“Anything fun in your day so far?” a friend asked me this morning.

Well, let’s see. I dressed in black from head to toe, wearing a t-shirt that reads, Pay No Attention to My Browsing History, I’m a Writer, Not a Serial Killer to work. Appeared on camera and shamelessly plugged my novel, discussed my fondness for lava lamps, and made it rain by dramatically tossing $150 in tens and twenties into the air. Ran into the Secretary afterward, the Head Cheese if you will, still clutching a paperback copy of No Time for Kings in my hand, and he asked where he could buy it. His Executive Staff Assistant, who owns the very same Rubik’s Cube tissue dispenser as me (neither here nor there but interesting nonetheless), said, “You’re such a cool guy, Mark!” I modestly thanked her and returned to my cubicle, a good one with a window, and watched the rain that had been falling for 18 hours turn to snow and gradually paint the Beltline white.

I never could solve these things, but I can blow my nose like a champ!

Ashley picked a good day to ask the question, because a typical CheeseGov nine-to-five looks nothing like this. And I didn’t even mention the fire alarm test, but that was more ear-splitting than fun.

I can count on one finger the number of times I’ve flaunted the dress code by wearing a t-shirt (especially one that alludes to murder) or tossed fistfuls of cash into the air. I’ve never even brought in my book before, come to think of it. But there’s a good and logical reason for all this: the Communications team is shooting an introductory video for NEWD…err, NEED…orientation, and we decided to have fun with it by sharing two personal facts about us. Introvert that I am, I hate being on video. Counterintuitively, with no choice in the matter, I decided to ham it up and be as over-the-top and wacky as possible. If I have to do a video, I reasoned, I’m going to make it memorable:

I’m Mark, I’m the external comms manager, I wrote a book. Cue book. Said book includes murder and mayhem so ignore my browsing history. Cue t-shirt. I have an extensive lava lamp collection and a very high electric bill. Cue cash.

The money thing, by the way, was a total ad-lib. I reached for my wallet midway through the shoot but found it mostly empty. Sensing that my $12 wouldn’t adequately represent big electric bills, the videographer grabbed his wallet, took out a stack of cash, and let me use it as a prop. Trusting fella, that one (and what’s he doing after hours to pad his wallet like that?).

If CheeseGov were handing out Oscars, pretty sure I’d nab Best Actor.


Hey, speaking of my book, guess what? I’ve finally, officially, begun work on the sequel!

After teasing a No Time for Kings follow-up for years, I realized the damn thing wasn’t going to write itself, so I just jumped in. Do I have a plot? I have loose threads, baby! An outline? Only if a few hastily scribbled notes count. Hell, even the title — Earth Fights Back — isn’t written in stone. I consider it a working title that may or may not become permanent.

Rather than worry over these not-so-trivial details, I feel a strange sense of calm. I have always been a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants writer; that’s just the way I work best. Trust me, I’d love to be able to develop an outline and know in advance how I was going to get from Point A to Points B, C, and D. But that just ain’t my method.

All those same things were true of No Time for Kings, even the title (it was originally called Stabbing Nature). I had nothing more than a vague direction of where I wanted things to go when I started writing, but I think it all worked out well in the end. In fact, not having an outline allowed the story to evolve in unforeseen ways. One of my main characters is secretly an alcoholic, and I was completely unaware of this until the moment those words appeared on the page. This was totally unplanned but brought some much-needed conflict to the story. That’s the type of creative freedom that’s only possible when you’re going in blindly.

The same goes for Dream Sailors. In that case, I took a very basic concept — a group of people learn how to bring back objects from their lucid dreams — and ran with it. True, I haven’t published Dream Sailors, and Amazon killed their Vella platform last month, so that poor guy is sitting in limbo. Anybody wanna read it?

In any case, I knocked out 1,304 words in Earth Fights Back on day one while enjoying that oh-so-familiar writer’s high. God, I’ve missed that feeling! It’s like the best damn Brass Monkey you’ve ever had. (Sounds better than saying “like crack,” which has become such a cliche.) I hope to ride this wave all the way to The End!

What’s your definition of a fun day at work? If you’re a writer, do you plot out your story in advance or just wing it like me?


71 responses to “Cue book, cue t-shirt, and make it rain!”

  1. That sounds like a fun day for sure! I am also a pantser. And I love that feeling of discovery when writing–like you don’t know what’s going to happen until you read it as you’re typing it. It’s a weird disconnect with different parts of our brain, I think. Sort of like when I’m presented with a math problem and part of my brain gives the answer immediately. THEN I work out the problem and realize, hey, my brain was right! Who knew?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Sorry, I can’t relate to your analogy. Math and I do not get along, so it would be a freakin’ miracle if my brain got a problem right.

      After reading your novel, I’m impressed to learn you’re a pantser too. Makes me even more confident that I can do this without a cheat sheet!

      Like

      1. OMG, did you see this? I was first and didn’t even realize it. I’m such a crap shoot, aren’t I? Sometimes I’m on it immediately. Some posts I miss entirely. Some I read a week or two later. I keep you guessing!

        Definitely a pantser. I’m pretty sure I wrote the climax before finishing chapter 3. For book 2, I’ve got independent scenes all over the place just waiting to be woven together. I say, whatever gets the job done, you know?

        Like

  2. “Counterintuitively, with no choice in the matter, I decided to ham it up and be as over-the-top and wacky as possible. If I have to do a video, I reasoned, I’m going to make it memorable” This is absolutely the best. If I gotta be an extrovert . . . then let’s put it over the top. Perfect. Ha, ha.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This was me thumbing my nose at my introvertedness and trying to prove a point. I think it worked.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. My definition for a FUN day at work . . . not being at work. 😀

    When writing, I definitely let the words unfold in their own way and time ~ no outlines since the 8th grade.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. While I totally agree with your definition of a fun day at work, you’re not actually at work, so I’m going to have to disqualify your answer on a technicality. So sorry.

      Like

      1. I understand completely. 😀

        Liked by 1 person

  4. big, big day! and yay about getting that book rolling! roll on. a fun day at work for me was dressing up as a piñata and tossing candy and – no one hitting me with a stick.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Nobody hit you? You got lucky ’cause it sounds like you were practically inviting a good whacking. You must’ve had some disgusting candy like Necco Wafers or something. I would have beat you silly for a Kit Kat.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. it was a risk/reward situation!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. A fun day indeed. I love the shirt, and also the kleenex box!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Definitely an odd day. Mostly fun. The drive home turned out to be a little dicey, but hey, I made it in one piece!

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Good for you, plugging your book at work (in a video no less!). You should!

    And I’m thrilled to see you’re working on the sequel. I think we may have touched on the fact that I am like you – I write by the seat of my pants, and yes, that gives us so much freedom with our story!

    One of my main characters is secretly an alcoholic, and I was completely unaware of this… I love when this happens! Sometimes, I swear my characters take over the story and tell me what they want to happen. They are (in my mind) real people while I’m writing them.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m so glad to hear I’m not the only one who writes without a plan. It actually sounds like most of the writers I know take this approach. Whew!

      I was shocked and a little disappointed when I learned my character was an alcoholic. I really liked him, but in retrospect, I think he was too damn perfect. Dude needed a flaw.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Exactly! How can our characters learn and grow if they don’t have flaws. Keep writing!

        Liked by 1 person

  7. A fun day at work is scanning romance comics, vintage student newspapers (a favorite from MIT was the April Fools Issue: The Anal Sphincter 😁), photographs ect

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This reminds me of the April Fools newsletters I would write for CenturyCo. Now that was a fun day at work!

      Liked by 1 person

  8. I wing it. I may create a drawing if I get stuck, but the fun is in the winging.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve read some of your work and it’s really good, so I’m happy to hear this is your way too!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Thanks, mon. I appreciate that.

        Like

  9. You’ll have to post that video once it’s live! If you’re a good actor on top of being a good writer and a good guy in general, you totally deserve a triple crown here.

    I’ve got a firm structure plan for my book as well as a partial outline, and, finally, a damn good synopsis. I’m worried, with all the fun I’ve had prepping this sucker, that I’m better at writing about books than writing books, but I’ll see about that. Thanks for the reminder of the high you get when you put in some serious keyboard clicks; I need to get on that!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ahh, but if I share the video, then the CheeseGov cat is out of the blog. Maybe to a few close friends!

      I envy your structure plan, partial outline, and synopsis. Wish I could be like you but I just can’t! I have no doubt you’ll knock it out of the ballpark though.

      Like

      1. I forgot you have to protect your secret identity, of course!

        About my writing, I’m afraid I’m better at planning and synopsizing and even critiquing my imaginary manuscript than I will be at writing. If anyone wants to have their pretend book pretend organized though, I’m your man!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. You know, together we would make the perfect author, ha!

        Like

      3. I forgot our idea of cowriting a blog post! Which gives me an idea. It could be a satirical day in the life of an Airstreamer, something like that. A Wisconsinite Airstreamer?

        Liked by 1 person

      4. I’m down anytime!

        Like

  10. So much to unpack here, but it all leads to the fact that you are indeed a fun guy. Congrats on starting the new book… whose title I really like, don’t change it.
    😉

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I like the title too. It’s an ironic callback to the first book…but it will only work if it takes a particular direction, and as I’ve mentioned, I’m not sure it will!

      I also think it would be fun to call the sequel Stabbing Nature, though I’m the only one who would truly appreciate the full-circleness of that.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yeah, that makes it sound like you’re anti nature… not as catchy.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. There’s a line in the book where someone says, “eco-terrorism feels like you’re stabbing nature in the heart.” I liked that tie-in, plus a play on words since the villain has a murderous nature!

        Liked by 1 person

  11. I feel encouraged to continue writing the way you do because that’s how I write too, with very little planning or outlining. Kind of sick of people telling me to plan and write outlines and follow a script… . I never like doing that. 😀. But lately my words haven’t flowed… I know they will again because writing for me is cyclical. Especially fiction.

    Looking forward to the sequel!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m curious, are the people insisting you plot everything out writers themselves? ‘Cause if they’re just regular citizens they need to MYOB. Why box yourself in if that’s not your style?

      Liked by 1 person

  12. I could never solve a Rubik’s Cube and it’s always annoyed me. Since I don’t work outside the home, a fun day for me is being able to go outdoors and feel some sunshine.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Going outdoors on my lunch hour is also a fun day at work for me, even when I’m in Madison. But it’s been months since the weather has been even remotely conducive to doing that. I miss my summer drives to the lakeside park five minutes away, where I like to sit at a picnic table and read a book while a gentle breeze is blowing. Soon, I’m sure!

      Like

  13. You sound like you enjoyed your fun day at work. I’m a pantser when I write, but also a good editor, so in the end after I’ve done my two-step writing tango I have something that makes sense. Or so I hope.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m a solid editor too (though I have learned the hard way it’s difficult to catch every single error when it’s your own writing).

      Liked by 1 person

      1. What?? You’re joking, right? 👀😂

        Liked by 1 person

  14. I have fun days at work pretty regularly. I like challenging days (we had registration day when our main software program just wouldn’t work, so had to register all the students manually and I still talk about what a rush that day was), days when I get to do something completely different than a regular workday (conferences, visitors who get tours, dogs stopping by), and days when I meet with student after student and I am helpful. I like all those days. And, fortunately for me, those aren’t that rare!

    Congrats on getting started on your new book. May the words flow easily!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you! My dad has a saying: “Once begun, it’s half done.” So, starting the new book was a huge step forward.

      I once worked in an office where people brought their dogs in every single day. You’d have loved that!

      Like

  15. A fun day at work? That has varied wildly for the last decade or two. Sometimes it’s just not being covered in child/ pet bodily fluids. Sometimes it’s having school children clap when I finish reading a story aloud as their elementary school librarian. Sometimes it’s giving out scholarships to high school seniors. Sometimes it’s getting a new client and sometimes it’s having a student client get into Stanford after coaching them on their essays. Sometimes it’s starting a book or script and sometimes it’s finishing. And yes, I always have an outline. How can you plot character development and mysteries without knowing the ending?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ending up covered in bodily fluids would never constitute a fun day at work for me.

      (Scratch that. Would rarely constitute a fun day at work for me.)

      Go on with your bad outlining self. Like I said, I wish I could do that. I guess since this is a sequel with many returning characters, I already know them pretty well. As far as mysteries go, since the plot itself will be a mystery, I think I’m golden! 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Your methods hurt me. Even if I don’t do a formal outline, I know where the story is going in my head.

        Like

      2. I don’t think there’s any right or wrong way to write a novel though. This off-the-cuff approach has worked for me twice (six times actually, if you count the unpublished manuscripts). I do have an idea where the story is going in my head; I’m just not sure how exactly it’s going to get there or what will happen in between. I dunno…it’s kind of freeing in a way (but also a little scary).

        Liked by 1 person

  16. Laughing so hard…best new employee orientation video EVER…I’m sure! And I keep thinking about the title of “No Time for Kings” and how…ummm…appropriate that would be right now on a t-shirt, placard, billboard for other reasons. Maybe with your marketing expertise you can find a way to ride the wave of discontent directed to a wannabe king and pivot attention to your book? And cheers to cranking out words for “Earth Fights Back”. Go, Mark! 😎

    Liked by 1 person

    1. No exaggeration: you are the third person in 24 hours to mention how relevant the “No Time for Kings” title is given the current political climate. I really should capitalize on that somehow. I could call the sequel “No Time for Oligarchs” (this could actually work) or something similar. I do think “No Time for ______” would be a fun way to continue the series.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’m not surprised…I’m feeling it…there’s something there for you to mine! I just know it! 🥰

        Liked by 1 person

  17. I’m also a pantser. I love finding out new things about my story as I write. (All of the outlines I had to turn in during high school and college were pure BS. Fortunately, I’m good at BS.)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Seems there’s more pantsers than outliners. Yay! I feel validated!

      Liked by 1 person

  18. I wing it on my blog but if I were (by some miracle) writing a book, I think I would need an outline of some sort.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This brings up an interesting point: I wonder if anyone actually outlines their blog posts?

      Like

  19. […] cracked me up because commas were Mark’s primary concern when he did a run-through also. I specifically remember him adding a comma before […]

    Like

  20. Yay for starting your next book!

    I love the Rubiks cube tissue holder.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thankfully you don’t have to solve the damn thing to get a tissue. My nose would be running constantly.

      Liked by 1 person

  21. My MOST fun days at work are like this past Tuesday: cancelled due to snow – haha! I can tell you what my least fun part of work is: teaching long u. Hate it.
    Anyway, even thought I’m not a book writer, I do write a blog, so to answer your question, like a bird, I wing it.
    Congrats on digging into your next writing adventure.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I saw you guys were getting hammered earlier this week and assumed that meant a snow day. Hope you made the most of it! What’s long u?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. You know! The long vowel sound and its representation in phonics. It’s much less common than the other long vowels, so harder for the kids to grasp and hang onto. Plus, unlike the other long vowels, it has two sounds, which complicates matters for English Language Learners.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Well of course. Why didn’t I understand that right away?

        Liked by 1 person

  22. Congrats on making such a great start with the follow up novel. I really must read the first one or you’ll finish the second one before I’ve read it.

    I, too, am a pantser, although I’m beginning to think I’d like to flirt with a rough outline. As you say, even if I did work with a firm structure, I know from previous experience that the characters will have their way with things.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m at the point where I’ve accepted the fact that an outline just isn’t for me. Maybe I should ask AI to write me one, ha! (I kid.)

      Like

  23. Wow – Chapter One with text following. There’s even a drop cap R to start off that all important first paragraph…you go, guy!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ha…thanks, Laura. The drop cap is one of my favorite design elements!

      Liked by 1 person

  24. Oh my goodness, that’s a good day! And I totally want to read Dream Sailors – just never figured out how to get it. I hope you ride that wave to the end. Can’t wait to read it. EFB is on its way! ❤

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I need to figure out what to do with Dream Sailors now. Maybe I just publish each chapter here, a week or two at a time? I serialized it for Kindle Vella, so that format would work.

      Like

      1. That’s a good idea!

        Liked by 1 person

  25. I love what you come up with; very clever my friend!

    I would never attempt to write a book, maybe a pamphlet? Kidding, not that either. I know you will come up with something great to follow up the first one.

    Like

  26. […] was the second interesting thing to happen this week at CheeseGov. Weird days are starting to become a […]

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  27. […] occurs to me that this need to plot out every travel detail is in direct contrast to my writing style. Enigma much, […]

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  28. I began to plot out a story some time ago in 1776. New chapters seem to emerge all by themselves these days.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Sounds like a horror novel.

      Liked by 1 person

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