The Read ...
Web and Other Stuff ...
Fast or slow, the start of your novel and its speed off the blocks are always a problem. A breaking point for agent, publisher, and reader. My latest read has me puzzling this question ... because the start of next year's "novel" is breathing down my neck.
I bought Cricket McRae's mystery, Lye in Wait, at a local author's reading. She read such a vivid characterization of an interfering mother getting her way within the context of a brother's mysterious suicide that I thought she was worth buying a trade paperback for ... the first in the series. Then, I read the first chapter and wondered if I'd lost my mind.
Oh, the book started great. Opening sentence: "That Thursday morning had been going so well until I found the local handyman dead on my workroom floor."
A wonderfully simple opening line that'd warm the cockles of any critics heart. But, the character turned out to be something of a dip. In the first chapter, she committed two stupidities the likes of which'd get any teen in a horror movie killed ... or at least, lose a finger when she put it in an unknown substance by a dead body.
Since McRae didn't strike out with a third goof-up ... and then, used the protagonist's bad decisions as a point of humor in the book ... I kept reading and was rewarded with a neat, intricate plot that illustrated that having a family can be dangerous to your health.
Web and Other Stuff ...
Tamela Burhke at the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writer's asks a question I often ask myself: basically Why blog?. One of the first things she mentions is what a time-sink it is. Many of her comments seem to apply to non-fiction writers more than fiction ones. Still, you should make note of her comments. Oh, I've followed the blog too so I can read the next installment in the discussion.
Overwhelmed by all the tweets on Twitter? Roni Lauren over at *Fiction Groupie* has a simple way to organize your Twitter "follows"? -- "Authors on Twitter". You might go over and take a look.
Did you catch the Thursday (12/9) front page article on e-books in the New York Times? Romance readers seem to be buying the most e-books. (Link courtesy of the AW Water Cooler.) Seems like they don't have the courage to show the semi-salacious print covers in public. ... Don't quite understand it, but then, I've always thought Favio something of a turn-off. Maybe shy away for displaying erotica?
One more media networking thing. David Wisehart is doing a promotion experiment on Twitter -- #Sample Sunday. Visit his blog, Kindle Author, to get the details. Published, work-in-progress, short stories -- the categories are open. This is listed as an experiment on AW Water Cooler.
Did you catch the Thursday (12/9) front page article on e-books in the New York Times? Romance readers seem to be buying the most e-books. (Link courtesy of the AW Water Cooler.) Seems like they don't have the courage to show the semi-salacious print covers in public. ... Don't quite understand it, but then, I've always thought Favio something of a turn-off. Maybe shy away for displaying erotica?
One more media networking thing. David Wisehart is doing a promotion experiment on Twitter -- #Sample Sunday. Visit his blog, Kindle Author, to get the details. Published, work-in-progress, short stories -- the categories are open. This is listed as an experiment on AW Water Cooler.
Progress ...
If cleaning is progress, I'm making it. So far, it's only manuscripts ... but I have loads of paper piling up again that needs to be sorted and filed and recycled in the printer. Now ... if only some of the places where I have long standing submissions would start cleaning up their files.
Guess, I just as soon have a rejection after three months as let a submission continue to hang in the nether regions.
Trivia ...
The rest of the house needs sorting and dumping and cleaning too. Part of it gets done today and tomorrow. A friend who's allergic to cats is coming to visit.
2 comments:
Oh, that cleaning thing. Will it never end?
It hasn't gone away after 50 years ... so I don't think it will.
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