About andrew

Andrew J. Peters writes fantasy for readers of all ages. His titles include the Werecat series, a finalist in The Romance Reviews' Readers' Choice Awards, Poseidon and Cleito, The City of Seven Gods, and two books for young adults: The Seventh Pleiade and Banished Sons of Poseidon. He grew up in Buffalo, New York, studied psychology at Cornell University, and spent most of his career as a social worker and an advocate for LGBT youth. He lives in New York City with his husband Genaro and their cat Chloë.

Primordial soup

I thought I’d talk about my writing process today.  Not that it’s been too active lately.  Since launching this site, I’ve been obsessively hunting down places to get the word out and trying to operationalize every bit of promotional advice I get from fellow writers.  But on a good day, here’s how it works.

Before I start a project, my head is a primordial ocean sloshing around with pre-developed life forms.  One celled themes.  Flagellating premises.  Microscopic construction sites where characters are built by hard-hat enzymes fitting bits of backstory along a helical spine.  Sometimes there’s an idea that has drifted around in the stew, sealed in membrane, protected from the noxious currents of forgetfulness and self-doubt.  It could  be a fixed impression from my childhood or an overheard conversation on the train or some unconscious brain print that evoked a vivid scene.  Locked in on the floating creature, mental synapses fire.  A web of cranial nerves is activated.  It flexes and extends, morphing into a psychic tentacle reaching toward the protozoan form.  The tentacle probes and squeezes, testing for viability.  If the squishiness is right – not too firm, not too mushy, the neural web prepares for the next stage.   Now it stirs in circles around the creature, capturing proteins of inspiration and Technicolor mitochondria in its centrifugal flux.  Flashing white hot with hope and possibility, the neural web warms the pool like a superconductor.  The perfect temperature is achieved.  Nutrients are absorbed.  Beyond the intrapsychic laboratory, the writer smiles.  Eyes glimmer.  He searches for a computer, a note pad, or even a discarded envelope on which to describe the thing that grows inside him.

The creature bloats.  Cells divide.  They arrange like squares on a child’s board game.  Plotlines.  Diversions.  Dead ends.  Simultaneously, a skin envelopes the mutating thing, signifying its wholeness.  But it remains amorphous.  A narrative pollywog.  Intact but undeveloped.  The psychic waters recede, and the creature flops around, marooned in a stark cerebral landscape.

It’s a vulnerable thing and like aquatic spawn only few will survive.  Some will be collected into formaldehyde  jars  and stored for future experimentation.   Others will be harshly judged and left to desiccate or, subconsciously, be cannibalized by heartier beasts.  But for those deemed worthy, the murky waters will flood in again, and the neural web will scour the pool, testing out new nutrients to feed its creation.  And under the right conditions, the creation will learn to swim and become its own entity, unaware of the forces that brought it to life.

OPERATION: OPTIMIZE

I’m incredibly heartened by all of the support and positive feedback from friends, family and the AW community.  A lot of the credit for the site goes to graphic designer Larry Black who came up with the background and put up with my indecisive, yet exacting  direction.  Now comes what I call OPERATION:  OPTIMIZE.   I need to get lots of traffic here.  I’m slowly figuring out how to do things behind the scenes.  You’ll notice links added, for instance.   A word about those…

Absolute Write is the best writers community on-line.  Why?  Because it’s this huge, free, grassroots space, simple to navigate and full of writers of every stripe.  I recently started an LGBT Writers Groupthere.

Ganymede, of course, is the awesome journal that actually agreed to publish my work.

Gregory Maguire is my literary hero.  Eric Marcus is a terrific gay historian.

Lambda Literary Foundation is a not-for-profit that supports and recognizes LGBT writers.

Only five so far, but many more to come.  I’m being very picky.

But back to OPERATION:  OPTIMIZE…I’m building up my presence by networking at sites like gaywriters.ning.com, gayauthors.com, and gaywebsource.com.  I put in a listing request at DMOZ.org, and I’ve Facebooked my url like mad.  Drop me a comment if you have other ideas for promoting my site.