Monday, March 9, 2009
A Public Declaration: 1000 Pages a Day
"If you want to get something done, tell as many people as you can that you're going to do it. Then you'll fear their disappointment, and that disappointment will drive you." - Anonymous(1)
History, screenwriting, actual job, The Brothel, day-to-day things, relationship, friends, fitness, f^&k! the plate is getting full.
One more thing. I can do one more thing. A novel.
Write a novel. How hard can that be?
I'll start it here on The Brothel - then it will be combined with my Brothel duties, and not be an extra thing.
Right.
Plus, the writing can then be done from anywhere with an internet connection.
And if there is no internet connection, I can hand-write it, on napkins(2), then type it up later.
I'll write for 30 minutes a day. This is a rough draft. Comments will be appreciated - and possibly acknowledged in the printed version of the novel - but when you make your comments keep in mind the sentence prior to this one.
In other words, this is a rough draft. There will be errors.
(15 minutes left)
Apparently, you can write a decent amount in 30 minutes a day. (See this post) I've already written the first two footnotes, which contain the cleverest jokes so far, so I hope you're reading them as you go along, and not wondering what those numbers in parentheses are. (Blogger lacks footnote technology.)
12 minutes to go. Time to start the novel.
1000 Pages a Day
by Klaus Varley
Published by Random House
Copyright 2009
New York City
The Home of Pace Picante
And Jay-Z
Chapter 1: Acknowledgments
If you are reading this descriptive paragraph instead of the actual acknowledgments, it means they have not yet been written. They have not yet been written, because as I have not yet written the book, and thus do not know who to thank.
However, I assume this section eventually will include brief disclaimer on how there is no possible way I can thank everyone associated with this book and surely I'll forget someone if I do, followed by a long list of names, some of which will share my last name, others being readers of this blog, ending - most likely - with a brief dedication to my parents or my girlfriend, who may be more than my girlfriend by that time.(3)
(Oh no, 4 minutes left! I spent too much time writing footnote 3, balancing the fact that we could be married by that time without sounding too much like I was proposing while walking the fine line of suggesting that if a proposal was on the horizon it wasn't far FAR in the future, but just in the future.)
Damn, 1 minute left. Just enough time for a title of the next chapter:
Chapter 2: Introduction
(To be continued...)
-KV
---footnotes---
(1) I'm not sure anyone actually said this.
(2) I would not recommend writing anything important on napkins, yet Banana Yamamoto allegedly wrote this badass book called Kitchen on napkins while waitressing in Tokyo. But we can't all be Banana.
(3) This does not mean we have immediate plans to get married, this just means that books take a long time to write.
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6 comments:
I think you may have been watching too much hedberg...
Kratic.
-a.
I think you may be right.
I also think I do not know what "Kratic" means.
Are you calling me Kratic?
If so, thanks!
Unless of course, Kratic means what I think it means.
Then, nevermind.
(Google search has resulted in strange band listings...)
That is all.
This is sweet. I'm going to tell your girlfriend to read this.
Tell her! Thanks!
"The plate is getting full." Refer to Brain Transplant Journal: List of Abominations.
That's all I'm going to say.
Alex, what are you talking about? (Assuming that was Alex. I'm pretty sure it is.)
I believe I actually said was "FUCK, the plate is getting full," which is just different enough to not be cliche.
Alright, it's still a little cliche. Perhaps it will be changed. And then people will wonder what the hell this comment stream is all about.
If that time is now, let me explain. You see, I once said "FUCK, the plate is getting full," in my introduction to "A Public Declaration" and then Laura called me out on it as a phrase that she dislikes because of a post that went up prior to "A Public Declaration." However, what Laura DOES NOT know, is that "A Public Declaration was written over a month ago, (though just recently posted) long before reading the post on her site, "Brain Transplant Journal" (linked on the left) chastising phrases such as "my plate is full" and anything having to do with baseball in a non-baseball environment.
Laura: feel free to post this comment exchange on your site as an example of the impact of Brain Transplant Journal on other websites and/or the world in general.
And feel free to edit for clarity and errors. But not too much. These words is golden.
Here to help,
-Klaus
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