The writing on Zoe’s Tale is generally going quite smoothly, thanks, not counting yesterday when for unrelated reasons my brain had the consistency of tapioca. But today in particular things chugged along nicely. I still have far too much writing to do on the book before the end of the month, but there’s not much to be done about that now, and the relative ease of writing this month gives me cause for not-entirely-idiotic optimism.
One thing I will say, although you’ll forgive me if I don’t go into detail at the moment, is that I really like Zoe. It’s not always a guarantee that you’ll really like your main character, and it’s also sometimes difficult to elevate someone who had minor character status into an interesting primary character. But so far Zoe seems up to the task. She’s fun to write, and I like finding out what she does next.

So I did and I found something interesting, which was that Wil wasn’t merely living a non-dumpster-filled post-child star life, he was doing the actually incredibly difficult task of reinventing himself, and doing it in the public eye, and also succeeding in doing it. Wil’s never not going to have been Wesley Crusher, but now among the geek nation he is equally if not better known as Wil Wheaton, blogger, writer and ubergeek. When the man 


The Blatherations of Others