By Sarah Loudin Thomas
I recently came to the
halfway point on my fourth novel (four and a half counting the novella). The
book isn't contracted and may never see the light of day, but early on I
learned it's much easier to sell something than nothing.
But I’ve found a funny
thing happens around the midpoint of a book—something I suspect quite a few
authors’ experience. This is the place where:
1. I
can't imagine how there could possibly be another half of a book to go. Oh my
goodness--I've run out of all words except "the end!"
2. I
wonder how I got this far to begin with. I can't even remember what happened
two chapters ago (which is why I write a chapter-by-chapter synopsis as I
go--seriously--I don't remember).
3. I
begin to think there's no tension and no plot, it's just a Seinfeld episode
where nothing happens.
4. I’m
pretty sure there's no moral center to the story. What did I think it was
about? Forgiveness? Faith? Love? Then why didn't I write that stuff in?!?
5. I
have the niggling feeling there was a really cool idea for the second half that
I didn't write down and so have forgotten completely.
This is the point at
which I have to decide, for the umpteenth time, if I'm going to be a writer or
not. Writers, I have concluded, are assailed by doubts but keep writing anyway.
Non-writers are assailed by doubts and go eat some ice cream and watch a few
episodes of Blue Bloods, marveling at the intricacies of the plots. (Okay,
writers, do that too, but afterwards they keep
writing anyway.)
This is the advantage of
having completed several manuscripts. I know this moment is
coming. I expect it. And now I realize that if I just keep writing past it,
I'll get a book in the end. One that someone might read. And perhaps, enjoy.
So, for as long as it
takes after I reach the midpoint, I'll write. Because I'm a writer—really I am.
And anyway, I’m curious
to know what happens next . . .
_____________________________________________________________________
Sarah Loudin Thomas grew
up on a 100-acre farm in French Creek, WV, the seventh generation to live
there. Her Christian fiction is set in West Virginia and celebrates the people,
the land, and the heritage of Appalachia. Her first novel, Miracle in a Dry Season, released August 2014 through Bethany House. Book #2, Until the Harvest,released May 2015. Her novella, Appalachian Serenade is FREE today on Amazon. Sarah and her husband Jim live in the mountains of Western
North Carolina with Thistle–the canine equivalent to a personal trainer pushing
them to hike, run, and throw sticks. Sarah is active in her local church and
enjoys cooking and–you guessed it–reading. She can be found at www.SarahLoudinThomas.com www.facebook.com/SarahLoudinThomas @SarahAnneThomas www.pinterest.com/sarahlthomas
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