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Showing posts with label #screamapp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #screamapp. Show all posts

Sunday, August 8, 2021

Readers have different expectations

cj Sez:  My first drafts are crappy and sparse, mainly for two reasons: First, first drafts are supposed to be crappy, and second, before a screenwriter course turned me on to creative writing, I was once a corporate journalist/editor tasked with relating the gist of a story in limited line space.

  When I’m finished with the first draft, and the manuscript has its usual dearth of details, I start work expanding the details: The five senses…hear, see, taste, smell, feel…and the who, what, when, where, why, and how of the plot.

  I incorporate action descriptors, but I consider too many of them stage directions. Some writers may use them much like adverbs to “tell” their readers what to think or as a way to add words to a short manuscript.
 
  Action needs to have purpose. If describing an action doesn't contribute to the reader's knowledge of the character, scene conflict, or mood, then it’s stage direction. I write mostly suspense and thrillers and have a minimalist approach to action—using few words speeds up the pace and heightens the tension. On the other hand, readers of cozy mysteries or more narrative-based novels want, and expect, to know every detail.

  It’s a good way to control the pace of your novel. Even in suspense and thrillers, there are places where the reader needs a respite from the action. These would be the spots where I add more detail or beats. Places where I can reveal more of the characters’ growth, i.e., transformation, as the plot progresses.
 
Hint: Adding detail words slows the pace; being stingy speeds it up.

  When action is needed to set some mood for the scene, then yes, I detail the action. Sometimes I add details to slow the action and increase the tension. If I want a character to give the reader a sense of impending danger and fear, then I add more description to the action. I tend to follow the lead of my favorite authors—Robert Parker, Stephen King, James Lee Burke. Their succinct style of writing is what I like to read, and it is their fans who are my target market.
 
Hint: Write what you like to read and hit your target market.

 When I write, I take my cues from screenwriting, except I’m the actor. Since internal dialogue doesn’t convert easily to the movie screen, I tend to develop most of the characters’ personalities with action. I move through the scene in my mind and react to the events as my characters would, physically and mentally. I can do that because I’ve written their bios. I know their personalities well enough to know what they would do in a given situation. I want my readers to identify the character more by what s/he does and says rather than what I might tell them, also known as “author intrusion.”

   Fiction, non-fiction, whatever the genre, each has a different set of “rules” because the readers have different expectations and wants. The key is to make what you want to write the genre you read and analyze most often. Over time, the structure of the genre will become second nature.

  If you have any questions or more info to add to this post, please leave a comment. A reader but not a writer? Readers, that means you, too. Lyrical Pens would love to hear from you.

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Writerly/Readerly quote:
  “All writing is difficult. The most you can hope for is a day when it goes reasonably easily. Plumbers don’t get plumber’s block, and doctors don’t get doctor’s block; why should writers be the only profession that gives a special name to the difficulty of working, and then expects sympathy for it?”  —Philip Pullman

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On a personal note:
  My short story "Puppy Love" in the Christmas charity anthology FINALLY HOME is being lived by my daughter-in-law.

  Yesterday, she introduced me to her puppy Ziva, a German Shepherd mix, that had to have one of her front legs amputated two weeks ago (birth defect). Ziva is running and happy and excited and beautiful and loving, and D-I-L (who is a Special Olympics volunteer) hopes her baby can be trained as a therapy dog.

  I sent along copies of my story for D-I-L to read and think you would enjoy all
the stories in the anthology as well. The FINALLY HOME anthology stories have a universal appeal, going far beyond the Christmas theme. 

  FINALLY HOME has eight stories, all about our four-legged friends and the special people who rescue them. From funny to sad to romantic, there’s something to tug at everyone’s heart strings. The publisher donates a portion of the profits to various animal rescue organizations, and the anthology is free on Kindle Unlimited. https://amzn.to/2Y9VPpe

And now a few words from my sponsor: 

THE DAWGSTAR is available as an eBook  https://books2read.com/u/3LRRG5and as a paperback  Amazon Buy Now
DEATH ON THE YAMPA is available as an eBook https://books2read.com/u/bxe1AP
as a paperback  Buy Paperback Yampa
and as a #SCREAM, series phone app. 

  There are a lot of authors and their mystery/suspense stories available on #SCREAM. All you do is load up the app and search for the author’s name.
§§

  You can ask your local library to order my eBooks for you. You’ll need to give them the ISBN number of the title you want to borrow.

THE DAWGSTAR … ISBN 978-17369146-0-1
DEATH ON THE YAMPA … ISBN 978-1-7369146-1-8

§§

  That’s it for today’s post. You-all guys keep on keeping on, and I’ll try to do the same.

cj

P.S. TO ORDER any book of your choice on-line and support an indie bookstore, contact The Haunted Bookshop here: https://www.thehauntedbookshopmobile.com/contact-us

  If you’d like me to autograph or personalize one of my books for you, be sure to tell them, and I’ll run by the shop.
  The Haunted Bookshop has re-opened to limited hours (and they have an awesome bookstore kitty, Mr. Bingley), so if you’re in the Mobile area, you can stop and shop, too.

➜ Follow me . . .     
➜ on Amazon:    Amazon Central Author Page
➜ on Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3fcN3h6

Sunday, July 18, 2021

AGATHA AWARDS WINNERS

cj Sez: Applause and congratulations to the 2021 Malice Domestic* Agatha Awards Winners!


   When the pandemic necessitated cancelling the in-person Malice Domestic in 2020 and then again in 2021, the Malice Board of Directors decided the second cancellation gave the organization an opportunity to try something new . . . ergo, MORE THAN MALICE, a virtual Malice Domestic Festival, was born. The idea was to fill the in-person conference void “by allowing their community to gather in a virtual environment for a fun and informative weekend.”

   And it worked. This year’s winners were announced July 17 at “More than Malice,” the virtual Malice Domestic Festival.

   For your reading enjoyment, here’s a list of the winning stories and their award-winning authors (maybe your favorite is among the winners):

Best Contemporary Novel
   All the Devils are Here, by Louise Penny (Minotaur)
Best Historical Novel 
   The Last Mrs. Summers, by Rhys Bowen (Berkeley)
Best First Novel
   Murder at the Mena House, by Erica Ruth Neubauer (Kensington)
Best Short Story 
"Dear Emily Etiquette," by Barb Goffman (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Sep/Oct)
Best Non-Fiction
   Phantom Lady: Hollywood Producer Joan Harrison, the Forgotten Woman Behind Hitchcock, by Christina Lane (Chicago Review Press)
Best Children's/YA
   Holly Hernandez and the Death of Disco, by Richard Narvaez (PiƱata Books) 

 (*Established in 1989, Malice Domestic is a fan convention that takes place each year in Maryland, just outside of Washington, D.C. Malice celebrates the Traditional Mystery, books best typified by the works of Agatha Christie. The genre is loosely defined as mysteries which contain no explicit sex, or excessive gore or violence.)
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Writerly/Readerly quote:
“Once you have read a book you care about, some part of it is always with you.” - Louis L’Amour.
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   After you’ve read a book—whether mine or another author’s—please leave a review on Goodreads or Amazon or wherever you can. It shares your joy of reading with others and means the world to the author. Please and thank you.
§§

And now a few words from my sponsors:
   Someone said, it’s never too soon to start your Christmas shopping (I think it was one of my kids). These anthologies make wonderful gifts, filled with timeless stories that are wonderful reads all year long. 

   Bonus points: Part of the proceeds of three of them benefits charities.

And new for 2021...

   THE DAWGSTAR is available as an eBook 
https://books2read.com/u/3LRRG5
and as a paperback  Amazon Buy Now

   DEATH ON THE YAMPA is available as an eBook https://books2read.com/u/bxe1AP
as a paperback  Buy Paperback Yampa
and as a #SCREAM, series phone app. There are hundreds of authors and their mystery/suspense stories available on #SCREAM. All you have to do is load up the app and search for the author’s name.

§§

   Draft2Digital tells me that you can ask your local library to order my eBooks for you. You’ll need to give them the ISBN number of the title you want to borrow. I’ve listed mine below.
THE DAWGSTAR … ISBN 978-17369146-0-1
DEATH ON THE YAMPA … ISBN 978-1-7369146-1-8

§§

   That’s it for today’s post. You-all guys keep on keeping on, and I’ll try to do the same.

cj
P.S. TO ORDER any book of your choice on-line and support an indie bookstore, contact The Haunted Bookshop here: https://www.thehauntedbookshopmobile.com/contact-us
If you’d like me to autograph or personalize one of my books for you, be sure to tell them, and I’ll run by the shop.
 
   The Haunted Bookshop has re-opened to limited hours (and they have an awesome bookstore kitty, Mr. Bingley), so if you’re in the Mobile area, you can stop and shop, too.
 
Follow me . . .     
on Amazon:    Amazon Central Author Page
on Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3fcN3h6

 

Sunday, July 4, 2021

245 Years of Independence and counting

cj Sez:  Happy Birthday, U.S. of A. As we as a nation celebrate our freedoms, I wish each of my readers and your families a safe and wonderful Independence Day.

  I am grateful for and indebted to the heroes/patriots whose years of blood, sweat and tears went into creating and protecting this holiday.
 
    “The Declaration of Independence * 
 
  “We celebrate American Independence Day on the Fourth of July every year. We think of July 4, 1776, as a day that represents the Declaration of Independence and the birth of the United States of America as an independent nation.
 
  “But July 4, 1776 wasn't the day that the Continental Congress decided to declare independence (they did that on July 2, 1776).
 
  “It wasn’t the day we started the American Revolution either (that had happened back in April 1775).
 
  “And it wasn't the day Thomas Jefferson wrote the first draft of the Declaration of Independence (that was in June 1776). Or the date on which the Declaration was delivered to Great Britain (that didn't happen until November 1776). Or the date it was signed (that was August 2, 1776).
 
  “So what did happen on July 4, 1776?
 
  “The Continental Congress approved the final wording of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. They'd been working on it for a couple of days after the draft was submitted on July 2nd and finally agreed on all of the edits and changes.”
§§
   cj Sez: The American in me loves the history of why we celebrate the Fourth of July. The writer in me loves that last line.
 
  

Note: Two more Independence Day Facts:

+ John Hancock, the first signatory, was the only person to sign on July 4.

+ The Lee Resolution, also known as the resolution of independence, was first proposed by Richard Henry Lee of Virginia on June 7, 1776. It is the earliest form and draft of the Declaration of Independence.

§§
Writerly/Readerly quote:
  “Reading gives us someplace to go when we have to stay where we are.” — Mason Cooley 
§§
And now a few words from my sponsor:

   To get the SCREAM series phone app   All you need to do is download the Scream app from wherever you usually get apps. If you have an iPhone, that would be the Apple app store (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/scream-chills-thrills/id1555324728). If you have an Android phone, you can download Scream from the Google Play app store (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.stardust.scream&hl=en_US&gl=US). 
 
   You’ll be looking to download Scream: Chills & Thrills, not the title of the book. Once the Scream app is downloaded, then you can open it and search for the title or author name
§§
   Draft2Digital tells me that you can ask your local library to order my eBooks for you. You’ll need to give them the ISBN number of the book you want to borrow…I’ve listed them below.

   Order the Dawgstar from your favorite E-retailer, including Kindle, here:   https://books2read.com/u/3LRRG5   (To ask the library to borrow, tell them ISBN 978-17369146-0-1 )
 
   Buy Death on the Yampa eBook at https://books2read.com/u/bxe1AP   (To ask the library to borrow tell them the ISBN is 978-1-7369146-1-8 )
 
   The paperback of Death on the Yampa, a homegrown-terrorist adventure, is available on Amazon:    Buy Paperback Yampa

   The paperback of the international thriller The Dawgstar is available here:  Amazon Buy Now   

§§

   After you’ve read any author's book, please leave a review on Goodreads or Amazon or wherever. It shares your joy of reading with others and means the world to the author. Please and thank you.

§§

  That’s it for today’s post. You-all guys keep on keeping on, and I’ll try to do the same.
cj
 
P.S. A two-fer--TO ORDER any book of your choice on-line and support an indie bookstore, contact The Haunted Bookshop here: https://www.thehauntedbookshopmobile.com/contact-us

   If you’d like me to autograph or personalize one of my books for you, be sure to tell them.
 
   The Haunted Bookshop has re-opened to limited hours (and they have an awesome bookstore kitty, Mr. Bingley), so if you’re in the Mobile area, you can stop and shop, too.
 
Follow me . . .     
on Amazon:    Amazon Central Author Page
on Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3fcN3h6

 

Sunday, June 27, 2021

James Lee Burke shows how it's done

cj Sez:  First: Once upon a time I was ready to close my Facebook Author page on June 30 but now have been persuaded to keep it operating. The Welcome Mat is out so please keep visiting https://www.facebook.com/CjPettersonAuthor, and commenting, and questioning. I’ll be looking for you.


   “The evening sky was streaked with purple, the color of torn plums, and a light rain had started to fall when I came to the end of the blacktop road that cut through twenty miles of thick, almost impenetrable scrub oak and pine and stopped at the front gate of Angola penitentiary.” 
― James Lee BurkeThe Neon Rain  (the first title in his Detective David Robicheaux series)

cj Sez:  Setting is all important to readers (and agents) and that sentence invites the reader into the story. Every adjective works with its verb in that sentence and carries the action forward. The reader is on the road with the character, sees what the character sees, and ends up where the character ends up. A fantastic opening line to draw in readers, and a wonderful example of show, don’t tell.

   That is not to say that poetic words don’t have a place in a novel. Burke uses them also, and they still show what he wants his reader to see.

   Write your descriptions, tell your readers everything, then re-write everything in a way that shows them. How to do that, you ask? Read, read, and read some more. Get familiar with how your favorite author handles the task. It just takes practice …writing and re-writing and re-writing and re-writing, and sometimes it seems re-writing ad infinitum.

"There's nothing like rejection to make you do an inventory of yourself."   James Lee Burke

   I’ve had a few of those (makes for elephant-hide skin).

   That opening line is why James Lee Burke is one of my favorite authors. Who are yours?
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   Hope you’ve had a chance to read The Dawgstar and/or Death on the Yampa. Let me (and other readers) know what you think, okay?
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Son’s photo of a vixen and her kit, taken on Dauphin Island, AL. 

§§

Writerly/Readerly quotes: 
   “We read five words on the first page of a really good novel and we begin to forget that we are reading printed words on a page; we begin to see images.” —John Gardner (On Becoming a Novelist)

§§
And now a short message from my sponsor:

The Dawgstar from your favorite E-retailer, including Kindle, here:   https://books2read.com/u/3LRRG5


The paperback of the international thriller The Dawgstar is available here:  Amazon Buy Now



Buy Death on the Yampa at https://books2read.com/u/bxe1AP    

   The paperback of Death on the Yampa, a homegrown-terrorist adventure, is available on Amazon:    Buy Paperback Yampa

   Here's some help on accessing the suspense/ thriller/ mystery series phone app #SCREAM


   All you will need to do is download the Scream app from wherever you usually get your apps.

   You’ll be looking to download Scream: Chills & Thrills, and once the Scream app is downloaded, then you can open it and search for the title or my author name.

   If you have an iPhone, that would be the Apple app store (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/scream-chills-thrills/id1555324728).

   If you have an Android phone, download Scream from the Google Play app store (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.stardust.scream&hl=en_US&gl=US). 

§§

   If you've enjoyed reading any book by any author, please leave a review on Goodreads or Amazon or Facebook, or wherever. It shares your joy of reading with others and means the world to the author. Please and thank you.

§§

   That’s it for today’s post. You-all guys keep on keeping on, and I’ll try to do the same.

cj

P.S. Indie bookstore plug: TO ORDER my books or any book of your choice on-line and support an indie bookstore, contact The Haunted Bookshop here: https://www.thehauntedbookshopmobile.com/contact-us

   If you’d like me to autograph or personalize it for you, be sure to tell them.

   The Haunted Bookshop has re-opened to limited hours (and they have an awesome bookstore kitty, Mr. Bingley), so if you’re in the Mobile area, you can stop and shop, too.

➜ Follow me . . .     
➜ on Amazon:    Amazon Central Author Page 
➜ on Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3fcN3h6