Award-winning novelist Steven James answers your questions about the craft of writing and the art of storytelling
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Novel Writing Intensive, October 2016
Registration is now open for my 7th Novel Writing Intensive Retreat, with New York Times bestselling author, Robert Dugoni. This is an in-depth, intensive time of teaching and study on the craft of novel writing. For more information, visit the NWI website.
Monday, January 4, 2016
What’s the one piece of advice you’d give to the next generation of thriller authors?
Quite honestly, I think that each
generation of writers has the same job—to tell great stories to their
audiences. As readers’ expectations continue to evolve, so should our stories.
That said, here are a couple thoughts.
1 - Spend the extra time making your story
great. Create a character we want to spend time with, want to cheer for, and
want to worry about. Make it clear what the character wants, how far he is
willing to go to get it, and what is at stake if he fails. Whether you consider
your story character-driven or plot-driven, every story, at it’s core, is
struggle-driven. Draw us into that world.
2 - Be concise. I’m finding that people
today really do have shorter and shorter attention spans, and with the
emergence of ebooks (which seem to sell better when they’re shorter), I’m
afraid that we’re going to have to start telling simpler and less complex
stories. Or maybe we just need to write leaner, sharper, more gripping stories.
In either case, ruminating, meandering prose and long, insignificant descriptions
are out; and taut, intense stories are in.
Saturday, December 26, 2015
Every Crooked
Path is a work of fiction, and yet, in a very real sense, it also
tells the truth about our world today. While the characters and situations in
this story are made up, the nature of the crimes is not.
As a parent, I found this book particularly difficult to write,
since it involved research into cybercrimes against children. However, because
of the impact of this issue on modern culture, I felt it was an important story
for me to tell—perhaps my most important one so far.
Finding out what’s really out there lurking online was a
wake-up call to me. Rather than describe any exploitative images in this book,
I chose to show the reactions of the characters to seeing them. I’ll trust your
imagination to fill in the rest.
During my research, I came across an organization called the
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. It’s dedicated to
rescuing children and catching those who target them. NCMEC is a nonprofit
organization that depends on private donations, so please consider supporting
their work. For more information, go to www.missingkids.com.
Together we can make a difference in protecting the next
generation from those who would steal their innocence from them.
I think you’ll enjoy Every Crooked Path. It’s a thrilling
ride, a redemptive story, and shows the power of good over evil. Let me know
what you think.
—Steven James
Thursday, May 28, 2015
What makes a character likable?
Sometimes it’s a quirk, sometimes it’s a wound we all share.
Most often it’s an attitude. Too many authors spend tons of time working up a
detailed history of the character’s life, but usually that’s a waste. A
character with an attitude is always more interesting than a character with a
history.
Think about the people you like to hang around with in real
life—those same traits are often present in fictional characters we like to
spend time with.
Just as in real life, we prefer people who are fun to be
around (rather than whiny and self-pitying), adventurous, engaging, vibrant,
unpredictable and ready to admit their mistakes rather than pretend they’re
better than everyone else. In his book Writing 21st Century Fiction, Donald
Maass suggests that we imagine creating characters that we would want to take
to prom. That’s good advice.
I also think it’s the inconsistencies rather than the
consistencies that make characters interesting. So, for example, if a character
is mature in every way, she’s boring, but if she’s intellectually mature but
also emotionally needy, she becomes a character who’s intriguing and
multi-layered.
New York Times Bestselling author Robert Dugoni suggests
that to create empathy in readers we give the character an undeserved
misfortune, put him in jeopardy, make them compassionate and nice, funny or
witty, make them powerful and altruistic.
Sometimes I’ve started watching a TV series and then just
abandoned it after an episode or two because, honestly, there just wasn’t
anyone I felt like I could cheer for, no one I wanted to spend time with. When
you’re creating characters, you need to create ones that people would rather
spend time with than do anything else. That’s the only way you’re going to be
able to grab their attention long enough for them to become engaged in your
book, and enthralled enough to stick with it.
Even if a character doesn’t always play by the rules or has
undesirable traits, if he’s someone intriguing and fun to be around, he’s going
to be the likeable character who will attract readers.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Writer's Digest Webinar Event
Authors, you're invited to attend my Writer's Digest webinar, Abandon Your Outline and Elevate Your Novel, on Tuesday, December 16th, at 1pm. Those who register for the live event will receive an ebook version of my book Story Trumps Structure. I hope you can join us.
ABOUT THIS WEBINAR:
In this eye-opening live webinar, both aspiring and accomplished authors will learn the advantages of ditching their outlines, why they should stop trying to plot out their stories, how to trust the writing process, and how to develop their fiction organically rather than mechanically.
ABOUT THIS WEBINAR:
In this eye-opening live webinar, both aspiring and accomplished authors will learn the advantages of ditching their outlines, why they should stop trying to plot out their stories, how to trust the writing process, and how to develop their fiction organically rather than mechanically.
This is far different than “seat-of-the-pants” writing. It's all about delving into a deeper understanding of the essence of story, embracing the expectations of your readers, and asking the right questions to help shape the story.
Formulas and templates can only take you so far and, all too often, they end up straightjacketing stories. But how can you really write a powerful, cohesive, emotionally-gripping story without plotting it out first? Is it even possible? Yes it is. And this webinar will teach you how.
WHAT YOU’LL LEARN:
- 3 questions that will solve every “plot problem” you'll ever have
- How vital, underlying narrative forces work together to drive your story forward
- Why context determines content and how it shapes every scene you write
- 5 easy-to-implement steps to organizing scene ideas without using an outline
- Practical steps to adding a twist to your story
- Specific ways to listen to and respond to your story as it unfolds
- The core ingredients that will improve every story
WHO SHOULD ATTEND?
- Writers tired of following formulas and plot templates
- Writers looking for a fresh approach to understanding what makes a story work
- Aspiring novelists intimidated by the idea of outlining an entire novel
- Accomplished novelists who would like to expand their storytelling depth
- Novelists with great ideas but no direction
- “Seat-of-the-pants” writers looking for practical tips
- Writers who would rather spend time writing a story than plotting one out
- Writers who've written themselves into a corner
- Writers trying to reconnect with the joy of creativity
- Writers who want to add twists to their stories
Monday, November 17, 2014
Troubleshooting Your Novel
Troubleshooting Your Novel

a full-day writing seminar
with the critically-acclaimed author of the
Patrick Bowers thriller series,
Steven James
Also featuring New York Times bestselling author, Eric Wilson;
award-winning author and freelance editor, Jodie Renner; and literary agent
with the Wheelhouse Literary Group, Jonathan Clements
Saturday, January 17, 2015
Radisson Airport Hotel
Nashville, TN
This
one-day conference will be filled with practical insights,
dozens
of
ways to fix plot flaws, time-tested writing
secrets,
and easy-to-implement ideas
that will help you improve your novel right now, no matter how far along you
are in writing it. From the broad aspects of building the framework of your
novel to the fine brush-strokes of line-by-line editing, this day will
transform your writing forever.
Visit troubleshootingyournovel.com
to register.
Friday, October 3, 2014
In keeping with your contract of entertaining the reader: How best do I design scenes? What should every scene consist of in your opinion? Can you have a scene that simply shows more character development, or simply hints/builds towards things to come later in the story? Does every scene have to have conflict? Since this is my first draft, should I simply write the story out and go back and add/drop scenes as needed?
People often ask me what a scene is, what a scene includes, how long a scene should be, and if scenes are included simply to reveal character traits. Since all of these are related topics, I decided to tackle them together. Let’s see how much we can cover in this one blog post.
First of all, a scene is the account of a character, rooted in time and space, working toward an objective that he wishes to accomplish.
The scene begins when a decision on his own, or an obligation thrust on him by another, places him in this situation where he must accomplish a certain task. It might be buying a bag of Cheetos or negotiating to get a good deal on a new car, or seducing a lover, or saving a child who fell into the lake. There is a task that is related to a goal. The scene shows what happens when the character attempts to accomplish this task or reach this goal.
Scenes are made stronger when there is tension, conflict, unmet desire. Look for that; bring it out.
Regardless of which draft you're in, you will want to work your scenes around objectives—on the part of the characters. I’m not a fan of bland scenes in which nothing is sought or altered, but the actions are just there “to show characterization.” This might be a scene of internal reflection or dialogue or exposition in which nothing is sought and the reader is left in the dark about what the characters really want.
The best way to show characterization is when a character is accepting to overcome something or rise to an occasion, so the scenes that best reveal characterization are those that do more than show action, they show action with intention.
Identify the goal. Let the characters seek it, fail to get it, process what just happened, and then make a decision that leads them on to the next scene.
Seek. Fail. Process. Proceed. This is what well-crafted scenes will do for you. This is the pathway your character will move through, scene by escalating scene, toward the climax.
Monday, September 8, 2014
How long does the first draft of a manuscript typically take you to get onto paper? With thinking, research, and writing how long does it usually take for you to finish your manuscript?
This question comes up quite often in one form or another. I
can’t tell you how many times at a writers conference someone has asked me how
long it takes me to write a book, or finish a first draft, or how many words I
write each day.
I know that part of it is natural curiosity, but there’s
also that practical side of things—If he can write 2,000 words a day, how
many should I be able to write?
I have friends who actually write precisely a thousand words
a day. They can tell you that their book will be done in 100 days and will be
100,000 words long, just like that. Boom. It’s crazy.
Honestly, I just don’t understand that. First of all, I’m
not sure how you would even know the length of the book until it’s finished.
Secondly, that’s not at all how I’m wired.
Ideas don’t start on a certain date and they don’t have an
expiration date. Making a career as a novelist means that, in the real world,
you’ll be working on a new project while one of your previous works is being
edited, proofread, etc.
So, in essence, there are always two or more pots on the
stove and your life is often made up of moving them around to keep the most
important one at the moment boiling.
I’m always coming up with ideas that don’t quite fit into
the current project I’m working on. I set them aside, let them percolate, and
then pull them out when I’m ready to move on to another book.
Obviously, novels vary greatly in length, complexity, number
of point-of-view characters, and so on, so the amount of time it takes to write
one will vary as well. Most of my Patrick Bowers novels are between 105,000 and
140,000 words. My young adult thrillers, Blur and Fury, are both
less than 80,000 words.
I’ve managed to write some of my novels in less than six
months, others have taken nearly a year and a half—but remember, that’s writing
nearly every day of the year. It’s my day job. It’s what I do to pay the bills.
Recently, there have been several self-published books about
writing extraordinarily fast (for example: 2,000 to 10,000, in which the
author purports to be able to write 10,000 words in a day. No. I’m not kidding.
Nor am I endorsing the book by mentioning it. Quite the opposite, frankly.)
It’s simply not possible for the vast majority of authors to
write that fast and write well, and it does a serious disservice to
people to imply that they can learn to do it.
Yes, there will always be prodigies who can pull off amazing
feats, but on my best, most productive days of writing, I average maybe 120
words an hour, and that’s after doing this for more than a decade, utilizing
every trick and time-saving secret I can think of.
Can some people pull off amazing quality and breathtaking
quantity? Yes. But most of us have to choose between the two. Even though it
ends up taking me about a month of work for every hour it takes a reader to go
through my books, it’s just who I am. I’ll never be able to pump out books
every couple months.
And I guess, now that I think about it, I’m glad I don’t
even try.
Monday, August 11, 2014
I have all of these great ideas, and I have been working really hard on all of them but I don't want to have to wait to completely finish one genre before I start another. Do authors bounce back and forth like that, or is it in the best interest for the readers to stick with one genre?
This question bridges into the field of marketing, which, these days is a part of any successful writing career.
Over the years I’ve written in lots of different genres—from prayer journals and spiritual titles to educational books, fantasy, psychological suspense, conspiracy thrillers, young adult mystery and more. As we’ve spoken with marketing experts they always ask, “What makes you unique or different?” And then, they want to use that to create your brand.
So when I was speaking and performing children’s and family shows as well as writing about storytelling, my brand was “The voice of imagination” which encompassed all of my imaginative storytelling and writing. However, over the last decade, I’ve moved toward primarily writing intelligent thrillers with twist endings. So my brand has changed. (Although I don’t have a cool phrase to describe myself anymore. Suggestions are always welcome,)
Now, as far as writing in different genres, I’ve always believed in writing what you have the ideas for and moving on from there, but I can certainly see the wisdom in sticking to one genre and becoming known for that. Honestly, it is a little confusing when people see what I’ve written and they say, “So you’ve written books on how to tell Bible stories to preschool children and you write serial killer novels?”
Yup. That’s me. But it’s a little hard to brand.
Many fiction authors do span genres (Heather Graham, F. Paul Wilson, Stephen King, Ted Dekker, etc.), so there’s no easy answer to your question. I personally believe in pursuing ideas where they lead and trusting that readers will connect with brilliantly told stories, whatever genre labels might be ascribed to it.
Friday, July 11, 2014
Since this is my first draft, should I simply write the story out and go back and add/drop scenes as needed?
People often ask me questions regarding my writing style, process, etc. Whenever we talk about writing, there is process and there are principles. While the principles for storytelling are relatively universal, the process will vary from person to person and also, at least in my experience, from book to book.
Some people outline and “plot out” their stories and others listen to the story as they write each day, feeling out the direction of the story organically. Since I’ve described the organic writing process in other posts, let’s not go there for now. You can go back and read those posts later. But no matter your process, I think it is important to write the ideas you have when they are fresh in your mind—even if they are not specifically chronological.
When I’m working on a story, I might know that in a certain place in my book my detective will visit a crime scene and notice what no one else notices, but it might take me weeks or months to figure out exactly what that is. So in the meantime, while I wait for just the right inspiration, I write obligatory scenes that the story and the genre dictate.
For example, in the book I’m currently writing, I’m about 80 or 90% done, but I have no clear idea about how the climax will play out. As I’ve written, I’ve worked on scenes that I knew I was going to include, and some transitions or interludes between the scenes themselves. In some cases I know that something must be altered—or tilt as I sometimes think of it—but I’m not sure exactly what that is. But it will come if I continue to look at context and press the right questions against the fabric of the story. So, as I now add those scenes and transitions, I can look at the story as a whole and that will lead me to just the right climax and ending.
To summarize, I believe it’s best to pursue your ideas where they take you. Write yourself into a corner as much as you can and then find a way out your readers would never expect. Keep moving through the story, sometimes that will mean moving ahead without figuring exactly what will happen in a scene and then dropping the scenes in later, sometimes it’ll mean you figure them out as you move along. Be flexible. Be open. And keep an ear out for what the story is trying to tell you.
Friday, June 27, 2014
Q & A's about Organic Writing (Post 2)
Here is the second Q & A excerpt from my recently released book STORY TRUMPS STRUCTURE.
Q- “What do you do if you get writer’s block?”
A - I reread the story in context, keep the promises I’ve made—or make more, and ask the narrative questions (which we examine in Story Trumps Structure). Since you’re always analyzing the direction and content of your story when you write organically, you’ll find that you don’t run out of ideas very often. It makes it a lot easier for those of us who make a living doing this.
Q - “But without an outline how do you know when to end your story?”
A - Stories are over when the change in the life of the character has occurred, the questions readers want answered are answered, and the promises you’ve made have been kept. At that point, readers expect no more from the story, and the next logical step would only be the introduction of a new internal, external or interpersonal struggle for the protagonist—in other words, the beginning of a new story.
It might take one act or it might take a dozen, depending on the length of the story, the number of characters and the complexity of the conflict, but when the discovery is made, when the resolution is reached and you’ve fulfilled your promises, the story is over.
Q - “What if you’re writing a complex story? How do you keep everything straight if you don’t outline?”
A - Read the context. Some stories are too complex to outline. My novels often involve dozens of characters, multiple plots and subplots, half a dozen point-of-view characters and single-, double- or triple-twist endings. Even now that the books are written, if someone asked me to outline one of them I can’t imagine how hard that would be.
Make it easier on yourself and write organically. Read the context, jot down notes on the characters if you need to, and keep in mind what readers have in mind. Remember, they’re not going to have character biographies, outlines, and so on in front of them to help keep everything straight as they read your story, so, if you’re trying to write one for them that doesn’t include those things, why would you begin writing the story in such a way that you need them?
Q - “But how can you add a twist if you don’t outline?”
A - When you understand the dynamics of good storytelling, you can’t help but add a twist when you write organically.
The twist will reveal itself to you if you look for it long enough and in the right place by opening your eyes and asking the right questions.
Readers today are narratively astute. Respect them. Assume they’re at least as smart as you are. If you’re not surprised by the direction the story takes as you work on it, many of them won’t be surprised either.
Friday, June 13, 2014
Q & A's about Organic Writing (Post 1)
With the release of my book STORY TRUMPS STRUCTURE, I thought I would devote the next two posts to excerpts from the Q & A section on organic writing. Here you go!
Q - “Why do you need to
write the whole story organically instead of plotting it out? Why can’t you
just use this process as you’re outlining it?”
A - It takes time to get to
know characters and allow them the freedom to respond to the situations you
present to them in the story.
Also, you’ll only know the
narrative weight of scenes after you’ve written them and studied them in
context. There’s no practical way to do this when outlining.
Finally, if you’re not
surprised by the twists in the story and the direction that it takes as
you’re writing it, it’s likely many of your readers won’t be either as
they’re reading it. It might take me six months of thinking about how to
resolve a certain plot question as I’m working on the novel before I come up
with a workable solution. I’m nowhere near smart enough to solve all of those
plot problems before I get started. And unless you’re a prodigy or a creative genius,
you probably aren’t either.
Q - “But if you don’t
outline, how do you know how long your book will be?”
A - I don’t. I can’t know
how many words my book will have until I’ve uncovered the story.
I might know some general
ideas based on the genre, number of point-of-view characters, the complexity of
the plot and so on, but novels are not sitcoms. The art form allows us freedom
that those who are constricted to a twenty-two minute time limit don’t have.
Don’t let a predetermined word-count handcuff you and interfere with telling
the story that needs to be told.
Q - “But won’t I have to go
through more edits if I write organically? Won’t it take me fewer drafts if I
outline?”
A - There seems to be an
impression out there that writing a novel organically takes longer than writing
one using an outline. Some people outline their books and go through dozens of
drafts; some people write organically and hardly have to edit the manuscript at
all. Some of it is skill, artistry, intuition.
Writing great fiction takes
a lot of time no matter how you approach it. I’ve had a number of professional
novelists confess to me that the more they write the less they outline, simply
because they don’t have time to write detailed outlines and still meet their
deadlines.
Writing organically doesn’t
mean approaching a story with a blank slate in your brain—you know about story,
about genre conventions and reader expectations. If you’re writing a series,
you’ve made promises in previous books that readers will look forward to
finding payoff for in the book you’re working on.
If you ask the right
questions and let the story continually unfold before you by letting the
narrative forces press in upon it, you’ll be able to write the story much
quicker than if you were to outline it and then have to make edits because
there are continuity or causality problems.
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Do You Use Beta Readers (extra pairs of eyes on your manuscript)?
My question for you is regarding 'beta readers.' I have found that as your story evolves as you write organically, minor things may change, and there may be inconsistencies that can be overlooked. Example, John Smith is a vegan. Later in the story, after several rewrites, he takes his wife out for BBQ dinner because it is pivotal to the newly written scene. While minor within the crux of the story, to the reader it would seem like a billboard (with them asking, how did the author miss this?).
So do you use beta readers? If so, how many are in your pool? And do you take their advice? Seems that everyone has an opinion of how they would have written the story. But I feel if I completely entertain their ideas, it is no longer my story.
This question brings several issues to mind for me—internal consistency, self-editing, and working with the advice of beta readers and editors.
First, you’re absolutely right that snags such as the one you listed regarding the vegan who ends up taking his wife out for BBQ would jar readers and knock them out of the story. As I edit scenes and shape new ones, I often find myself going back to make sure that I’ve tackled those kinds of glitches.
Still, mistakes can creep in. I remember one character who appeared in several of my Patrick Bowers novels being in his mid-seventies in one book and then about a decade younger in the next book. Oops. Since it was a mistake that spanned two books it was easier to miss. But still, astute readers might have noticed it if they read the books within a close time frame.
Second, self-editing. The first and most important eyes you will have on your manuscript are your own. Catching those minor glitches and mistakes is ultimately your job, no matter how many editors and readers you may have. To make sure I’ve caught those, I need to read through the whole book, usually in one day to make sure all of it is fresh in my mind.
With my latest suspense novel BLUR, I noticed that one character was listed as a wide receiver, and then later as a tight end. No readers or editors caught this and it was only on my final pass through the book that I noticed it. Don’t rely on anyone else to fact check. Readers will always blame you, and rightly so, if they find mistakes.
Finally, readers and editors. I do my best to take their comments and queries to heart, but I don’t make all the changes they suggest. Often they don’t realize that you’ve thought about the same idea months ago and discarded it because of the context or the movement of the story.
I usually give them a list of specific things I’d like them to look for in the book. For example, I give one copy to someone in law enforcement and have him look at the cop lingo, things like that. I usually choose someone to look at story flow, another at grammar, and so on.
This is your baby and, just like having a baby of your own, you’ll get lots of advice about how to raise it. In the end, you have to take all of it with a grain of salt and raise your child your way.
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Story Trumps Structure Is Now Available
I am pleased to announce that my book
on the craft of novel writing
Story Trumps Structure
is now available.
For more information, please visit
Don't Limit Your Fiction—Liberate It
All too often, following the “rules”
of writing can constrict rather than inspire you. With Story Trumps
Structure, you can shed those rules—about three-act structure, rising
action, outlining, and more—to craft your most powerful, emotional, and
gripping stories.
Award-winning novelist Steven James
explains how to trust the narrative process to make your story believable,
compelling, and engaging, and debunks the common myths that hold writers back
from creating their best work.
• Ditch your outline and learn to
write organically.
• Set up promises for readers—and
deliver on them.
• Discover how to craft a satisfying
climax.
• Master the subtleties of
characterization.
• Add mind-blowing twists to your
fiction.
When you focus on what lies at the
heart of story—tension, desire, crisis, escalation, struggle, discovery—rather
than plot templates and formulas, you’ll begin to break out of the box and
write fiction that resonates with your readers. Story Trumps Structure
will transform the way you think about stories and the way you write them,
forever.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
“Steven James is the best teacher
I’ve ever worked with. I’ve been keenly awaiting Story Trumps Structure
since I first heard it was coming out. Like Steven’s lectures, the book is an
invaluable resource for aspiring authors and published novelists alike.”
—Robert Dugoni, New York Times
best-selling author of The Jury Master
Monday, April 21, 2014
Do you prefer writing a series? Would stand-alone stories be easier to write?
First of all, the secret to creativity is not so much brainstorming, but limiting yourself. In other words, if you asked me to join you for supper and said, “Where do you want to go?” and I replied, “I don’t care. Where do you want to go?” And then you said, “It doesn’t matter to me.” Well, suddenly we’re in a bind. While it seems that we’re free to to anything, we’re actually stuck.
On the other hand, if you said, “Well, we have forty dollars in the budget,” or “We need to be back by eight so I can catch my show,” or “I’m thinking Italian,” then you have a place to start from. A limit that, in a very real sense, sets you free.
A series provides you with those limits.
I’ve found it the most difficult to write the first book in a series since I’m trying to get to know the characters, how they will naturally act in different circumstances, and so on. Once I’ve gotten to know the characters, it’s much easier to render scenes because I know how they’ll react to their struggles and circumstances.
Every story consists of promises and payoff. In a series, you have more promises that will help shape the direction of the book—carryover promises from the previous books in the series. These also help to limit you.
However, in a series you need to be careful that you don’t end up repeating scenes, situations, dialogue and so on. And, when you have eight books in a series, that becomes more and more difficult.
Still, I prefer working on a series because I can delve more deeply into each character and explore more complex issues that carry through from one book to the next.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
What is the key to emotionally captivating characters?
Emotion is evoked through empathy (feeling the emotions along with the character) and sympathy (feeling emotions for a character). We vicariously feel emotions when we identify with the deep questions that the character is asking of themselves or the world. You need to find a connection point between your character and readers’ lives.
My friend author Robert Dugoni says characters should be empathetic or sympathetic, but not pathetic. So, strive to give your character a deep struggle but not one that’s melodramatic or overplayed.
We might find it hard to identify with losing a limb, but all of us know what it’s like to feel helpless, to understand what it means to have to overcome hardship.
I suggest giving your character an emotional wound we all share, a question we all ask, or a struggle we all find ourselves engaged in. For example, the loss of a loved one, or the question about whether their choices (and lives) ultimately matter, and the struggle to find meaning or forgiveness.
Well-rounded characters also have:
- A variety of status relationships (high and low) with other characters.
- A quirk, foible, special skill or emblem that makes them unique.
- Deep desires that give them intention in each scene—an intention that readers will care about.
We want readers to worry about the character, so ask what the stakes are. For example, what’s at stake for the guy to overcome the loss of his arm? Or what’s at stake for the mom to deal with the loss of a child.
Trust your gut. If it’s telling you that your character is too cliché, then work at making him more distinctive and give him a universal quest—to love and be loved, to find freedom or happiness or acceptance or adventure. Readers can relate to those goals and make them more emotionally involved.
Monday, March 3, 2014
International Thriller Writers On-line Craft School
I am honored that I was asked to be one of the teachers for the International Thriller Writers On-line Craft School. This is a great opportunity for any writer, especially a thriller writer, to take advantage of...without having to go all the way to New York City for Thrillerfest.
Check it out: International Thriller Writers On-line Craft School
Check it out: International Thriller Writers On-line Craft School
Friday, February 14, 2014
As an organic writer, how do you approach research? I find I learn things off research that become major story elements, and yet, I have no idea what to research until I start writing the story.
I find that
research and writing feed off each other. Early on in my work on a book, I’ll
visit the location and keep my eyes open for things that grab my attention. I
do this with the premise of the story in mind.
Never lose sight of the story’s preeminence in
the balance of research and narrative. It’s easy to wow people with facts.
Emotionally moving them with the story is the much more vital--and more
difficult--task.
For example,
while I was working on my current manuscript for Checkmate, I knew that
I wanted to plant the story in Charlotte, North Carolina. So, last year I
visited the city and took a history tour. While I was there, I learned that
there are abandoned gold mines that thread underneath Uptown Charlotte. No one
seemed to know where they were, but apparently they’d been built in the early
1800s and were never filled in.
Fascinating.
That led me into researching to see if I could locate any historical documents
that told the location of the mines—and I found one. Then, as I worked on the
book, I kept in touch with experts on the history of Charlotte, asking
questions as I moved forward with the story.
It’s a give and
take of uncovering the story as you discover more about its elements. You’ll be
tempted to over-research—and that has happened with me. I believe it’s best to
work from your premise, grab hold of intriguing facts that relate to it, then
move forward and keep researching as you write.
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