are HO, Mom’s are N gauge. I want a Z-gauge set-up installed in a hard cello case someday. Who can make that happen?

My grandparents loved to travel by train. Once, they let us come with them for the first bit of the trip, just for the experience of it. My father drove and met the train at another station to drive us back. When I had to leave college after only two years, it was an Amtrak train that took me from Colorado to Vermont. My husband and I have taken the train to Washington DC a few times. When I found out that my father was going to have yet another open-heart surgery and the prognosis wasn’t good, I hopped on a train the next day. I was on that train when I got the call that he’d made it through.

You have trains in your stories, don’t you? you ask, your interest piqued.

Why, yes. I have a Steampunk series I’m working on, and trains are integral to that universe. In my Kingdom Come universe, I assume that one of the basic pieces of infrastructure the colony established early on and maintains regularly is a transit system consisting largely of several varieties of trains. My Lunar Shorts assume the same for the moon. I don’t write dystopias; I write about positive futures where humans form near-ideal societies that function effectively. Trains are part of that.

Where would you go? you ask, ready to offer suggestions…

The Vermonter is close, but I’ve taken it several times. I’d love something new! It’s a short drive across the lake to catch a train in upstate New York. I would be thrilled to make a big circle of the country from New England, down to the south, circling west to California and back east again in some northerly route. Or perhaps I could simply go to Colorado and back and visit friends back there. I’ve heard the train between Colorado and California has some of the most spectacular scenery in the country. Then again, it would be awesome to go to Texas and visit my NASA peeps! I have a number of connections who are always willing to help me out with questions of scientific plausibility. I’d love to meet them in person!

I end this post as the whistle of the train goes past my house. It’s less than a block away, and I could easily see it from my window if it was daylight. I’ve always liked the sound and feel of the train going by. I can anticipate the whistle (required by law as it crosses the street) because I can feel the train coming.

When my daughter was little, the train whistle scared her. We got used to hearing her shout “Mommy! Train!” as she came running to us for hugs and reassurance. Alas, she has also grown used to the whistle and rumble, and now sleeps through every night-time crossing.

I hope that I can soon sleep on that train for a few days, instead of constantly watching it pass me by.

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