What am I celebrating this week?
It's the weekend!
The website for young adult author Kate Larkindale. A place for her musings on writing, publishing and a day job in the arts sector.
I'm late to the whole Colson Whitehead thing, I know.... I picked this up at the library because I've heard so much about this author and it seemed wrong that I hadn't read anything from him yet. Maybe I picked the wrong book to start with, but I really am not sure what all the fuss is about.
There's nothing really wrong with this book, but I didn't love it. It took me almost three weeks to read which is VERY unlike me. I just wasn't into it so much that I was compelled to get back to it any time I had a spare moment.
Set in 1960s Harlem, it's about Ray Carney, a guy who is kind of a crook. Only kind of though. Outwardly he's a respectable business owner trying to do right by his family and get ahead. His cousin Freddie is a career criminal and has a bad habit of getting Ray involved. And Ray can't say no to Freddie.
The book follows Ray across many years as he tries to balance these two sides of his life, keep his family ignorant of his more shady dealings and keep himself form getting himself killed.
The book has a colourful cast of characters as you'd expect from a story about the criminal underworld. It also paints a vivid picture of Harlem at the time, the power players and racial tensions that seethe beneath the surface of the seemingly thriving community.
Yes somehow this book didn't quite work for me. It wasn't gripping enough to satisfy as a crime novel, yet wasn't quite a character study or an examination of the society at the time. It was all three and it didn't quite work as any of these things entirely.
It's a hard one for me to talk about because I didn't dislike it. But I didn't really like it either. I think I was actually a little bored by it, if I'm being honest. There were some wonderful lines, but overall, I didn't find the writing to be that extraordinary. I think I'll need to try another one of Whitehead's books - I hear The Nickle Boys is good - before I cement my opinion.
So I'm not sure if I should recommend this one or not... Make your own mind up!
But don't take my word for it... Here's the blurb.
From the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Underground Railroad and The Nickel Boys, a gloriously entertaining novel of heists, shakedowns, and rip-offs set in Harlem in the 1960s.I had another pretty good writing weekend and managed to get through a couple of pivotal scenes. Hoping they're as good as I think they are when I go back over them... They're tricky ones to write because I want the reader to glean some idea what's going on, but the POV character is blind drunk at the time and doesn't know what's happening.
I swear this book is the most challenging I've ever written.... I have really made it hard for myself! But if it works out the way I want it to, I think it's going to be pretty powerful. My critique group have read the first six chapters and are enjoying it so far. And they love the characters which makes me so happy. I love them too!
Unfortunately I don't think I'm going to get any time to write over the next couple of weeks because the Jazz Festival is almost upon us and I'm working the next two weekends. But the week after is a long weekend and I might take a day or so on either side to write.
So this week I need to get all my ducks in a row so I'm organised for the Festival week ahead.
What are your goals for the week?
It's the first Wednesday of the month, so it's time for the Insecure Writers Support Group!
The awesome co-hosts for the October 2 posting of the IWSG are Nancy Gideon, Jennifer Lane, Jacqui Murray, and Natalie Aguirre!
I got some writing done over the weekend. I skipped forward a bit and wrote a scene toward the climax off the book. From here I kind of know what needs to happen and how, so it shouldn't be hard to keep going. There is still stuff that needs fixing further back, but I'll do that later, when I go back to try and fill in all the places I've left things to move on because I wasn't sure how to make the transition.
I'm just over 43K now, which is starting to feel like a book. And probably around about where I should be at this point in the story. I think I have another 25-30K to write until the end. So once I've filled in the gaps and tidied up some stuff, I should be around the 80K mark which s pretty standard for one of my books.
So my goal for this week is to keep going, keep moving forward. I really think it's realistic to finish this before the end of the year now, so that's my ultimate goal. Once the Jazz Festival is over, I'll have some more time off up my sleeve, so I'll probably try to take a couple of days a week in November to write - kind of like NaNo, but without actually doing NaNo.
Why are your goals this week?