Err...I think something may not have been understood, or maybe my syntax was sloppy...what I'd intended, and what I think is still there in the message, was that I'd hoped that ST today would be as exciting in the 90s as it was in the 60s. That was kinda my point, that ST in its first incarnation *was* innovative and interesting and imaginative; I hope that wasn't misconstrued.
(And Jose...yes, you're probably right on that distinction between the two kinds of Trek.)
Came across this in my email tonight (it's now a tick before 3 a.m.).
This leads me to a request, which I am writing by email since I don't have access to CompuServe or GEnie, but please feel free to respond to it publicly rather than privately if you wish, since others may be interested in your response as well. I would be fascinated, if you would care to talk about it, about your writing process. Do you have a set time, a predetermined schedule in which to write? Are you *able* to write like that? Do you write rapidly? easily? enjoyably? Do you read your work- in-progress aloud to hear the language? Do you solicit feedback from others? Do you revise? much? What kind of revisions are you likely to make? And if you do make revisions, do they occur as you go along, or afterwards, or a combination? And, finally, would it be possible for you to post (or email) any bits of writing showing the revision process?
I'm refraining from asking all the related questions I'd love to know the answers to, but if this is a topic you'd be willing to discuss and think I/we would be interested in other details as well, please do talk about them. Thank you so much.
Marcia Goldstein
Since these were good questions, I thought I'd tackle them here. To the first: no, I don't have a set time, except that I pretty much end up writing all the time...when I get up, when I'm fighting sleep to go to bed, in- between...basically, I chew on a scene over and over in my head until I'm satisfied with it, then I write it down. Sometimes that process goes on at the desk, or over dinner, or watching TV...but as soon as it comes through, I get up and I write it. Consequently, once I've thought it through, "seen" it in my head a couple dozen times like watching a movie, the actual writing, or transcribing, is fairly easy. It's the thinking part that makes Zathras' head hurt.
Most of my revisions take place before anyone else sees it; I don't generally turn over the script until I'm happy with it. At that point, it's published as an official first draft, even though it may have gone through multiple revisions in my computer before anyone else ever saw it. Sometimes, though, I get it right the first time, and what gets shot is basically first draft. Once it's turned it, there are additional revisions, but usually of a minor nature, changing sets to accommodate shooting, or just changing a word. (I've been known to reissue a full page when we get into blues or pinks *just* to change a word or two.)
I never read the words aloud because then they all come out sounding like me; I can "hear" them better in my head, where I can hear the actual tenor of Londo's voice. I never solicit opinions on pages while I'm still writing, only afterward, and mainly in terms of production aspects. To do otherwise risks you losing your direction and second-guessing too much.
Do I enjoy it? Yes and no. Writing is the one, the ONLY thing I'm good at. Writing is also the hardest thing I do. I agonize over every word, always fighting the fear that this one won't be as good as the last one, that this time I won't be able to pull the rabbit out of the hat. Sometimes, when a scene comes through completely of its own volition, it's great fun; when it doesn't, it's agony. Sometimes I enjoy the writing process; sometimes I more enjoy *having* written. It's kinda like taking a portable speed drill with a 3/4" steel bit and driving it into the side of your head...it's painful, but after the first four inches in, you kinda start to like it....
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