by Catherine Dilts
The first killing freeze is late to arrive this year. My
garden, lacking access to weather apps, has already slowed way down.
The tomatoes have quit producing, not realizing they could
have gone on another couple weeks. The cucumber vines shriveled, the leaves
turning dry despite regular watering. Instead of one sudden death in the form
of a hard frost or early snow, things are winding down. The garden stumbles gradually toward The
End.
In writing, two projects reached The End recently. That moment is glorious. Finally completed! Time to sell the books to an eager publisher, make a fortune, and move on to write the next bestseller!
Not exactly. Both novels were brutalized by beta readers. Am
I being too sensitive? Maybe just a little. Like the garden, I'm not ready to give up yet. I received the most incredibly
helpful comments on the big novel-of-my-heart from my critique partner. I’m
getting a grasp on how to do revisions that will convince the rest of the world
what a magnificent story I’ve created.
The second project is an ambitious YA co-authored with my
daughter. After beta readers didn’t seem to grasp our brilliance, she became
depressed. Almost ready to give up. Almost. Then something snapped. She’s
coming up with amazing ideas that are giving life to characters, and placing
them in ridiculously perilous situations. All the plotlines are weaving
together with the strength of a bridge cable.
There’s hope these books will make it into the marketplace
eventually. Soon? This rewriting and polishing is a hard task. The goal is in
sight. Hope is reborn.
New life when you’ve just about given up. Like my two potted miniature cherry tomato plants. They are the only tomatoes still pushing out blossoms. They might create one last crop for me.
The End in gardening involves harvesting the produce, and
doing something with it. Drying, canning, or freezing. (Canning jars ready for pickle relish.) Cleaning up the beds and containers before they're covered with the eventual blanket of snow.
The End in writing frequently results in realizing you’re not finished. There remains more editing, polishing, and review by trusted critique partners or beta readers. The absolute final step is doing something with it: sending it out into the world.
Each phase of gardening and writing is its own special
season. Each requires a different kind of energy. And the courage to keep
watering that bed if it promises to produce one last crop.
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