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Just thought I’d better do a quick update as life seems to be passing far too speedily at the moment:

Part Two of The Elementalist is up now and, all being well, Part Three will be up next Monday, though I’m travelling that day so I may sneak it up last thing Sunday night (if I don’t get distracted by Sherlock).

I’ve set up a Facebook group for The Elementalist, so feel free to join in (it would be great to get to 100 members by the end of the week).

Things are falling into place with the planned shoot of The Man Who Wished short. I just need to nail some dates, which is proving tricky as the day job is threatening to get in the way. Hopefully I’ll have a clearer idea of my schedule for next month very soon and we can really get things rolling. Locations and props are almost all sorted now, as well as a very nice man with a 20 foot pole, which I’m assured is no bad thing.

The Man Who Wished TV series is developing nicely too, though it’s getting kinda massive, so I’ve had to crack the old Dramatica out to try to to knock it into some kind of shape. It’s slowly wielding.

    All in all, what with real work as well, it’s all a bit manic.

    A couple of years ago I had a crack at NaNoWriMo, and the outcome was pretty much a complete novel entitled ‘The Elementalist’. I was quite proud of it at the time, but then went through the usual ‘oh, no, it’s rubbish’ paranoia that follows any intense period of work. So I stuck it away and never thought much more of it.

    I did tinker with the idea of making it into a screenplay a short while later, but never got very far with it. Then, the other day  I happened to chance upon it, still sat quietly in its folder, so I took a quick ganders. ‘Blow me,’ I thought, ‘perhaps it’s not as bad as I remembered!’

    It’s in need of a good tidy up, but the story is fairly solid, apart form the ending which I never really finished to my satisfaction, even though I’d worked out what I wanted to do. ‘It’s a bit of a shame to keep it hidden away like that,’ thought I, ‘someone might enjoy it.’ Then I realised I still had the domain I’d registered for it sitting lying dormant, so why not, thinks I, tidy the damn thing up and publish it online.

    You can read the first ‘part’ here (I say part, it’s kind of half of the first chapter). I’ll tidy up a bit each week and publish it as a serial. You can read ‘part one’ here.

    I’d welcome any feedback should you be kind enough to read it. I even set up a twitter account for the main character, Barin Elicerio, though I have no idea at this stage what I’ll do with it :-S

    BIC cristal pen

    Image via Wikipedia

    It’s that time of year again, where we all go nuts and try to write 50,000 words in 30 days.  I did it last year and loved it, so I’m having a go again this year.  

    But this year, I’m doing it all a bit different.

    In honour of two of my favourite authors, Robert Rankin and Neil Gaiman, I’ll be doing it with a pen and paper (it also gets me away from the computer and this darned distracting interweb).

    I was a bit unsure of this approach at first – how would I cope without being able to check my tweets every five minutes?

    As it turns out, it was great, but it still left me with a couple of unresolved issues.

    Firstly; which type of pen to use?

    I met Robert Rankin a few years ago when he was one of the speakers at a comedy writing workshop. Here he espoused the virtues of the Bic Biro.  For him, no other pen came close – he even complained when I asked him to sign my book with my fountain pen.  

    No such complaints I feel would issue forth from Mr Gaiman, who takes writing with an ink pen to a whole new level.

    So what to do? Easy – 25000 words with a Biro, followed by 25000 words with my trusty parker fountain pen (I think a straight ink pen is probably a bit ambitious for someone as clumsy as me). 

    Sorted.

    My second, and possibly more significant quandary, was what to write.  After much deliberation (more than was probably necessary) I’ve decided that, rather than go for a straight novel, I should try something a little different.  

    I went up to London last week to the very cool Tuttle Club at the ICA (see me here at the bar getting a coffee) and met a very splendid man who goes by the moniker of Sizemore (he’s the one in the checked shirt, sat down).  He told me about a project he’s working on which inspired me (along with Adrian Mead’s very excellent Making It As a Screenwriter) to write something for television.

    So what I shall do for NaNoWriMo is write out a six episode TV series in long hand prose, with the intention of then adapting it directly to screenplay format afterwards.  

    I’ve done all the calculations to try to keep me on track both with NaNoWriMo itself, and the pacing of the screenplays.  It’ll be a six chapter book, with 8500-9000 words per chapter; each chapter = one episode. I’ve no idea if it will work, but I’m 1758 words in so far (roughly, manual counting is a pain) and all feels good.

    See you on the other side… and good luck to @missread, @ricgalbraith, @warriorgrrl and @splinister and everyone else doing it.

    (Yes I know, I’m halfway through Return to Earth draft 2 but I’m following Adrian Mead’s advice and trying to get a wider variety of work into my portfolio – and I have no TV scripts in the bank at the moment)

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    About Andy Coughlan

    I write stuff down and try to make films out of it. Sometimes I succeed.

    I also write novels, like The Elementalist and code things, like Scribomatic, Brolly or Not? and Geeky Gifts.

    Current projects: A short film, The Man Who Wished which I\'m also developing into a TV series.

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