Scrivener tip: Text to speech

You know those optical illusion emails that your mother-in-law won’t stop forwarding to you? With weirdly colored, too-big fonts and plenty of white space so you get carpal tunnel while scrolling down to see the punchline?

Image from Jack Uldrich (Thanks also to Jeremy Zimmerman for his efforts in tracking down a half-remembered optical illusion)

You scroll and scroll, then stare and stare. You don’t get it. You curse yourself for not procrastinating better. Then your office mate or wife or whoever saunters up, looks at the screen for all of two seconds, and points out the double use of the word “the”.

::Headdesk::

I’m always shocked at how our minds fill in information according to expectations. Revision blindness on first pages and cover letters is particularly mortifying. Cue my recent love affair with text-to-speech programs.

I can’t believe I’ve never used this software before, and I suspect that it exists by default on most computers for accessibility reasons. True to form, Scrivener makes it super easy: Just go to the Edit menu, and scroll down to Speech. Before I found this option, I would compile my document to a plain text file (Under Compilation Options > Transformations > Select Convert to plain text: Paragraph spacing and indents), open in TextEdit, and select Speech from the Edit menu. If you have a long document and want the ability to pause and rewind, you can even convert text to a spoken track in iTunes. I’ve never tried this myself, but the technique is explained in detail here.

Sorry to be so Mac centric, but I’m sure there’s a simple way to do this on PCs as well!

The first time I ran Speech on my novel opening–an opening that’s been pored over by myself and countless crit partners and friends–I heard transposed words. A mistake that my brain naturally fixes when reading, and one that spell check would never pick up on.

I am a text-to-speech convert.

Notes from a British-Columbian adventure

Friday, 11:00 a.m. On the road. O Canada!

1:00 p.m. Scold dog for barking at border patrol.

3:00 p.m. Greetings from Squamish! We were supposed to meet up with Andrew’s parents in Vancouver, but there was a kerfuffle and we detoured for a weekend in the mountains instead. This part of B.C. always reminds me a bit of Norway, though the road signs have words like “Sḵwxwú7mesh” rather than “Sogn og Fjordane.” (Sounding out road signs in languages I don’t speak is a particular hobby of mine.)

4:00 p.m. I’m reminded why I never got much writing accomplished while I was working in the Himalayas–too much to see and do. (Well, that and eighteen-hour work days.) But I’ve sent Andrew off bouldering for the afternoon, while I hang out at the cabin and work on novel edits. It was hard giving him the car keys. I taught him how to climb.

7:00 p.m. Edit one scene, read four chapters of Insurgent. Rinse and repeat.

9:00 p.m. Refuse to share with Andrew my butter chicken from Howe Sound Brewery.

Saturday
Hike report for Stawamus Chief:

View of Mount Garibaldi from the North Gully, Stawamus Chief

Stats: 7 miles, 1980 ft elevation gain, high point 2180 ft above sea level.
Average Grade: 11%
Description: The Chief is the massive rock buttress that towers over Squamish and is a popular rock-climbing destination. The hiking trail goes up the backside, and there are three summits, each higher than the last.

10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Climb about a bajillion steps, or at least a couple of thousand-feet worth of an insanely well-constructed trail. Haul the dog like a suitcase up steel ladders and chains bolted into slabs of bedrock. Praise dog for being such a good boy. Summit center then north peak of the Chief. Marvel over views of Howe Sound, Mount Garibaldi, and the Tantalus Range. Wait for knees to fall off on scramble back down.

View of South Summit from Center Summit of Stawamus Chief, Squamish, B.C.

Atop Center Summit of Stawamus Chief

6:00 p.m. Post-hike coma. Lament lack of massive novel edits. Freak out as I recall I’m supposed to write something for crit group this week.

7:00 p.m. Read more Insurgent.

Sunday, 12:00 p.m. Finish iPad pass on the novel, hooray! Make final to-do list of loose ends that need tying up.

Double hooray!

P.S. I sold a short story to Wily Writers, which is a pro-paying market. I am thrilled. I will be podcast.

Bluebird

This past weekend I realized that one of the things I find challenging (frustrating?) about writing short fiction is the time-to-word-count ratio. I am in no way soothed by the fact that short stories are quick to draft, because it takes forever to then shape and polish the story into something publishable in the brutal short fiction market. I don’t mind spending ages on a novel, because a novel is a couple of orders of magnitude longer and it makes sense that editing and revision should be a herculean task. I expect it. I love seeing my novel become incrementally more awesome. But a thousand-word flash fiction piece? Sigh, and gah. How do you not just give up on the minutiae? No, really, tell me.

In other news, I’m really enjoying interacting on Goodreads, and would love to talk books with you–especially adult and YA science fiction and fantasy! Feel free to friend me and mention you found me through the blog.

Hike report for Deception Pass Headlands:

Jasper, looking particularly handsome

Stats: 5.0 miles, 350 ft elevation gain, high point 110 ft above sea level.
Quotation of the hike: “I used to babysit JJ Grey.” ~Andrew
Highlights: Narrow cliff-side trails, secret coves I want to kayak to, bluebird sky and views of snowy Olympic mountains.
Low points: Mother’s Day might have been a poor choice for this apparently primo picnicking destination. There were people everywhere. I’m not used to dodging badminton birdies mid-hike.

We got a little lost on the headland to the south of Bowman Bay, and spent some time bushwhacking along cliff edges before the trail disappeared. I may have gotten a little crankypants. But, man, was it a gorgeous day. The drive back was spent deconstructing the Beatles’ brilliance, with a deliciously impromptu stop at Brooklyn Bros Pizzeria in Everett on a friend’s recommendation. (Thanks Mac!)

View from Rosario Head towards Olympic Peninsula, Deception Pass State Park

Deception Pass Bridge

Bluffs at Deception Pass State Park

Now with beta-reader feedback

I’m constantly surprised at how iterative a novel is. Does this happen to everyone? I wrote the dang thing, revised it, tossed it out to beta readers (all this over the course of years, mind you). And I’m finding that, for this project, incorporating beta-reader feedback means layering in characterization and backstory that didn’t make it out of my head and onto the page the first go-round. I write on the spare side as it is–and already chucked the floppy aimless scenes during the first revision–so I’m not dealing with cutting down prose, as you often hear people talk about. I’ve also had to rewrite scenes from different POVs, which drives me batty, and have generally been neglecting short stories and the other novel.

I’ve ripped this novel apart and patched it back together so many times, but this feels like a different beast entirely. Even before putting fingers to keyboard, I gathered all the feedback and notes together, and just thought about the novel for weeks. Because the draft I have right now is fairly polished in terms of prose, my goal is to make this last pass of edits with surgical precision, disrupting as little as possible from the working parts of the story.

The process has gone something like this:

  1. Think furiously about my game plan.
  2. Read notes, compile meta feedback into a quick-reference document. Keep comments ordered by critiquer. Highlight the ones that resonate.
  3. Transfer novel to iPad in ebook format, so it feels like I’m reading an actual book rather than a manuscript–and to prevent massive rewriting at this stage. (Hat tip to Phoebe for the suggestion).
  4. Before each editing session, I reread the master feedback document. Well, at least every couple of sessions, to refresh.
  5. Read the novel, making annotations as needed.
  6. After I’ve gone through a solid chunk of the novel this way (usually a third), I then bust out my laptop and make edits to the actual manuscript. Up to this point I’ve only incorporated meta level comments. The idea is not to get bogged down in the line edits, and to keep in the forefront my overarching ideal for the story.
  7. Finally I fire up the individual beta-reader versions of the manuscript and go through line edits.
  8. Repeat steps 5-7 with rest of the novel.

In addition to the POV changes mentioned earlier, I realized I had a fairly mustache-twirly antagonist, and have been working hard to make him more realistic. I found some of the exercises in Donald Maass’ Writing the Breakout Novel Workbook to be immensely valuable in this regard. It was also quite the revelation to see that my tendency to shift POVs was directly proportional to how much suffering a character was experiencing. And I know better than that! I know that when writing third person limited, a typical technique is to select POV based on which character is in the most pain. But I must have had my blinders on in previous passes. Or really, I wasn’t ready to write that scene the way it needed to be written. And that’s okay. That’s what revision is for, right? Now, finally, the scene is fixed, and the story so much stronger for it. I love my beta readers.

What have your experiences been in incorporating beta-reader feedback into a WIP?

2011: The year in numbers

Novels revised: 1 (ongoing)
Short stories written: 9
Short story submissions: 29
Short stories trunked: 3
Short stories critiqued for others: 18
Books read: ~35
Blog posts written: 24 (since August 3)
Conventions/workshops attended: 3 (Connie Willis workshop at the Hugo House; Norwescon 34; Viable Paradise XV)

I don’t do resolutions. They stress me out, they sound so … resolute. Goals on the other hand, I don’t mind. They give me direction. My goals for 2011 were to apply to Viable Paradise, to write a short story set in space (it’s called “Iris”), to finish revising the novel, and to do NaNoWriMo. I accomplished the first two. I’m still slogging on the novel revisions, and I passed on NaNoWriMo because I decided it was more important to make headway on the current project that start a new one.

For 2012, I want to query agents with the novel, and I’ve decided to participate in Write 1 Sub 1 at the monthly level–which means I’m supposed to write and submit a short story each month. Since I wrote nine short stories last year, I think twelve is doable. You should sign up with me! There are weekly and monthly options (so 52 or 12 stories for 2012).

I’d also like to start my next novel in 2012. Wheeee.