The Journey Begins
After five years of working on Challenger’s Chase, I have finally started publishing chapters online. I set-up the first free chapter on the first of the year, and my first patreon-locked chapter today. Not necessarily much to look at (yet) but a huge personal milestone. I think I’m officially going to upgrade myself from writer to author.
I’ve discovered a lot of things in the past few years. Patience, to keep from avoiding a half-finished story to my audience. Discipline, in finding the will to keep working after three years of revisions. My writerly and artistic skills, from the sheer amount of practice I got from working on this project for so long. I have leveled up so much, and in so many ways since I started working on Challenger’s Chase five years ago, and yet despite all that growth, it still feels like I’m half the artist and writer I need to be.
A major part of it is simple quantity. My original plans for publication anticipated I could put words on the page at around five hundred per day. Quite a low estimate, I thought, given what other writers manage. Turns out, I was wrong, though it wasn’t the word count per say. The problem was that when I wrote, it all came out out of order. If a paragraph was supposed to look like 123456789, my brain would vomit out 48?13??56. And the time it took me to figure out and reorganize those sentences in the right order vastly overshadowed the time it took me to write those sentences in the first place.
Compounding on that problem was the nature of my writing style. Since my illustrated novel attempts to seamlessly maintain POV between the prose and the artwork, Tevery time I had to reorder a paragraph, a scene, a chapter, there was a strong possibility I had to rethink what any nearby art would look like. The composition, the perspective, and how it interplayed with the text. The number of sketched artworks that have ended up in the garbage bin, pulled back out, then put back in again, would horrify you.
Suffice it to say, it has been hell streamlining this process. But I have gotten better.
I think that’s the point of this post, I guess. I don’t want to be miserly with the backlog of chapters I’ve written so far, but right now, I have to be. I am not a practiced enough writer or artist to publish the volume of work I’d like to. But I think I eventually will be.
Book One of Challenger’s Chase is somewhat of an amuse-bouche for the whole series. It’s a whole lot of world set-up, and whole lot of character introduction, and a whole lot of foreshadowing; hidden inside in a fun little package of deadly competition. I fully intend for it to be entertaining and gripping in its own right (it better be after the work I put into it, goddamn it!), but the stuff I really look forward to comes after. After all, the core narrative has not changed in the past three years of revisions, and I’m looking forward to exploring new ground in the world of Aerth.
But that’s skipping ahead. Even publishing what I have, I expect to do a lot of learning this year. Some of my most explosive periods of growth as a writer have occurred when I put my work in front of an audience, and I expect much the same now. Even if, in some magical wonderland, there was nothing to fix in my writing or artwork, I already know there is so much for me to figure out about the logistics of publishing, how to reach my audience, and a whole bunch of other really important, really practical things.
Time to put my feet in the fire. 2025 is about to be a year of growth.