Saturday, October 25, 2014

Doodles in the Margins: Meet the Lev-Katia Family

In an effort to solidify the appearances and miscellaneous attributes of my Snow Glider characters, I drew Nara's family today.

I still stink at drawing men (and women for that matter...), but this was a helpful exercise for me so I thought I'd share. Besides, I haven't had the time or money to see any movies or read any books lately, so this is the only blog post you're gonna get for a while probably.

Lev & Katia


These are Nara's parents, Lev and Katia (hence the "Lev-Katia" Family). They're in the upper middle class in New Aglaya. Katia comes from a very wealthy family, and Lev is a renowned ship builder. He's quiet and fair, Katia is stern and all about propriety. Since Nara is her only daughter, Katia can seem kind of domineering to Nara. 

(From left to right) Onton, Benedikt, and Danil


This one was a much quicker, poorer-quality drawing, so sorry it's such a mess. These are Nara's brothers, all older than she is. Onton ("Tonny") is the eldest, and is supposed to take over the shipbuilding when Lev retires, so he dresses all fancy to keep up appearances.

Benedikt is a professional hunter, so he's pretty distant from his family most of the time. The snow leopard cape he wears marks him as an accomplished hunter, and his unkempt hair and beard show that he couldn't care less about appearances.

Danil is the youngest, only two years older than Nara, and he's the most sweet-tempered. Everyone likes him, but he tends to be overlooked when compared to the rest of his family.

So that's the Lev-Katia family (minus Nara, who I'll draw again later with her team of snow gliders). Hope you enjoyed this! NaNoWriMo is going to be my obsession until the end of November, so if you don't like hearing all about my characters and drafts, you might want to just check back in December. :)

Freewrite: Extremely Overdue Update/I Need to Infodump

Infodump (v.) = to unload a ton of information. Something usually to be avoided in literature because it bores the reader to tears and makes it impossible to tell which of all the info is actually important.

It's been a long time since I blogged, and since this blog is kind of doubling as my journal this year, I feel unsettled with how much has happened and how little I've written.

So here goes. *Deep breath*

NaNoWriMo
National Novel Writing Month (November) is in a week, and I feel overwhelmed at the thought of trying to write a novel again. It's been a year since my last whole-hearted attempt. I'm doing tons of research and planning so that Snow Glider will not only be written in November, it will be written well.

A lot of my "research" involves watching Bear Grylls tips for surviving in the arctic. Holy crow it's intense. I'm so glad I chose an arctic setting now, and my MC is definitely gonna have to display survival skills in the book. After all I'm learning, I have to include it in the book!

I'm also learning a lot about cultures that really do live in the arctic, and I'm sad that more people don't know more about the Sami, Greenlanders, and Inuit. I hope I can raise at least a little bit of awareness if Snow Glider is ever published.

Making more of an attempt to make friends
When I came home from Europe, I had two good acquaintances--two--come up to me and say, "Hi, I'm ---. What's your name?" Both times I just gaped at them and went, "Guys! It's me!" Needless to say, I feel like I haven't made a good enough effort to leave a lasting impression on my ward friends.

So, since I've been home I've done a lot to bond with people. My first week back, especially since I was jobless, I had lots of opportunities to socialize. That first Saturday, I went with Liz to clean the church and met a few new people there.

Later that afternoon, I went hiking with my friends to Donut Falls. It was a fun, leisurely hike on a beautiful autumn day. There were fat little chipmunks everywhere scrounging for last-minute winter rations. April had a bag of trail mix, so I fed peanuts to the chipmunks by hand. They were bold little critters, and I was glad that none of them bit me. My dad would never let me hear the end of it if I had to get rabies shots from a Donut Falls chipmunk.

Much later that evening, I helped Liz make a pizza casserole--the first time I've cooked with any of my roommates. It turned out to be delicious.

That first Monday back, our ward FHE was a service activity for the man who takes care of our church grounds. We went to his house and weeded his yard and took out bushes. It was good to give back to someone who's made our church such a pretty place.

Then on Tuesday, we had another ward activity--this one a Relief Society activity. We made holiday crafts. They had tile picture frames, little baby Jesus ornaments, and wood blocks. I made a stack of three wood blocks. On one side of the blocks are Halloween designs, and on the other are Christmas designs, so they work for both holidays! The RS committee provided cuts of scrapbook paper for us to use, and it was interesting to see how even though all the blocks are the same size and the papers are pretty similar, we all put our own unique style and personality into the blocks.

Here are mine. :)



On the following Sunday, we had a Relief Society breakfast/training meeting, where half the Relief Society got together to eat breakfast casserole and fruit salad while learning more about the importance of our callings. I got to know a lot more girls in my ward at that activity.

For FHE this past Monday, we had the coolest Halloween activity ever! We went up to the Salt Lake cemetery, where we were divided into four groups and given maps of the cemetery. Four of the graves were circled, and each group stumbled around in the dark to find them. Each grave belonged to a famous person in Church history. I can't for the life of me remember who the first woman was, but the other three were Truman Angell, Mary Fielding Smith, and Porter Rockwell. At each grave was a ward member dressed up as the person. They'd each memorized a script telling about the life of the person. It was both very creepy and very cool. Even though I knew it was a ward member's face hidden in the shadows, you could almost imagine that it really was each person's spirit standing by their own gravestone, eager to tell their story and be remembered. I loved it.

Family Get-togethers
I'm also spending much more time bonding with my family. My first Monday back, I was invited to have FHE with the Jenkins and my grandparents (I went after our ward FHE where we cleaned up that yard). We had a delicious dinner, then watched this commencement speech from the University of Texas:


Please please watch it. It's one of the most inspirational things I've ever listened to. It made a great FHE subject.

And then FHE kind of derailed into a YouTube party, where we watched a bunch of trailers for upcoming movies, and then watched the newest episode of Studio C, which grandma and grandpa found very...interesting. :) When it was over, we played Quick Rook while eating ice cream on pizzookies.

I've had dinner at grandma and grandpa's a few Sundays already, usually followed by Rumikub, and most recently with an episode of The Paradise.

Since Ashley has come back from Norway, she and I have gotten into all sorts of shenanigans. We've been working on our fitness most mornings. We've gone to BodyPump, hiked in the mountains, jogged around the park track, and just this morning went to yoga at Dash. It nearly killed us, but we feel very good about ourselves.

We've also been doing a bunch of crafty things together. We've been to Walmart several times for supplies. Last week we painted canvasses. My room desperately needs more decor, so I painted this to fill the space where a headboard should be.


I got the idea from Pinterest. The original piece was black and white, but I have enough black in my room, so I changed it to red.

Then yesterday we invited A-Hui over and made pumpkin chocolate chip cookies, then painted pumpkins to decorate grandma's porch with.





Don't you just love October??

Finally, in family news, I have a new cousin! Aunt Lucie had a baby boy on the 20th--his name is Tennessee James "T.J." Chamberlain. I can't wait to meet him!

Job hunting
The most stressful thing about coming home from Europe has been the job hunt, but thankfully that has mostly been resolved. It was really frustrating those first two weeks. I kept getting my hopes up about some jobs, then not hear anything back for forever.

But then I went to a group interview at the JSMB for a banquet server position. It went extremely well and I felt confident that they were going to hire me. Two days later, they called me and wanted me to work for them.

Unfortunately, they called me while I was on my way to another interview with the Deseret Book downtown store. I too the JSMB that I would call them back, then went in and talked with the DB manager. After a fantastic interview, he hired me on the spot.

So I was sad to have to tell the kind people at the JSMB "thanks but no thanks," but I have a job now! Yay!! I hope this one won't be temporary, but it very well might be. I also got an interview to be the receptionist at the DB corporate office--a position a little higher up the ladder and a little more applicable to my career path than the store associate position.  That interview also went very well (I feel like a professional interviewee at this point), but I'm still waiting to hear back from them.

So far working at the downtown store has been amazing. It's been a learning process, sure, but I'm catching on quickly and I just love the whole atmosphere. Everyone who comes in is so nice and my coworkers are wonderful and helpful.

I also get to use my Spanish a lot. Yesterday there was this adorable family of four little girls with their mom, and they only spoke Spanish. The girls loved that I spoke their language (though they were skeptical at first. "Are you sure you speak Spanish?" one asked me.)

The distribution center especially likes having me around, because it's really hard to find the right temple clothes sizes and specifications when there's a language barrier. Not that I'm all that useful when it comes to clothing words. I'm picking them up now, but that first day I did my best but realized most of my vocabulary is very gospel- or Paraguay-specific.

Also, being on my feet all day is reminding me of Paraguay a lot. I haven't been this foot-sore and physically exhausted in a long while. I don't even remember Grounds being this exhausting. I'm sure I'll get used to it soon, though.

Speaking of jobs, it's finally safe for me to say that my parents are officially moving back to Utah!!! My dad found a great job in Salt Lake, and our dreams of all living in Utah again are finally coming true! Of course, Amanda, Chase, and Jackson are still in Idaho, but at least now Mom and Dad can visit them much more frequently! I'm so excited.


Phew! FINALLY all caught up. I feel great relief now. On to writing a novel in 30 days!

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Europe Trip 2014: Video!

You guys. You HAVE to watch this video that my sisters put together. It captures some of the essence of our amazing Europe trip (though really you would've had to be there to understand just how spectacular it was.)

Also, Sarah's blog, prone2wand3r.blogspot.com, is all updated, so if you want to read more about the trip then that's where you should go!

I miss it already.


Thursday, October 9, 2014

Doodle in the Margins: Clash of Characters

So I'm still hunting for a job. I'm really tired of filling out online applications and I'm getting nervous about the fact that I haven't heard back from one part-time job I was practically guaranteed before I left for Europe.

But I'm not going to get into that. It just means that I have a lot of free time at home while everyone else is out earning a living.

Aside from mind-numbing tasks like filling out online applications (which always have you fill out a TON of sections and then asks for you to submit a resume too--like why can't I just submit the resume I already made??), I've been trying to stay somewhat productive.

My biggest side project is preparation for this year's NaNoWriMo (National Novel-Writing Month). I did it last year successfully, and...that was the last time I wrote anything for Snow Glider. Since last November it has remained unfinished, because I'm rethinking the plot and just haven't had the motivation to go back and rewrite the whole thing.

I still don't quite know where the plot is gonna go, but most of the fun of writing 1500 words a day for NaNoWriMo is that it sets your mind free and the plot just kind of forms itself sometimes. I still want to have a really great outline before NaNoWriMo begins, but until then I'm doing other things to prepare.

For example, yesterday I spent about three hours making mini profiles for every single arctic animal I could think of. Snow Glider is set in the arctic, so for authenticity and inspiration I'm researching every aspect of arctic life I can find. Animals naturally were my first choice of research topic, and boy did I find a lot of them. I was surprised by how many creatures live in polar deserts, and I haven't even gotten to the marine life yet. I'm glad I didn't choose a rainforest setting.

Anyways, this morning I decided to take a break from researching and instead I decided to establish my characters' appearances. I want to make them all so distinct and memorable that my readers will never experience what I did with Michael Vey ("Wait...who's Benedikt again?" "I think he might be one of the MC's brothers...?" "Eh, whatevs.").

It got me to doodling, because that really helps me to fixate an image of my characters in my own head.

I started with Nara, my MC (Main Character). And then I randomly felt like drawing my other MC, Aralin, even though her story is completely unrelated to Nara's and her novel isn't my project this year. The two of them technically live in the same world, but at completely opposite ends of it (Nara in a polar desert and Aralin in a desert desert), and I think I'm gonna put them in completely different eras, too. Whatever. I just thought how weird (and fun!) it would be if the two of them ever met up, and this happened:


Sorry it's blurry. I don't have a scanner.

I just realized that Aralin kind of looks like I based her off of Korra. A) She's usually wearing that coat around her waist, and her hair is usually down. This is her when she's doing something physically demanding that makes her sweaty. B) I designed Aralin's character YEARS before Korra ever happened. Just saying. :)

Also, to keep my mind in NaNoWriMo mode, I drew this and hung it in my room:


I stole the design from this one I found via Pinterest, so don't credit me or ask me to reproduce it.

As much as I want an income again, it's pretty fun being able to focus so much of my time and my thoughts on literature and characters and doodles. This is making me want more than ever to actually make a living on writing so that my work and my play can be one and the same. :)

Friday, October 3, 2014

Book Review: Michael Vey #4 (+ Writing Tips)

Hello and welcome back to "Carly Gives Her Opinions on Books"!

In this episode, we'll be taking a look at Michael Vey and the Hunt for Jade Dragon, the fourth book in the Michael Vey series.


First up, the pros.

I was pleasantly surprised by this installment in the Michael Vey series because the last one left me extremely underwhelmed. So underwhelmed that I almost didn't finish reading it because I was so bored. Maybe it was just because I went in with very low expectations, but I liked this book much better than the last. It was engaging enough that I read it all yesterday in an attempt to combat jet lag.

I think what the last book lacked for me was any kind of suspense. It was getting too predictable in its repetition--the kids are evading Elgen, Elgen catches up, Elgen catches the kids, the kids escape Elgen, repeat.

In this book, the kids still save the day and manage to escape relatively unscathed, but there were some twists to the story that generally surprised me.

(I'm going to include some spoilers for the sake of those who have read it, but I'm going to write them in white so that you have to highlight the spoiler sections in order to see them.)

For example, I saw the ( "Tara takes the place of Taylor" ) thing a mile away. But I didn't realize that ( Nichelle "betraying" the others ) was actually a ruse to trick Tara and Hatch and ultimately save the others. I just thought ( she was going back to her villainous ways), and I was sad that it was so cliched. Luckily it didn't turn out that way at all. I was happy with that.

Evans did a good job in this book of using obvious twists in the plot to disguise surprising ones. Another example was when ( Michael's father was alive and working for Elgen. I thought "Great, his dad's been alive all this time and now he's going to trick Michael into thinking that Elgen is actually the good guys." ) What I didn't see coming at all was that it was actually ( Hatch using Tara's abilities to pretend to be Michael's father). I was just as shocked and disturbed by that as Michael was.

Now for the cons.

These are pretty nitpicky probably, but I am an editor. I did ultimately like this book (I'll give it a 4 out of 5), but there are some things that could be done better, and so I'm gonna give some tips from an editor to any writers out there who may be reading this.

1) Jade Dragon is the most cliched "cool" Chinese name I've ever heard of. I think they could have still called it "Operation Jade Dragon," but they should have kept using the girl's Chinese name, Lin Julung. Since, you know, she's Chinese and her name is actually Chinese. Anyone who speaks Chinese would still think it's the most contrived name ever, but at least it wouldn't be so blatant.

It's like taking a Mexican guy named Jorge Santa Cruz and calling him George Holy Cross the whole book. If you're gonna give a character a cool name in some other language, you can acknowledge that it's a "cool" name, but don't shove it down our throats like that.

2) Evans has obviously either been to Taiwan or just done tons of research on it. He put in tons of details to make it seem as authentic as possible. Unfortunately, this really bogged down the story for me.

The characters had like a week in Taiwan before their super secret mission to rescue Jade Dragon, but I didn't need to hear about every single meal they ate in excruciating detail to understand that they were experiencing culture shock and that Evans did his homework. A few comments about the unfamiliar food would have sufficed. Knowing exactly everything they did during that week just made me think "Are these guys covert ops or tourists?" They didn't seem all that worried about their situation. They just pigged out on Taiwanese food and visited markets the whole time.

In fact, all four books have been blow-by-blow accounts of what's happened to Michael since he discovered the other electric kids. Not a day gets passed up as unimportant.

Now, I like a book that has its days numbered, but I like it better when we get a sense of urgency because those days are numbered and they have limited time. I don't feel urgency when every single day of months of Michael's life are spelled out, including mundane details like every food they ate and what every single member of the Electroclan was up to.

Bravo for putting in details to make the story seem more authentic--it was definitely believable that they were in Taiwan--but don't bog down the story with unnecessary facts for the sake of authenticity.

3) Limit how many main characters you have. Obviously Michael, Taylor, and Ostin are the MAIN main characters, but there are six other kids they hang out with all the time who are supposed to be equally as important. SIX. And there's almost nothing setting them apart for me, except the occasional use of their respective powers. But even those I can't keep straight.

You know you have too many unmemorable characters when I read this book and everyone was mourning (Wade's) death from the last book and I thought, "Who was (Wade) again...?" When I finally did remember, I still didn't feel sad because he'd served the exact same purpose as another main character, (Jack). Evans could have easily combined (Jack and Wade) to make one character who's ( not electric and who used to pick on Michael but changed his ways to help them out). Having two was so redundant that I didn't even miss one of them when he died.

There are so many kids in the Electroclan whose powers I can't remember and whose personalities and stories don't stand apart enough for me to care about them individually. They're not even set apart by appearances, except McKenna whose Chinese appearance was mentioned a lot in this book.

It's okay to have tons of characters in your stories, but they need to stand apart on their own, not just be bunched together as a collective whole with individual powers that are important to the story (sometimes). Nine MAIN characters is just too much, unless they serve very important functions and have vastly different personalities.

Take "Firefly" for example. It also has nine main characters--Mal, Zoe, Wash, Kaylee, Inara, Jayne, Simon, River, and Book. But I was able to list all nine of them after having only seen the series once in high school, and I never EVER mistake Inara for Kaylee. Every one of those nine characters is so memorable and so different in their roles that they stand out in my mind. If I were to try and name the nine main characters of Michael Vey, I'd have to consult the book. And I just read it yesterday.


If the characters don't stand out enough, then usually just three main characters is all a reader can handle. Hence all the trios you find in books. Harry, Ron, Hermione. Edward, Bella, Jacob. Katniss, Peeta, Gale.

4) It's great that Evans made his characters question in this book whether or not Elgen were really evil. It's awesome when you can give the villains grey morality. Unfortunately, Evans fell a bit short in this because while Michael and Ostin may have questioned Elgen's evilness, we readers certainly didn't.

That's because we the readers are treated to the POV of Hatch and other villains, but nothing about them makes us go "Awww, they have a tragic past and are just misunderstood and really think they're doing the right thing!" That's what you need to do in order to make the reader question the villains and sympathize with them. All Evans did when showing us the villain POV was treat us to murder, truly disturbing plots, and the villains' complete lack of sympathy towards anyone else. I never once thought, "Oh, maybe they're actually the good guys."

So if you're a writer and you want the villains to be sympathetic, get into their heads and show us something that we'll connect with. THEN you can make the main characters question, and the readers will also start to wonder. But you can't portray black and white morality and expect us to start seeing grey where there isn't any.

5) Finally, heroes can be heroes, but they need flaws in order to really connect with the readers. Michael Vey is near flawless, and it's starting to make me unafraid of how the story will end. I just know that good is going to triumph, because in these books good can do no wrong.

Evans tries to make Michael "flawed" by giving him Tourette's and constantly pointing out that Taylor is way out of his league. But those aren't the kinds of flaws that make a story a genuine struggle between good and evil.

Michael Vey can apparently do no wrong. His powers keep growing (unlike anyone else's), and he never uses them poorly or in the wrong way. He's so admired that his friends make him the undisputed leader of their group, and he never makes an incorrect decision for them. Even the adults resisting Elgen defer to Michael as the undisputed most clever and most capable person among them. Michael is supposed to be like 15 years old, yet grown adults are sending him and his other 15-year-old friends on deadly missions because they're so perfectly special. He's the one the bad guy hates most, because he always spoils the bad guy's plans.

It's coming to the point where I know exactly how it's going to play out. Michael will always have a great plan, and it will sort of get foiled by Hatch, but then Michael and his friends escape and ultimately win the battle. Every time.

If you want good examples of flawed main characters, here are a few of my favorites:

In the Dresden Files (which I can't in good conscience recommend to the faint of heart but which I love for lots of literary reasons), Harry Dresden is without a doubt capable and awesome. But I don't always know that he's going to come out on top, even though that's his track record, because he has flaws. He makes mistakes that get people killed. He uses his powers for bad reasons sometimes, and a lot of the time his powers and abilities just aren't enough to defeat the bad guys. He's not handsome or popular, not even among other wizards. Normal people avoid him at first because he looks so sketchy and acts so snarky. He accidentally (and sometimes intentionally) offends and alienates even his closest friends so that even they sometimes don't trust him.

One minute he's being awesome, taking names. The next minute, he's accidentally setting his lab on fire.


I've seen Dresden make countless mistakes, and I honestly don't know if things are going to turn out all right in the end because things go wrong, his plans have fatal errors to them, and people don't always listen to his advice. Bad things happen. Ultimately he does win, but usually with severe consequences and lots of tragedy to go along with the victory. It wouldn't surprise me if he dies at the end of the series and the world remains a little messed up. I will cry my eyes out if that happens, but Jim Butcher has made his characters so believably imperfect that it won't surprise me if it happens.


Kaladin from Way of Kings and Words of Radiance (which I just read last month) is the underdog in so many ways. He doesn't have great social skills, so people don't generally adore him--not even the people he saves from danger. He loses his powers at one point because he makes selfish decisions and stops using them for noble reasons. He doesn't get the girl. He has legit problems, and those problems come with consequences that leave him afraid and alone on many occasions.

Michael Vey has Tourette's and was considered a dweeb in high school. That's not enough to make him flawed when all his plans go right, he always makes the right choice, and all the good guys love him no matter what.

Wow, this was much longer than I planned for it to be. I hope it was helpful, though--both in finding you a pretty good book to read when you're bored, and in giving you some writing tips if that's your thing.

(I just found all these photos through Google, so I have no idea who they actually belong to. I don't own any of them.)

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Freewrite: Not Dead

If anyone's reading this, I am still alive and well!

Unfortunately, my sisters are the ones with the photos from our Europe trip, so I could just write up a huge long narrative about what we did, but I have a feeling most people won't read it to the end unless there are pictures.

So once I get access to those, I'll start catching you up. In the meantime, see what we've already blogged on Gypsy Soul. It still needs a few days covered, but it's got much more content than I have.

Not much is happening in my life in the meantime. I'm just in AZ spending time with Mom before going back to UT to job hunt. (Ugh…) But if I read anything or watch any new movies I'll be sure to post about them.

Have a wonderful Wednesday night!