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To: Travis McGee
I've built a 48 foot steel sailboat by hand, and written a "major" novel, and I would compare the two endeavors in complexity and difficulty.

Interesting and thought-provoking comparison. For me, writing the novel, especially one as involved as EFAD would probably be harder than building the boat. The mechanics and stylistic elements of sailboats are pretty well documented and so you don't have to invent and design in a void. And you don't have to agonize over every weld and placement of every screw and bolt ... it would be readily apparent whether it was right or wrong in that moment.

For a novel, especially one as complex and as involved as EFAD, every word, every paragraph, the character development, the technical details, the psychological dynamics, the flow of the story, and the overall continuity ... all of it, has to be invented, and distilled from a lifetime of understanding and study. And the potential is there to hit a mental brickwall agonizing over every phrase and description to make it just right.

In other words, I think I could study for a year or so and then go build a sailboat, but I doubt that I could study for a year or so and completely invent a (complex, technically detailed) novel that is entertaining, interesting, and readable.

Of course if you build a sailboat wrong, you might die. If you write a novel 'wrong', no one will read it. I haven't seen your boat, but you obviously got the novel right. And since you were around to write the novel, the boat must be pretty solid as well.

(Sorry for hijacking the thread, but I am chatty this morning trying to warm back up from an early morning bike ride in 19 degree weather.)

28 posted on 01/07/2004 4:08:31 AM PST by spodefly (This is my tagline. There are many like it, but this one is mine.)
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To: spodefly
From my perspective after doing both, the boat and the book both are about equally complex "3D blueprints" in my mind. (I designed the entire boat except for the basic underwater hull geometry.) You are absorbed totally by both, as in not hearing other people, driving past exits, or laying in bed for hours thinking out sequences and conflicts etc. They both use all of your brain power and then some on a sustained long term basis. You have so many hundreds of decision trees to juggle simultaneously, where decisions here will affect a dozen interconnected factors downstream. Both are mentally exhausting.
31 posted on 01/07/2004 7:25:13 AM PST by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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