Okay, I confess, I've not been much with the writing lately. Not because of lack of time - I've had plenty - more because of a lack of motivation.
I'm sick of the sight of the novel formerly known as Muse. I've spent most of November working on writing an outline of the current plot so that I can fix the holes for a final (or mostly final) draft prior to sending it out to beta-readers. I'll be honest with you: I well and truly loathe the the damn thing.
It's not that it's a bad story. There are bits of it that are bad or, at best, need serious work, but that isn't the problem. The story just doesn't have the same spark for me that it did when I set out to write it; it no longer interests me, rather like those Christmas presents that you got as a kid that were the only things able to capture your attention for the week after Christmas, but whose charm wore off quickly thereafter. Reading it through again doesn't excite me as much as it did when I was doing the first pass of edits, and that means that I've been procrastinating more than usual in an attempt to avoid it. (On the upside, though, my bass playing has come on in leaps and bounds.)
Throughout all this, and bearing in mind I'm still hoping to get the outline finished in time for the last week of November, during which I have four well-deserved days off work, is the undercurrent of the embryonic novel the second, which keeps pestering me like a well meaning farmyard dog that has taken one too many blows to the head. I want to sit down and work on it, I really do. I have at least one of the main characters firmly in my mind, another one there in outline and a third for whom there is a situation but, as yet, no character with which to fill it.
I'm well aware of all the advice that states that you have to treat stories rather as you would relationships, in that it's a bad idea to move on to the next one before you wrap up the one you're already in, and ending the current one suddenly can be equally disastrous (especially when you're just going to go off with something younger and more flexible). That doesn't stop me from yearning to have three months off to sit down with novel the second and really bash out something I can be proud of.
But I can't do that. I will return to the battered, one-eyed crone that is Muse-that-was. She may be old, but she was beautiful once, and I loved her enough to coax her into being. I owe her some perseverance at least, bass playing be damned.