Saturday, July 26, 2014

This Highway

Life is a highway we all must take
No sign to announce our on-ramp
Thrust into traffic, so cautious at first
On this pitted old road there is so much at stake
Watch closely, young driver, there’s no turning back
A merger that’s missed is forevermore passed
And you’ll wonder what travels awaited you there
Gone forever, that squandered alternative track
You will also see cars all mangled and burned
There’s nothing to do that will help them
Lives lived in conflict, addiction, pain
Careless with loved ones they’ve trod on and spurned
Others you’ll pass while they’re broken down
Just wondering as life passes by
Lost on paths missed, real and imaginary
As their exit draws closer they dream of renown
Others will seek for the next road
Choosing exits that weren’t meant to be
Never can they see tragedy in their choice
Blinded by slipping, nefarious load

Remember, my son, life cannot be undone
You must live with each mile as it comes
Look to the better highway that’s ahead
One day that grand exit will come.

Randall Madden
July 26, 2014


Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Progress Report

The initial edits for my manuscript are completed, and I’m about one third of the way through inputting them for the next printed copy. I’ve added several more passages to shore up weaknesses in the plot line, and I’ve spent some time considering what I need to include for the story to mesh seamlessly in future installments for the series.

With all that said, I have to thank my wife for pointing out a serious error in the series for me. I was missing out on a large area of one culture by only showcasing their leadership. This made much of the tension in their part of the story less believable, because they felt like bit players in comparison to the other cultures.

As a result, I’ve went back and started putting in chapters for a new character. This girl is still closely attached to the ruling elite, but her storyline will carry her to places that would have otherwise remained unexplored.


I owe you a big thanks, Brittany. You’ve brought another portion of Cestre to light that may never have been known outside the confines of my own mind.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Edits

Here I stand, a week into the editing process, and I must say that I feel cautiously optimistic. I’ve done lots of reading on the things to keep in mind when working through the editing process, including dozens of Top Ten lists and advice columns. My biggest fear in the process of writing was that I might be too proud to cut work that needed to be cut, and to change characters that needed to be changed.

I’m optimistic because I’ve already been able to see material that needs to be added and material that needs to be removed altogether. I’m realizing that some of my characters are too flat, and that others are too inconsistent to come across as believable. Motivations need to be altered to bring characters into line with their own culture, rather than my own. Gradually I’m working through the content and trying to create a more seamless transition as the story progresses.

With all that said, I’m trying to remain cautious to the fact that some things are going to escape my notice. I’m still too close to the project to catch everything that needs to be altered or changed, so I’m trying to remember that criticisms will come from other readers and potential agents/editors down the line. When these come, I want to be able to view them objectively as to how they negatively affect the overall storyline.


I’m excited to see the story coming together, and I look forward to the challenge of the query process!

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Rough Draft Complete!

It took nearly a year to finish, but the rough draft for my first novel has been completed!

Honestly, the process could have been completed in a couple of months if I had stayed at it. However, several months in the middle were lost in a bout with depression that I hope never has to be repeated. Waking up each morning and struggling to find a reason to live made writing an incredibly difficult task to face. As I begin my first round of editing, I can see where my mindset was at the beginning of the book, and how it changed as writing went on.

In many ways, it helped to convey the tone I intended throughout the work. The story was darkest in the middle of this leg of the story, and that was my low point in my personal life. My own attitudes and emotions were imprinted on some of the characters, and as I look back I realize that it was largely appropriate.

It’s strange, how characters take on a life of their own. There are many individuals I had planned deaths for, only to find them still a part of the team as the book drew to a close. Some of them even survived the encounters in which I meant for them to perish! On the other side, though, I lost a character or two along the way that I really didn’t intend to lose. One particular old man still bothers me, and while I wish I could go back and rewrite the passage to give him a happier ending, I know that would be a greater injustice than his cruel fate.

Maybe this doesn’t make sense to you, or maybe you’re nodding your head and saying, “Yeah. I know exactly what he’s talking about.” I think anyone who has spent much time writing knows that you have to let your characters walk where the story takes them. If the world becomes real, the events feel as uncontrollable to me as a writer as the events of the real world. No one wants to get that phone call saying a loved one has had an accident. The same can be said, to a lesser emotional degree, of characters I’ve created. They have lives and stories to tell, and sometimes their death means part of their story can never be told. It is locked in my head (and my notes) forever.

I’m excited to know that the first stage of writing this book has come to an end. Even though I have at least three more books planned in this series, I feel a sense of accomplishment knowing that I have written a full-length book. There have been many voices along the way, telling me that I’d never make a living as a writer, and that only jobs with a tangible output have real value to society. I allowed those voices to dictate my writing for the last decade, and I have not written nearly as much as I could have. That is my one regret, and it also informs my advice to other intrepid writers. Don’t ever allow others to tell you that writing is a waste of time.

I may never make money with this book, and it may never even find a publisher. Yet even if I knew in the beginning, when I sat down last June to start brainstorming for the world of Cestre, that this manuscript would sit on my shelf and collect dust for the rest of my life, I still would embark on the journey. I feel that I’m a more complete person for the journey. Time spent in so many characters’ heads has helped me to better understand my own self, and how I come to understand the world around me.


I’m rambling now. I’ll end it here by saying a big thank you to the people who have motivated me along the way, and who continue to motivate me as I move into the editing process. A special thank you is in order for my mother, my wife and son, and for my Kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Ford. She reinforced my love of reading and always told me I’d dedicate my first book to her. Whether it is ever published, Mrs. Ford, know that this first novel is dedicated to you.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Random Thoughts

I’m one of those weird people who enjoys lying down under a tree and listening to the wind blow through the leaves. There’s something that speaks to me on a primal level when I escape from technology and the indoors, and I just fall back into the nature that we forget about so often.

Call it what you will (my preferred term is reflection), but I need time to clear my head from the stress and worry of daily life. Thirty minutes beneath a tree leaves me feeling more refreshed than any eight-hour period on a manmade bed. This is when I feel that I allow God to truly speak to me.


Give it a try sometime. You never know what will occur to you with time spent in reflection, in the peace and quiet of nature.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Poem - Lyrid

The sublime thought, to slip Gravity’s snare
And fall through Your creation
I’m tethered here instead
A mere spectator to the power
Minutes spent in waiting
For that tiny flash of light
A second passes and it burns out
An apt metaphor in regards to mortality
How many centuries spent
Travelling untold distance
What stories could cold rock tell
Since its birth at the Creation?
What scars marked your surface?
Collisions with celestial bodies
So much time spent in motion
To become sparkling light on my eye
Yet You knew this pilgrim’s destination
As surely as You know my own
I rest safe in Your hand for the journey
Until final transformation to soaring light

Yet where this cold light has passed in a wink
The light of Your faithful will endure forever.

Randall Madden
April 24, 2014

Sunday, April 20, 2014

The Columbine

In a world of stone and concrete
A gentle flower was born
A bud was slowly forming
A timid glance at this world
It yearns to share its beauty
Others there surely are
Yet in this world filled with cold unlife
How can such things be spoken?

The young flower resolves to be silent
Simply living the beauty it knows.

With time the young flower grows carefree
Today will be the day
Its azure petals gently parting
To share beauty and grace with the world
Then comes the uncaring boot
Any warning is now too late
The crushing pressure, irreversible fate
And the Columbine flower is gone.

Blue petals barely formed
Burgeoning life extinguished.

Yet the caring hand descends
Lifting up the slain young flower
Its value now known by many
Immortal to beholding eyes
In death, the flower has conquered
Its petals, in memory, undying
A jaded world stopped for the briefest of moments
And recognized oft-forgotten beauty.

The Columbine flower remains in remembering hearts
Forever young and hopeful.

Randall Madden

April 9, 2014