NaNoWriMo

The 2008 NaNoWriMo Winner's Badge.

The 2008 NaNoWriMo Winner's Badge.

It’s certainly that time of the year, and I like many folks are preparing for NaNoWriMo (the National Novel Writing Month). Last year I both participated and won.

Yay me!

Well sort of Yay me. I won, that is I wrote 50,000 words, actually more like 60,000 words, but they should have probably gone directly into the bit bucket. They were that bad.

So this year I am planning, plotting, characterizing. I have timelines, research, snowflakes, outlines, etc. I am determined that I will not be staring at October 31 with a empty Scrivener Project (devoid of any planning or research materials) and a song in my heart. It certainly does help that I am gainfully underemployed this month and plan to spend hours each day writing and planning for November.

So, what have I been doing?

Well, last week was WriMo Prep Week 1: My novel is a time travel historical fiction set in both the 1990s and gold rush California. So there is lots of good and fun historical research to do. Luckily for me, I love both research and history. Oooh Fun!

Unfortunately, I already have much of this done, since it was so much fun and I love doing it. So not so much left to do this month. Sigh. But not to worry there is more to occupy my busy brain for the rest of the month. Having a project management bent, I am approaching this systematically – in sections of work:

History:
Not a lot to do this month. Random fact checking and organizing references so I can find things fast in November. I am planning some entertaining reading of journals and diaries so I can get the language down. I figure by the end of November I should be talking like a proper mid-19th century lady.

Characterization:
I have my main characters and major supporting characters well worked out. Now I need to be sure that they are really multidimensional and are reacting in ways that you or I would expect in the situations that I have placed them. Last summer, Mike Munsil over at Liberty Hall sponsored a novel jump-start planning month-long challenge called Mid Sommer Madness. One of the suggestions out of that was to use Meyers-Briggs Analysis on our characters. As a business consultant, I loved this! Too funny, but it did help me to sort out some inconsistencies between my characters. Very helpful! I am not done here and still have some fleshing out on some of my supporting characters. I find role playing helps here too.  It’s fun and informative to just pretend to be the character for awhile.

Plot:
Ahhh, this is where the rubber is going to hit the road this month. I want to make sure that I have all the plot twists and turns pretty well laid out. I was able to work out much of this during the Liberty Hall MidSommer Madness Challenge but I have more work to do. My goal is to have a paragraph summary for each chapter with an arc for the major and minor plots before I start writing. I am planning on around 40 chapters for a 80,000 word book.  I’m about 2/3 of the way there and with 30 paragraphs, but I figure I will rewrite this least twice before the end of the month as I sync up with the timeline and the characters.

WorldBuilding:
Because this is a time travel story I need to have the elements of my world pretty well worked out before I start. I know what the end points look like: 1990′s and mid 1800′s, but I need to develop the rules that allow my characters to get there and back again…or do the get back…..hmmm. I have also found that to be able to think about a story like this I need timelines and detailed ones. So I have created two timelines, one for each time. It helps me think about who is doing what to whom and when. Time travel is very complicated!

So, there we have the 4 big chunks of my month. I’ll update a bit more on this as NaNoWriMo approaches.

Happy writing!

The Banquette: Coming along nicely

When last we visited the Great Banquette Conversion of 2009 Chris was making himself stupid by curve-fitting with a belt sander.  Mercifully for  all concerned, he went back to the tried and true Compass Method that we used so successfully before.  We completed both seats and the table top then added some Ikea drawers, which are going to work just fine. There is quite a bit of clearance at the back of an Ikea cabinet, even though we cut away part to fit, the drawers fit perfectly.

Dry fitting the BanquetteI spent some time figuring out the best way to support the table so it can be both a table and a bed/lounge.  We used a laptop stand as a prototype to figure out how high the table should be. Usually, we like to use Marine components because they are just better quality. But in this case there was just not anything that looked right. Most involved having some part of the table leg protruding below the ‘deck’. Hmmm. Not so much of a good thing with a trailer. So I was back looking at trailer parts.

I wandered over to Vintage Trailer Supply and found a nice support system that works for the table level and sleep/lounge level.  We bought two Table Wall Mounts (one for the table height and one for  the bed/lounge height).  They are quite reasonably priced and have worked out well.

Vika-JB Weld Table Leg Mod

We added a 30″ Vika table leg from Ikea which we can remove when the table is lowered.  We used JB weld, an old family favorite, to attach the Vika base to a bolt that fit a groovy orange knob we had laying around, and then we screwed the base into the bottom of the table. When the table is  used as a bed or lounge the base and knob are hidden under the leg, but when the table is used as, well, a table the groovy orange knob adds a bit of spice to the birch.

We are very happy with the finished effect.  The Ikea drawers fit perfectly and leave a bit open at top for handholds, recall that the base cabinets are actually refrigerator wall cabinets mounted on 1/2″ furring strips. Next to Chris, below, is the aluminum seat-level wall-mount.  We also added 1″ strips of aluminim for the table to rest on when it is in lounge mode.  Did we get the aluminum from McMaster-Carr?  But, of course! Well, it might have been OSH, too.

The Banquette..all done except the cushions.

We added Ikea birch drawer fronts to the Ikea drawers, they were a bit pricey but look so nice. We left the spaces between the cabinets and the trailer walls uncovered. We plan to use them as cubbies for laptop cases and well, more laptop cases. Our trailer bristles with multiple laptops on all camping trips – don’t ask – and we never have anywhere to put them.

We’ll probably cover the exposed side of the cabinet with purple or green plastic but are just not sure yet.  The white looks pretty nice; this may be a call we make when the upholstery is done.

We celebrated the finish of the woodwork with martinis in the trailer. That’s Chris there next to my fancy new power drill, it has an LED.  That reminds me that Chris needs to keep on his Martini Series he promised last year!

Next time, the foam!

McMaster-Carr…Heaven for the do-it-your-selfer

Chris and I moan on a near weekendly basis about the dire state of the big-box hardware stores.  If I go to Home Depot or Lowes or OSH for 9 items I come home with 5, 4 are of crappy quality and 3 actually work at all.  It’s pathetic. As recently as 10 years ago I could find just about anything close by. Not anymore.  If you are lucky enough to have a boutique plumbing store or small town hardware store nearby you are truly blessed, indeed.  If not, and you still want to tackle that Airstream restoration, home repair or trans-continental pipeline project then McMaster-Carr is the one stop shop for all your needs.

Pick a random page from McMaster-Carr, how about Fastening and Joining for example.

Heaven for the do-it-yourselfer

Heaven for the do-it-yourselfer

Its the kind of place where you can buy extruded sheet aluminim (you can choose the thickness and strength) to pre-hung doors and heavy industry rated exhaust equipment. We shop there for very reasonably priced stainless steel screws, bolts, and other hardware. Spend some time perusing.  I find the fasteners and joiners to be particularly compelling.  Where else can you find Metalized-Fabric EMI-Shielding Tape that is suitable for constuction of satellites, electronic vehicles, and robotics right next to galvanized wood screws.

You gotta love it.