My goals at this moment:
...
Finish Eek by the end of March so I can submit it to Writers of the Future.
...
I don't remember if I began working on
Eek when I still lived in the U.S. I do remember working on it in CavLancer's house in Jagna when I first moved over here...a decade ago. I've had so many false starts.
Eek is a starfaring swashbuckler told by a smart-mouthed genetically-altered monkey. The bad guys are my oft-used villains, the Throgs, two-meter tall, hairy monsters, a cross between abominable snowmen and nightmares, think of Mongol hordes in space ships.
Recently, I've been going over my notes on writing.

I came across a passage on premises stories vs. plot stories. A premise story comes out of a really cool idea but it rarely is completed because it has no staying power. This happens to a lot of my stories.

In comparison, a plot story grows out of the main character's striving to overcome a personal weakness. Without a weakness, there can be no character growth. A plot story puts the main character in the driver's seat of the plot, and it gives the story a theme. In my previous versions of my story, my main character was like a cork on the water, being carried along with no direction.
I took out my list of character weaknesses, and will focus on greed.

Already in Chap. 1, my main character has commented that she has grown rich and powerful by collaborating with the Throgs.

She is about to learn the error of her ways.
