Warning: the following post contains spoilers for A Test of Honor and The People’s Champion, In A Test of Honor, Sir Aidan Franklin fought on…
Warning: the following post contains spoilers for A Test of Honor and The People’s Champion, In A Test of Honor, Sir Aidan Franklin fought on…
In April of 2017, the final installment of the Aidan’s War trilogy will be released. One World One People will bring the massive conflict to…
WARNING: This post contains spoilers from A Test of Honor.
The popular geek blog io9 published an interesting article a few months ago observing that modern Fantasy books often contain more actual science than Science…
A New Thing I’ve been away from the old blog for too long, and part of that is because last month, I launched my first…
A Test of Honor is not the first book I’ve ever tried to write. In fact, it’s at least the fifth. Usually when I write a book, I get to about the third chapter and then it all falls apart. Suddenly I hate the characters, the story seems stupid, the dialogue nonsensical, and the point strangely missing. I freak out, tell myself I’ll come back to it later, and then leave it forever in my Documents folder to gather digital dust for all eternity.
So why is this book different? What did I do differently?
Milestones were originally used by the Roman Empire to mark distance along their many roads. This helped people know how quickly they were traveling, and also how far they had to go. I think this is why I prefer thinking of accomplishments as milestones rather than goals. Goals imply that you’ve arrived, that you’re finished; milestones tell you that you’ve simply reached an important place on your journey.
Just recently, I completed a milestone that I began working toward at the beginning of the year. I finished writing the rough draft of A Test of Honor – eighteen chapters, 94,263 words, three months’ worth of focused creativity. And it feels amazing.