I win. Again.
Well, another year, another Nano. I passed word count today, somewhere in the 50,200-something range, and I still have one more chapter to go.
If a novel is written and no one reads it, does it make a sound?
Unlike in prior years, this novel was technically nowhere close to wrapping up its ridiculous plot twists as I approached the 50,000 word arches. Thus the last two chapters became a desperate attempt to tie off a dozen loose ends, to underwhelming effect (I have not in fact written the last and final chapter, although I may have done so by the time you read this, and I can already say with confidence that it will have been a desperate affair).
Silicone Sisters boasted 2 readers, each of whom had not terribly negative things to say about its wildly ridiculous premise and wholly unlikely capers (there was a third poser reader who pretended to be digesting chapters until he was unfortunately exposed on some major matters of plot). I would like to take this time to thank those people for making the endeavor worth posting online.
Join me in bidding my third and possibly final Nanowrimo farewell.
If a novel is written and no one reads it, does it make a sound?
Unlike in prior years, this novel was technically nowhere close to wrapping up its ridiculous plot twists as I approached the 50,000 word arches. Thus the last two chapters became a desperate attempt to tie off a dozen loose ends, to underwhelming effect (I have not in fact written the last and final chapter, although I may have done so by the time you read this, and I can already say with confidence that it will have been a desperate affair).
Silicone Sisters boasted 2 readers, each of whom had not terribly negative things to say about its wildly ridiculous premise and wholly unlikely capers (there was a third poser reader who pretended to be digesting chapters until he was unfortunately exposed on some major matters of plot). I would like to take this time to thank those people for making the endeavor worth posting online.
Join me in bidding my third and possibly final Nanowrimo farewell.
They are after me again. The dentists. Toward the holiday season they tend to get restless, as the yearly quota for oral surgery referrals draws near, and they realize they are a few kills short of a trophy. When I go in for my cleanings, they stare in silent rage at my complete set of 32 teeth, an affront to their profession, and they vow to take me down.
Sitting next to me currently in this nameless eastside cafe are a trio of young medical students, one of whom has not stopped jabbering, dropping medical terms, and bloviating endlessly about her stress and ADD and Very Important Life even long enough to intubate a patient, likely not absorbing a single word from the imposing medical tomes serving as her latte coaster, and I realize that this woman will likely be cutting one of us open on a table somewhere in the coming decades, based on the knowledge she has accrued during study sessions just like this one. Which has nothing to do with 
