Realms of Love, Romantic Fiction

eBook Reading and Writing

August 20, 2006

Erotica: A Creative Genre Adventure

Filed under: WhatWeRead.Com, Writing Tips, Aspen Mountain Press, What Women Read — misterseo @ 5:57 pm

Erotica: A Creative Genre Adventure

Lucynda Storey and Cher Gorman will be presenting Erotica: A Creative Genre Adventure, an hour long workshop on writing erotica. The course is a part of the Colorado Gold Writer’s Conference sponsored by Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers.Cher Gorman is a 2006 EPPIE award finalist with her debut novel, Wolf Island. Lucynda Storey has seven full length novels and two novellas published tp date. Always sensual, some are so hot they’ll “Cynge” your fingers.

The class is Sunday, September 10th beginning at 10:30 AM at The Renaissance Denver Hotel (I-70 and Quebec) in beautiful Denver, Colorado.

August 14, 2006

eBook Writing Tips: Dialogue Tags

Filed under: Writing Tips, Aspen Mountain Press — misterseo @ 6:26 pm

Sandra, the Editor in Chief at Aspen Mountain Press, has passed along another of the articles she gives to her up and coming eBook writers. This writing tip article is about dialogue tags.

Sandra is getting a rep for being an editor who cares enough to send it back as many times as it takes to get it right. Her authors love her and the eBook stories at Aspen Mountain Press show the hard work and dedication Sandra and the authors have for their craft. 

Dialogue Tags

Long ago, when we were in elementary school we were taught how to properly write a sentence of dialogue.  Quotation marks were put at the beginning of the dialogue and when we got to the end we used a comma, end quotation marks and then we identified the speaker before putting an end mark to the whole sentence.  Our sentence of dialogue in the early stages of our writing went something like this:
“I’d like to go to the park today,” said Mary.

Later, once we had this particular form perfected we added the second speaker.  The dialogue then went something like this:

“I’d like to go to the park today,” said Mary.
“I heard it was going to rain.  I don’t think it’s a good idea,” said John.

“Rain, sprain, I want to go,” said Mary.

All in all, not bad for a third grader.  But, we are aiming for professional heights.   Identifiers are another of those special spices.  We only need them occasionally to keep track of who is speaking.  Once Mary and John have been introduced in the scene it isn’t necessary to use the identifier over and over.

When writing a scene of high emotional impact, interrupting the flow with identifiers steals a lot of energy and dilutes the impact.
There are ways to identify speakers without using ‘John said, Mary said.’  In the above example we can rewrite it to something like:

“I’d like to go to the park today,” said Mary.

“I heard it was going to rain today.”  John pushed the curtain back and looked out the window.  “I don’t think it’s a good idea.”

“Rain, sprain, I want to go.”

We’ve identified the two speakers.  When we noted John, we gave him an action to break up the “he said, she said” type dialogue.  Without more than two speakers in the room we can easily follow the conversation.  Mary wants to go, John doesn’t.  Their dialogue will keep that argument going and we know which side each supports.  We could keep this exchange going for a time but after a while we need to break up the conversation just to keep our readers from getting lost or bored.

If we continued our chat with John and Mary we could add a bit of action.  How did Mary sound?  Whose point of view are we in?  What does the other look like to the point of view character?  What is the point of view character thinking?  Our simple dialogue could easily deepen.

“I want to go to the park,” said Mary.
“I heard it was going to rain today.”  John pushed the curtain back and looked out the window.  “I don’t think it’s a good idea.”

“Rain, sprain, I want to go.”
John took in the frown on Mary’s face.  He’d do near anything than disappoint her, but the thought of catching a cold or being struck by lightning didn’t appeal to him either. And in Mary’s fragile condition and having just gotten over pneumonia.  No, on this he would stand his ground.  Mary was far to used to getting her way.  He turned toward her and held out his hand.  “Mary, love, there’s an excellent movie at the Mayan I’ve been wanting to take you to see.”

Relief spread through him when she stepped forward and placed her fragile hand in his.  This once, he’d succeeded.

“Really?  Oh do let’s go.  I love the movies.”

Without identifiers at all, though, we wouldn’t have any idea who was speaking, but given the attitudes and reactions of the characters in this short scene we’ve avoided many of them.  By adding internalization we’ve also learned more about the characters.  We’ve added in a tiny bit of back story without doing a history dump.  We know Mary is pregnant, had been seriously ill and has a tendency to get her way.  We could deepen this even more using John’s perspective.  Did she whine?  Retort with anger?  Sigh in disappointment?  We also know that John is not used to putting his foot down with this woman.  From the sound of it he’s a non-confrontational.  Mary probably has him tied around her fingers.  We can already see a hint of where each will have to change if the relationship is to be healthy and survive.
There is much more to dialogue than just identifiers.  Stay tuned for more hints on having your characters speak.

Homework:

Post a bit of dialogue you’ve written, then take the same dialogue and eliminate some of the identifiers.  Is it still clear who is speaking?  If not, add some action (choreography).  If necessary, add some internalization from the viewpoint character only.
 

August 11, 2006

eBook Editor Shares Her Pet Peeves

Filed under: Writing Tips, Aspen Mountain Press — misterseo @ 5:48 pm

Sandra, the Editor in Chief at Aspen Mountain Press shared this list of eBook editor pet peeves. Writer, beware!  

Editors and agents have pet peeves.  Talk to enough editors and
agents and you discover they have several pet peeves in common.

Here are a few of them:

Dirty manuscripts (for those that don’t take electronic submissions)
Wordiness
Dialogue tags
Common place dialogue that doesn’t move the story forward
Information dumps
Incorrect use of periods of elipsis
Incorrect use of dashes
Not following house guidelines for submission procedures
Submitting material that is not suitable for the house
Over-inflated self-worth in a query
Synopsis/query that is difficult to read (too small type, smudged,
etc.),
Inconsistent point of view
Backstory
Weak characterization

(more…)

August 5, 2006

They’re More Like Guidelines

Filed under: Writing Tips, Aspen Mountain Press — misterseo @ 7:52 pm

         Lucynda Storey wrote this article on writing rules for her local RWA chapter newsletter. It’s been picked up by numerous other chapters and is added to our eBook Writing Tips category here at WhatWeRead.com

         In Pirates of the Caribbean Miss Elizabeth quoted the pirate code over and again only to be told “They’re more like guidelines.”  So are most of our rules regarding writing.  Rules have purpose and knowing when to ignore certain writing laws means having an understanding of why they exist. 
          If you’re like me, you probably have all sorts of novel writing “how-to” books stuffed in your bookcase or piled on your desk.  A few are keepers: advice in Dwight Swain’s Techniques of the Selling Writer, for instance; Stephen King’s On Writing; or even Chris Baty’s No Plot, No Problem.  These tomes keep company with Webster’s Dictionary; Roget’s International Thesaurus; various Writer’s Digest books; Grun’s The Timetables of History; The Handy Space Answer Book; encyclopedias and a host of smaller reference books.
         Then there are the classes:  on-line classes generating hundreds of emails; workshops sponsored by various RWA organizations; conferences; seminars; the list goes on and on and generally breeds piles of unweildy paper information you must keep.
         Add to your books, hand-outs and other workshop materials your private, personal paperwork and you’ve a breeding ground for all sorts of mini (or not) paper stacks.  You know, the piles that replicate with the speed of lemmings and seem to be as suicidal as those Nordic varmints, diving off the carefully constructed heaps sitting perilously close to the edge of your perpetually small desk? 
        This isn’t an essay on resources and especially not on organization (my desk has rarely been known to have a square inch of available working space).  Rather its on the “rules” those piles represent.  You may remember in Pirates of the Caribbean the importance several of the main characters placed on the pirate’s code.
         So, here are a five of those writing rules we inevitably come across:
                1.  Don’t use adverbs.
                2.  Don’t use the word “that”.
                3.  Avoid contractions.
                4.  Don’t start sentences with “ing” words or repetitive use  of  “he”  or  “she.”
                5.  Don’t end sentences in prepositions. 

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Ten Steps to Creating Memorable Characters

Filed under: Writing Tips, Aspen Mountain Press — misterseo @ 1:21 pm

Here’s more on the writing tips book Ten Steps to Creating Memorable Characters. Written by Sue Viders , Lucynda Storey,  Cher Gorman and Becky Martinez.  It will be published in September 2006 by Watson-Guptill / Lone Eagle.

Create characters that leap off the page!

Characters are the life force of any novel or movie. They drive the plot. They generate the conflict. They are the story. Ten Steps to Creating Memorable Characters is a one-of-a-kind step-by-step guide to developing truly great characters for any kind of fiction writing. This practical workbook is packed with suggestions, ideas, exercises, and lists to help plan every imaginable area in a character’s “life.” Writers, screenwriters, playwrights—everyone who writes fiction will be able to create their own dynamic, memorable characters with this exciting yet practical book.

  • Great for screenwriters, novelists, playwrights, anyone who crafts fiction
  • Practical exercises, brainstorming ideas, lists, much more

Sue Viders has written more than 20 books; her latest is The Complete Writer’s Guide to Heroes and Heroines.
Lucynda Storey has written six novels: science fiction, fantasy, futuristic and contemporary romance.
Cher Gorman is the author of the novels Dove Wolf, The Secret Truth, and Dove.
Becky Martinez, a former broadcast journalist, now writes romances, romantic suspense, and mysteries. All of the authors live in Colorado.

 

 

July 23, 2006

The Sacred Glade By Diane Charles Linford

Filed under: Aspen Mountain Press — misterseo @ 4:01 pm

The Sacred Glade  by Diane Charles Linford has been released as an eBook by Aspen Mountain Press. This is DC’s first published work since Loose-Id’s release of  Handle Me With Care .

Click More for an excerpt of this time warp romance, an exploration of what might be…  

(more…)

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