Archive for April, 2007
At the moment I’m in the obsessed by story stage. Mainly I’m wondering if the new heroine has enough issues. True love can not run smooth. Boy meets girl, falls in loves, and lives happily ever after doesn’t make a good story. Nice if they are your parents or best friends. But not the stuff of great fiction.
What makes a story delicious are tortured characters. Outer conflict is all well and good and critical to keeping the tale moving along at a good clip. However, inner conflict is what rivets the reader, forcing her to stay up too late because she can’t sleep until the real story question is answered.
In romance the heart of the question is always the same. What keeps the heroine from loving the hero and living happily ever after with him? By the end of the second act she usually admits, at least to herself, that she loves him madly. Yet, there is still something standing between her and happiness. Some issue that is believable for this particular couple and yet ultimately resolvable, through growth, sudden insight, or a twist of fate. Hmmm.
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 2:32 pm |
The current story is zooming along, a novella length erotic romance. I do realize it’s insanely ambitious or just plain insane to target multiple publishers when I’ve yet to sell a single title.
But crazy might be part of the writer’s job description. Consider how many aspiring writers pour their hearts’ blood onto the hard drive day after day, facing such odds requires a certain amount of willingness to disregard reality.
I like to read different genres. I like to write different genres. There are others who’ve blazed this trail before me. When I consider how nutty it is to choose writing for publication as a goal, then writing more than one type of story seems like a harmless aberration.
Current year’s goals
1) Study characterization to add depth to the story’s cast
2) Three submissions
3) In roads in the TBR shelves
Progress report:
Done reading the stack of books related to characterization – Creating Unforgettable Characters deserves a second read, still not reading it. Hmmm distinct lack of discipline here.
Three submissions sent!
Working on number four (see word meter number four)!
Status: still waiting to hear from the publishers :(
Timeline:
Number One: four months and two weeks – estimated response time from publisher 3 months
Number Two: One month and one week – estimated response time from publisher 1 month
Number three: Three weeks – estimated response time from publisher none*
*Publisher did acknowledge the submission, but included a warning not to contact them about this submission. :( Word is they got lots of submissions (new line) and are sorting them out.
TBR shelves are continuing to thin – the row of books behind the front stacks are now visible on all shelves. . .
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 5:05 pm |
This may not be, strictly speaking, about writing craft. Since it’s my blog, I’m not strict. Which is actually today’s topic – lack of strictness.
For the past few weeks, I’ve spent as much time on emails, loops, chats, and groups as I’ve actually written. The other day I was chatting, in real life, with an incredibly generous and brilliant woman, who mentioned an agent would like to see something fresh from me in a couple of months. Panic began seeping into my bones at the thought. I don’t write all that fast and I certainly don’t polish all that quickly. Writing a new eighty thousand plus word story will take me eighty days. And that’s after it’s clear in my head – characters, plotting, synopsis, the whole shebang. A process that takes at least a week. Then the polishing takes another two weeks and goes so much better if I can set the raw manuscript aside for at least two weeks first.
In order to have something fresh ready to go by the end of summer, I should have started a couple of weeks ago. Or I could pare down the time spent on cyber socializing and increase the daily word count to fifteen hundred. Writing is what I want to do. Therefore writing needs to move back to number one on the priority list.
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 2:02 pm |
I’m continuing to make inroads into the TBR shelves. My Goal, of course, is to thin the ranks enough to justify buying more books. Have I mentioned there is a Barnes and Noble within walking distance? I try to avoid crossing their threshold because I’m not to be trusted in a bookstore. But sometimes I weaken.
First up was a Harlequin Superromance; Brenda Novak’s Stranger in Town , frankly I never got the title. But it doesn’t matter because the story is lovely. Yes, for any skeptics, it is category full of introspection and predictability. Which is exactly why fans like them. Superromance is part of the home and family line, the heroines are frequently older than the twenty-something stars of straight romance. There are usually children present as part of the equation. The story focuses on the heroine’s journey to true love. This particular title is part of a series Ms. Novak created set in Dundee, Idaho a small fictional town.
Next was a Samhain anthology, Caught by Cupid . The collection included three Valentine’s themed stories. Gwendolyn Cease’s Be Mine is the red-hot version of the classic friends to lovers tale. Bianca D’Arc’s Forever Valentine is erotic vampire love. Maya Banks Overheard is another take on the friends to lovers with the added spice of two friends conspiring to please one heroine.
Last was Jude Deveraux’s A Knight in Shining Armor. A time travel historical,which predates the famed Outlander. This book was urged on me by the charming proprietor of one of my favorite bookstores. She declared it one of her all time favorites. I’ve already admitted I’m not to be trusted inside a bookstore. Naturally I bought the book, but having read Ms. Deveraux before with indifferent results, the title lanquished for a few years. Ms. Deveraux writes well and is most likely intensely romantic, judging by her fans. But alas her story choices fail to connect with me. There’s way too much detail of day to day events that fails to charm me because I’m not engaged with her characters. But this boils down to personal preference and is not a reflection of her story telling ability. I don’t care for Hemmingway either.
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 4:49 pm |
Music helps me enter the story world. For each project I create a playlist. Since I’m mired in a Microsoft world and am running windows media edition as my operating system I have a fair sized library of window’s media formatted songs.
There are a few artists or groups that I like so much I’m willing to buy their latest CD when it’s released. But that is a small group, about the same size as the auto-buy book list. :) Since I adore music, I have a continual list of single songs I want. Downloading music via the internet should be perfect for me.
Hasn’t worked out that way. First no itunes, the site is user friendly, the selection terrific the price competitive, but their songs can not be converted to windows media files. At least not by me. Rhapsody, MSN music, Napster all demand a monthly subscription fee for the privilege of buying songs – thanks anyway. Lets not even discuss the problems with free sites.
Yahoo music failed. When I took the time to complain to their customer service department – they were unable to offer a solution. But the customer service agent did move my problem up the chain of command.
Here’s some free customer service advice for Yahoo, start from the assumption that your site may have a glitch and the customer complaint may be valid even if your experience has proved this to be unlikely.Beginning with premise the customer doesn’t know how to enter her billing information puts you at odds with your customer. This is not a good thing.
Wal-mart offers this service but I’m not running over to their site to see if I can make it work. I’ve already spent way too many hours in an attempt to buy a single song. A process that shouldn’t be this hard. I may have to give in convert to itunes. Grumble, grumble, grumble.
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 4:20 pm |
This past week I got a big chunk of a line edit for submission number two. A couple of new-to-me grammar rules are now firmly embedded. Sheesh! There’s no end to this stuff. Time consumming but good for me and for the story.
I’ve been planning and plotting a fourth submission. Cleaned up a few pages of submission number one based on the newly acquired grammar rules learned from submission number two’s edit. Thinking about entering another contest with submission number one (a favorite editor is the final judge), but would much prefer getting feedback from the lovely editor who has already has the story in her TBR stack. ;)
Current year’s goals
1) Study characterization to add depth to the story’s cast
2) Three submissions
3) In roads in the TBR shelves
Progress report:
Done reading the stack of books related to characterization – Creating Unforgettable Characters deserves a second read, still not reading it though. Got sidetracked by research reading this time.;)
Three submissions sent!
Plotting and planning stage for number four!
Status: still waiting to hear from the publishers :(
Timeline:
Number One: four months and one week – estimated response time from publisher 3 months
Number Two: One month – estimated response time from publisher 1 month
Number three: Two weeks – estimated response time from publisher none*
*Publisher did acknowledge the submission, but included a warning not to contact them about this submission. :( Word is they got lots of submissions (new line) and are sorting them out.
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 4:53 pm |
Having multiple submissions was on this year’s list and I’m so pleased with the results I want to do more. But not at the expense of each story being less than as perfectly polished as I can manage. Nor do I want to edit the life right out of my stories.
Learnng to be objective about my own work is one of my goals. No, it is not on the official annual goal list. Maybe it should be.
Here’s a short list of advice that I’ve found helpful for gaining objectivity.
1) Print it out – editing hard copy helps me
2) Read aloud, noting any rough spots, another technique that works for me
3) Color code the text (one color for dialogue, another for setting, another for action, another for emotion and one for introspection) it makes what’s missing vividly clear, very useful for me, especially the first few times
4) Put the story away for a couple of weeks. Time aids my objectivity.
So how do you all go about taking off the starry-eyed creative writer hat and pulling on the steely-eyed editor cap?
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 6:20 pm |
Last week I read and e-book. Deadly Games by Jaycee Clark. The beginning was a little slow. This is a common complaint on my part, which I blame on excess movie watching and thriller reading. Impatience with scene setting and backstory is a personal character flaw and one I need to work to overcome. The information given in the opening chapters is vital to understanding the story. I would have preferred it slivered in as needed, but this is a quibble.
After the opening, the story moves swiftly, coming alive with engaging characters, a taut pace and genuine suspense. There’s really nothing like reading a new author telling a gripping a story. The unpredictability factor adds delicious tension. This story was one of the best suspense titles I’ve read in a long time. Technically, it is romantic suspense, but the romance while believable is definitely secondary.
The title is available here as a downloadable file www.newconcepts.com or it may be purchased as a print book here.
Karen Marie Moning’s Darkfever was next off the TBR and the sole paranormal title on my shelves. I’m still thinking about this book. But I’ll give you my preliminary reactions.
Ms. Moning is one of my very select autobuy authors. She’s moved away from her base story of a time travel romance into a new area, which I will categorize as paranormal quest.
Missing from this new adventure are several elements I was fond of: ancient Scotland; romance; and hot sex. Present and fully accounted for is the ancient other world of the fae; a naive heroine; a brooding alpha hero; and a compliment of fully realized villains. This is book one in a new series, book two, Bloodfever is scheduled for release in October.
Ms. Moning’s writing voice is in fine form and the story came alive for me. Unlike her earlier books, where each title stood alone quite nicely. This tale ends with more questions than it begins.
I will read the next title, but I feel no compulsion to own it. Darkfever marks first rift in our author/reader relationship. Can she win me back? I suspect I’ll have to read the entire series to find the answer.
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 3:12 pm |
I’m still thinking about contests and whether or not they do anything good for me. I get opinions on my writing, but due to the blind nature of the arrangement I have no idea how qualified those opinions are. Only finalists are judged by an editor. The possibility to getting a second chance for a beloved story is definitely a plus mark in the pro contest column.
I’ve seen hopeful writers enter contests year after year and do well, yet remain unpublished. Then there are those who spring directly from contest to publication.
From my limited personal experience I can testify that judges vary wildly in their assessment of the same story. The most recent contest included four judges per entry. Two wanted to buy my book (as soon as it comes out), one gave high marks,and one ranted.
Oddly enough, or maybe not, the harshest of the judges had the most to say. She started her remarks by being offended by the instant attraction between my hero and heroine. A situation she found credible only in perverts. My list of shortcoming grew. Purple prose, verbosity, poorly handled POV shifts,and wandering body parts (she strongly suggested I replace eye with gaze)are just the highlights of the entry’s sins. She went on to assure me that that story had tons of potential.
According to the score sheet, this a published romance author. There was only one issue that bothered three out of the four judges.
Since judging is so subjective, is entering contests worthwhile?
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 2:52 pm |
The update on the current publication quest continues shortly. But first a bonus bulletin on contests. :)
Earlier this year, I entered my second contest. For a modest sum, this contest offered the unpublished writer four critiques on the first thirty pages of the manuscript.
As with last year’s contest, the score were divergent. Three out of the four judges liked the story and offered small suggestions for improvement. One judge really didn’t like anything. The most critical of the four judges gave me a total score that was less than half of the average from the others. Again, as happened the previous year the lowest scoring judge had the most to say. From her comments I sensed that she sincerely wanted to help me.
But here’s the problem with accepting her guidance – the other three judges didn’t share her concerns. I have the sense that if I were to act upon her suggestions, then I’d be ruining a story most readers would enjoy.
This is not to imply that the story could not be improved. It could and will be. Where two or more of the judges mention the same issue, I’m going to listen carefully and try to improve that area.
Of course, it would be even nicer to have input from the lovely editor. . .
Current year’s goals
1) Study characterization to add depth to the story’s cast
2) Three submissions
3) In roads in the TBR shelves
Progress report:
Done reading the stack of books related to characterization – Creating Unforgettable Characters deserves a second read, still not reading it though. Now I’m indulging in the TBR pile, precariously clinging to the reading plan.
Three submissions sent!
Status: still waiting to hear from the publishers
Timeline:
Number One: four months estimated response time from publisher 3 months)
Number Two: four weeks estimated response time from publisher 1 month)
Number three: one week estimated response time from publisher none
Number three did acknowledge the submission, but included a warning not to contact them about this submission. :(
Posted by Evanne Lorraine @ 8:03 pm |