Mood:

Topic: Writing
I can't believe it, but somehow I did make it through a complete line edit of the manuscript in time to meet the December 1 postmark deadline. I ended up pulling an all-nighter on Wednesday to make it--and I'm still trying to recover from that--but mostly I am just really, really happy. The new draft has to be better than what I started with, although I have something of a Picasso Cubist view of the manuscript right now. Some pieces stand out and jut up in my brain against each other in weird combinations. I didn't have an opportunity to read the whole manuscript again once I'd made the changes, so I really have no idea what I submitted. This is especially true of the acknowledgments page! I hadn't written this page before, thinking that would come last, once I had an actual publisher and knew the manuscript was going to materialize as a book. So the acknowledgments were written while I was trying to get dressed and out the door for work on Thursday morning, and I don't know what I said, only that it took me a page and a half to say it and I hope that's okay because the guidelines called for an "acknowledgments page." I know at one point I was using ________s to hold places for people's last names that I couldn't remember and needed to look up, and all I can hope is that I removed or filled in all of those blanks before I submitted it! I ended up having to take June from Maine off entirely because I couldn't find her name on the list of riders I had, and I listed the three main people at the American Lung Association of Washington by their first names only because Paul's was the only last name I could remember and Carolyn and Kathryn no longer work there, so I couldn't find them on the online directory.
It was amazing immersing myself in the manuscript again. There were things I couldn't believe I did--or didn't do--for instance, why didn't I just ask Richard if he knew anything about why Cynthia was missing from the Ride? Why did I feel the need to stay that far away from him? And I suddenly had insights into the feelings and actions of other riders that I hadn't had at the time or while writing the book the first time around. In places, I really seem to have regressed to an earlier time in my life, almost like high school. The only defense I have for some of my decisions is that the Ride brought emotions to the surface and made them more accessible, more immediate, much more intense than usual--much like being a teenager. I was swimming in hormones and endorphins and living in a world I was making up moment to moment.
The reimmersion also made me miss so many people. I would really like to see Janine, the Crisis Manager from Pallotta. She helped me when I was in the emergency room at the hospital in Idaho, and she helped me when Cynthia was missing, and I would really like to thank her again. There are a lot of people I would like to thank, and people I'd like to ride with. Maybe someday....
The other interesting thing is that between the line edits and the conversion from Microsoft Word (from my old Apple) to RTF (thanks to John) to Appleworks (because my new Apple with OS X doesn't have Word because I'm too cheap to buy it again), the manuscript went from 427 pages to 332, which sounds much less daunting, and much less like the sprawling work of a novice writer who can't manage her material!
Thoughts captured by Kristine
at 2:30 PM EST
Updated: Friday, December 2, 2005 2:47 PM EST