Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

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The Lightbulb Moment Remembered

May 19, 2023 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

I’ve mentioned before how a major turning point in the process of writing Land of Hills and Valleys (which stretched out over many years, as this post from all the way back in 2011 testifies) was the decision to switch from writing it in third-person to first-person—specifically, in a narrative style inspired by Mary Stewart’s classic romantic suspense novels. However, after the passing of a few years, exactly when and how I got the idea had become hazy in my memory. But one night recently I was looking through my old journals for some notes for an unfinished story, and I stumbled across the very entry where I recorded having that idea (from July 2017):

Read Mary Stewart’s “Wildfire at Midnight” over the last two days, and though I don’t think it’s one of her best, it gave me an unexpected lightbulb moment today: I decided if I do rewrite [Land of Hills and Valleys] one of these days, I’m going to do it in Lena’s first-person POV. I looked at my outline and it actually works. I just need to trim a few scenes involving minor characters where she isn’t present, and have her present at all the big climactic scenes. Which really makes better sense, as she’s the protagonist after all.

As matter-of-fact as that. I find it a bit funny that the idea was actually inspired by reading one of my least favorite Stewarts—that part I hadn’t remembered. Of course I still had plenty of actual work to do on the book ahead of me at this point, but this was definitely the epiphany that got me onto the right track!

image: “Peaceful Morning on the Range” by C.M. Dudash

Filed Under: Journaling, Land of Hills and Valleys, The Writing Life

Some Writing Updates

August 16, 2022 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

I realized this week that it’s been a long time since I’ve actually posted something about what I’m writing. It’s partly because I’ve become slightly allergic to talking very much about a project while it’s in progress. Talking about it too much can actually stunt my progress: the moment I tell somebody what I’m doing, I feel like I’ve set some mental standard or expectation that it needs to live up to, which piles on the pressure. I’ve probably taken being close-mouthed to the opposite extreme somewhat, and I don’t want to make a superstition or a self-fulfilling prophecy out of it (hence this post), but in general, keeping relatively quiet about works-in-progress does work better for me.

Anyway. I never feel like I’ve accomplished very much in a year (or almost eight months, in this case) unless I complete a major project; but when I look back at what I’ve actually done in 2022 and put all the little pieces together into a list it’s a pretty decent amount of work. Since January, I’ve…

• Revised and published The American Pony!

• Finished the first draft and first edits on my children’s historical fantasy The Summer Country. If you’ve been reading my blog for a while you may remember that title, and may have wondered what happened to it. Truth be told, I unpublished most of my posts about unfinished or badly stalled projects a while ago, for various reasons. However, I did finish this one and am quite happy with it. I do not know exactly what route to publication I’ll be taking with it yet, and it needs a few revisions, so I’ve laid it aside for a little rest before progressing any further.

• Added a few…a very few…pages to the first draft of my Ruritanian novel (which now has a working title: The City of the Great King); and continue to add to my notes/outline for it. This is basically a secondary project at the moment: not completely active, but not abandoned.

• Begun working again on the first draft of my next Western mystery, Last Ride at the Lazy G. I’ve been rewriting the opening chapters I drafted last year to get myself back into the swing of the story, and plan to stick with this as my primary project until I get that first draft done.

*  *  *

In other news, my summer reading list for this year has been knocking it out of the park (five stars apiece for Founding Gardeners by Andrea Wulf, The Country of the Pointed Firs by Sarah Orne Jewett, Heroes Without Glory by Jack Schaefer, and a spur-of-the-moment read that wasn’t on my list, Adorning the Dark by Andrew Peterson), and I’m looking forward to starting my seasonal farm job again soon and doing an author table at an upcoming library event!

Filed Under: Life in general, The Writing Life

The “Never Have I Ever” Writing Tag

February 1, 2020 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 1 Comment

I’m not in the habit of doing blog tags, but when I saw this on Hamlette’s blog I thought the questions were so much fun that I had to give it a shot. I’m not violating Internet etiquette by appropriating it without being tagged, am I? (Just kidding.)

Never have I ever…

…started a novel that I did not finish.

I have started too many novels that I did not finish. Some just clearly weren’t meant to be, but with others the thought of them literally hurts.

…written a story completely by hand.

I write all my stories by hand, so it’d be more remarkable if I ever wrote one completely on the computer.

…changed tenses midway through a story.

I hardly ever use anything but past tense, but I did write a large chunk of A Sidekick’s Tale in present tense before deciding to switch. Present tense actually does work well for comedy (see: O. Henry and Damon Runyan), but some scenes in A Sidekick’s Tale just weren’t coming off properly so I ultimately decided to use past instead.

…changed my protagonist’s name halfway through a draft.

I have indeed. A few obstinate characters have run through three or four names before I was satisfied with them.

…written a story in a month or less.

Sure! Shorter stories, at least. I’ve won NaNoWriMo a couple of times too, but I’m not sure my winning wordcount ever actually represented a completed novel.

…fallen asleep while writing.

I’m not sure how this even works.

…corrected someone’s grammar irl/online.

I’m sure I have, but I’m also pretty sure it’s always been with close family and has involved a lot of laughter from all parties.

…yelled in all caps at myself in the middle of a novel.

If scribbling “FIX” or “CHANGE” in the margin of a page counts, then yes.

…killed a character who was based off someone I know in real life.

I have not. None of my characters are wholly based on anyone real, and I kind of have trouble killing characters anyway, so…

…used pop culture references in a story.

Oh yes, certainly—pop culture of previous centuries.

…not researched anything before starting a story.

Sometimes. Once in a while if I’m writing in a setting/era that I’m already very familiar with, I’ll draft first and do research on the details later. Not if a major plot point turns on a question of historical accuracy, though!

…used “I’m writing” as an excuse.

Pretty sure I’ve managed to wriggle out of folding a load of laundry this way…some of the time.

…written between the hours of 1 a.m. and 6 a.m.

Not that I remember, unless I’ve crawled out of bed to scribble down a quick note for an idea in the middle of the night. (Perhaps not surprising that I can’t remember it in that case.)

…drank an entire pot of coffee while writing.

Have not. I hardly ever drink coffee at all.

…laughed like an evil villain while writing a scene.

I take some issue with the “evil villain” part, but I’ve definitely snickered with glee.

…written down dreams to use in potential novels.

I don’t think so? I’ve written in my journal about dreams I found amusing, but I don’t think any of it has ever made its way into a story.

…published an unedited story on the internet/Wattpad/blog.

Have not. Even short snippets or excerpts from a work-in-progress get a quick lick and polish before going online!

…procrastinated homework because I wanted to write.

Well, I was homeschooled, so technically all my schoolwork was homework. In addition, a lot of writing I did for fun probably doubled as creative writing for school, so it all blurs together in my memory so that I honestly can’t remember!

…typed so long that my wrists hurt.

Haven’t. I’ve typed till my eyes hurt, though (blasted computer screens).

…spilled a drink on my laptop while writing.

Thankfully, have not.

…forgotten to save my work/draft.

No particularly traumatic instances stick out in my memory…thankfully. But sometimes I’ve ended up terribly annoyed with myself because I had a good idea for a scene or a line of dialogue and neglected to write it down, and couldn’t remember it later.

…finished a novel.

I have! Two full-length manuscripts and several shorter ones.

…cried while writing a scene.

Very, very rarely. Once or twice perhaps.

…created maps of my fictional worlds.

I’ve scribbled out extremely rough diagrams of imaginary locations for stories, ranging from house floor plans to an imaginary country. Nothing that’s going to end up as a frontispiece, however; I am no artist.

…researched something shady for a novel.

I guess that depends on your point of view. Personally I don’t think reading up on the caliber of antique firearms or notable crimes and trials of a prior century is too odd.

Since I helped myself to this tag, I won’t hand it on to anybody in particular, but feel free to play if you want to!

Filed Under: The Writing Life

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