Thanks to Joe! and a HONEOWP update

Thank you Joe Young for kicking off my blog series on naming characters so successfully! I really enjoyed reading Joe’s answers to my questions, and they made me think carefully about my own attitude toward character names. I usually start out a novel with character names already in mind, but if I haven’t taken a little time to really think about who my characters are, I often find I need to change their names. I was especially intrigued when Joe said he knew there’d be a character named “the rabbit” in the book from the beginning, but he didn’t really know who it would be until his main character encountered him. I do love an opportunity to discuss writing with fellow authors. It’s always refreshing finding out about the differences and similarities.

Speaking of which, don’t forget to check back for A.J. Brown’s interview on Monday, January 10. It promises to be a good one. Get to know A.J. a little in the feature area to the upper left.

Finally, I received my latest royalty statement and am happy to report I sold a few more copies, so I’ve donated $25 more to the National Wildlife Federation’s Gulf Oil Spill Restoration Fund. (If you’d like to add a little more to the fund, you can click on the link.) Remember, $25 is the minimum I’ve pledged to donate to a charity each month of this year. If my royalties go above and beyond $25, I’ll donate all of it to my chosen charity of the month.

Here are my HONEOWP stats so far:

November (NWF’s Gulf Oil Spill Restoration Fund): $25
December (NWF’s Gulf Oil Spill Restoration Fund): $25
January (Habitat for Humanity): ????

If you’d like to join me in my HONEOWP (Helpful Outstanding Novelists, Editors and Others in the Writing Profession) initiative, email me at michellegflye@gmail.com. I know 2011 is going to be a great year!

A Rose is a Rose?: Joe Young

When I first heard my friend Joe Young had written a vampire novel, my first thought was, “Seriously?” It wasn’t something I’d ever have considered as something Joe would do. First of all, the longest work I’d ever read by Joe was his excellent collection of microfictions, EASTER RABBIT. Joe writing a novel wasn’t something I could comprehend. After I got over the astonishment, however, I was totally jealous. I knew if Joe had written a vampire novel it would be terrific, and that’s something I’ve never been able to accomplish.

Well, Joe’s novel NAME is excellent, so at least I have the satisfaction of being right. I think of NAME as “vampire realism” if there is such a thing. You know how vampires are either romanticized or turned into animals? How they either glow or are surrounded by gore? Well, NAME takes a different path. It addresses what it would really be like to be a vampire, to find yourself with a different identity from what you spend most of your life with.

It was NAME’s unique take on identity that prompted me to ask Joe to join me in my quest for answers about naming characters.

BREATHE: Obviously, the concept of identity is very central to your book. Is this something you have explored before in your writing, or is it something that emerged in this longer work?

JOE: I answered this first question after answering your second, and I think I kind of talk about this there: the non-naming of my characters in my microfiction is a sort of playing with identity, both the fixedness and the fluidity of it. So, yes, I have explored it before. Of course, in NAME the concept is more central and more overt. In the novel, your identity is attached to your name, and this attachment allows someone (in this case, vampires) access to who you are; by finding out a victim’s name, the vampires gain power over him or her. Also, having a name seems to stabilize a character in the book, and those characters with more than one name, Daniel and, in a way, John (who is misnamed when we first meet him), are the more volatile and even unstable of characters

BREATHE: Looking through your microfictions, I find a lot of pronouns and few names except sometimes in titles. Do the characters in your microfictions have names, even if they’re never stated?

JOE: They don’t have names that I ever think about. I don’t say to myself, This is Michelle and Pete, but I’m just not going to call them that. Therefore I guess the answer is no, they have no names. I think most of the time the he’s and she’s of my microfictions are the same people, even if they change ages or life situations or whatever. So, maybe not naming them lets me have fluidity over their identities in certain ways even while keeping them as the same basic people in my imagination—they are both fixed and fluid people.

BREATHE: Was it difficult to name characters in your first novel? If so, how did you overcome this? If not, why do you think it wasn’t?

JOE: No, it wasn’t difficult at all, the names came to me and I wrote them down as the characters appeared in the story. I didn’t plan them out ahead of time or change them at all. For instance, I came up with “the rabbit” earlier in the book and didn’t know his real name was Daniel until Robert encountered him later on. I don’t think it was difficult because I didn’t put much stock in names in particular, not consciously anyway. The fact that they had names, that they were identified by them, and that the vampires used those names to seduce them, was more important than the names themselves. It occurred to me much later on though that Lena was several times associated with ducks and swans in the book, and I think that perhaps I had unconsciously associated her with Leda, the woman who was raped by Zeus in the form of a swan and who then gave birth to Helen of Troy. Those who read the book might notice when the character of Helen appears. Some of the other names, John and Daniel, for example, have Biblical associations that perhaps were working subconsciously for me as well.

BREATHE: Do you feel a character’s name affects the way you write him or her?

JOE: I think so. Something about who a character is suggests a name, even if, as above, that suggestion is less than conscious, and then once they have that name it becomes part of their identity, influencing who they are and what they do. It could be an interesting experiment that when you revise a story you change the protagonist’s name and see what changes you make to his or her character as a result.

BREATHE: Are there any names that you absolutely will never use for a character? Why or why not?

JOE: I can’t imagine there are. If a character needs a certain name, whatever that might be, then he or she will likely get it. There aren’t certain names with certain associations that I wouldn’t allow myself to use or anything like that.

Here’s a taste of Joe’s novel NAME to whet your appetite:

Robert, a vampire, the novel’s protagonist, and Lena, his vampire love interest, go out hunting together for their victims. They come upon a pair of young lovers, about 14 years old.

Robert led them toward the woods, the pair of them, Lena and he. The other pair was up ahead, holding hands as they went. The girl and boy walked awhile, and then they stopped, a wide spot in the path, and put matches to their cigarettes. The boy propped one foot on a log, the girl’s hand on his knee. She said something at which he smiled, small and ironic at first and then opening out, into joy. He took his cigarette from his mouth, put it in the girl’s lips, took her cigarette and put it into his. She leant against him and exhaled, long and noisy, eyes closed.

Robert looked and it was so near the surface. It was clear and bright, at the bright surface of her thoughts. It was there, her name, as unclouded as her eyes, as if she’d just spoken it aloud. It was as if the boy had said it to her and she’d taken it into herself, her own name, like a gift. It was a small package, dressed in blue light and clear water.

“Maggie,” he called, and the girl looked up. And from Lena, “Ryan.”

2010 in review

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A helper monkey made this abstract painting, inspired by your stats.

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 2,100 times in 2010. That’s about 5 full 747s.

In 2010, there were 87 new posts, not bad for the first year! There were 42 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 27mb. That’s about 4 pictures per month.

The busiest day of the year was October 13th with 89 views. The most popular post that day was Springtime inspiration.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were networkedblogs.com, facebook.com, zoetrope.com, blogsurfer.us, and mail.live.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for michelle garren flye, kindle giveaway, “ellen meister”, breathing moment, and michelle garren flye blog.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Springtime inspiration April 2010

2

Free Fiction Page August 2010
9 comments

3

Day 9 of the Kindle Giveaway: Let’s Make it Two! November 2010
15 comments

4

Day 2 of My Kindle Giveaway November 2010
13 comments

5

Want a Kindle? November 2010
16 comments

A New Year: Happy 2011

I’m only twelve hours into the new year but I’ve already broken one of my resolutions. Remember that 5K I first thought I’d run, then decided I’d walk with my kids? I didn’t make it. I’ve been fighting a cold for the past week and it got the better of me today. I wasn’t totally certain I’d even make it without a fit of coughing, so I stayed home. I have to admit, I’m a little disappointed, though.

Still, I am focusing on the positive. My HONEOWP initiative. My friend A.J. Brown blogged about it today, making him a true HONEOWP, but then I already knew that. Check out his blog here: Type A.J. Negative. So, with A.J. and Steve, my HONEOWPs now number three including me. And we’re only one day into the new year.

And I’m not giving up on the 5K, either. I plan to walk at least three miles with my kids today and I’m going to keep an ear out for another organized walk/run in the coming weeks. Maybe I’ll even stay well long enough to train to run it this time! In the meantime, I’m ready for the marathon of this year. I’ve simplified my resolutions to one: Face every challenge with everything I’ve got. If only because it won’t do any good to do anything else.