Journal Entry

Mindy Klasky: Sorcery and the Single Girl

September 25th 2007 at 7:29 am

Mindy Klasky’s new book launches today, Sorcery and the Single Girl. Tate Hallaway has an interview with her up and I liked some of the glimpses into the writerly nuts and bolts:

Did you always want to write? Or did you stumble into it? How did you get where you are now?

When I was in seventh grade, my best friend and I decided that we would spend our spring break writing a sequel to the LORD OF THE RINGS. (Oddly enough, we didn’t get it finished in nine days.) I learned, though, that I loved creating characters, building their personalities and then tossing them into challenging situations. I wrote off and on all through high school but fell away from writing in college. When I started law school, though, I was desperate for something to balance the dry cases that I was reading. I wrote my first published novel while I was working as a trademark and copyright litigator at a major law firm. Eventually, I quit practicing law to become a librarian (in part, so that I would have more time to write!)

What does a typical writing day look like for you? How long do you write, that sort of thing?

In a perfect world, I wake up each morning at 6:00, work out until 7:00, write until 8:00, then eat breakfast, shower, and get ready for work. (I have to be in the office by 9:30.)

In the real world, I travel a lot for my day-job, and publicity and promotion tend to sponge up my weekly writing time. I usually set aside one or both days of the weekend to write for three or four straight hours. When deadlines are approaching, I forfeit a week of vacation from the day-job, using the nine days (work-week, plus two weekends) to pound out around 35,000 words (approximately a third of a novel.)

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3 Responses so far

  1. 1. Mark Terry

    There’s some important lessons in those two things for aspiring novelists.

  2. 2. Ed Greaves

    I think I’m a smidge envious of morning people. I can barely shake the cobwebs out of the brain before arriving at work, and coffee.

  3. 3. Tobias Buckell

    Mark: lots of hard work!

    Ed: I’m not a morning person at all, I do everything late at night.

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