Beware the Ides of November!

The Very Best Man<-Click me!

Or maybe not beware so much as be aware!  Why?  Because if you wanted The Very Best Man to go on sale, here’s your chance!  Starting November 15th at 8am CST, it’ll be reduced to 99 cents.

November 16th at 8am?  It jumps to $1.99 until November 17th when the story hits its usual price of $2.99

Why a sale on a newly released book?  Because I wanted to see how Amazon’s new promotion setup works.  Maybe not the very best reason, but a fun one anyway.

In other news, November is jam packed with activity, food, and veterans.  Should I mention furious writing?  National Novel Writing Month is something I am participating in this year in an effort to churn out Undesirable, the second in my Oregon Trail Series.  The food part, you’d guess is Thanksgiving, and would be a third of the way to correct.  My husband’s birthday and Veteran’s Day are big food days around here, too.  Mentioning veterans, it’s the month I get busy on finding veterans who need a little extra help at Christmas for our American Legion Auxiliary to help.  There are more who need just the bare necessities and a little bit of our help gives them the chance to get ahead and stop having to live afraid.

I know I’m supposed to be focused on the writing, on informing everyone about my books, and I intend to keep on doing that.  However, if everyone reading this could do a little bit extra for a food pantry this year, that would be awesome.  Yeah, there’s a lot of charities with their hands out, so just pick one you know can deliver the help to who needs it and go with that, no pressure.

In the meantime, I’ll be writing, donating, and appreciating that one guy I married who happens to be a veteran himself.

One of those days.

Maybe it’s really one of THOSE days.  The one where you keep holding out hope that things will be ok.  That after every downturn, you’ll ratchet up the ‘it’ll be ok’ in your heart and believe it.  Until the next downturn.  Still, you try again, thinking maybe this new solution will do the trick.

We lost a pet today.  Not the worst thing to ever happen to someone, no.  I’ve endured worse.  And yet, this one was tough.  The little guy had a good ten years left in him.  The one time he isn’t keen on his food, the boy loved his dinner, and I knew something was very wrong with him.  I didn’t sleep well last night.

At the vet’s first thing in the morning, not so bad, let’s see.  Back at the vet, it’s not good, maybe surgery.  During surgery, we could either try to fix him or let him go.  The fix wasn’t recommended.  So, we three said goodbye to a cat that was a friend during a scary and sad time for me.  Unconditional love from a cat?  He gave it and got it, too.

I have others I should have told before any blog readers.  It’d be the right thing to do, I suppose.  My ache is still too fresh in the heart to give the news and hear “Why didn’t you…?”, “You should of…,” and other sentences that tell me I didn’t do enough for the animal to save his life.  I’m not in the mood for it now, and don’t know if I ever will be.

I had serious plans for today of serious work on Undesirable.  I wanted to write glorious scenes set in the vast, dry plains of Wyoming along the Sweetwater river.  Instead, I’ll wait until tomorrow to zone out and give way to the movies/stories in my head.

 

So you’re the touchy-feely type, huh?

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Here you go. The cute little novella, The Very Best Man available in paperback in the next couple of days.  My bet is Wednesday.  It’s a cute, fun, and ‘can you believe this?’ kind of read.  So go, already, poke around in the author’s page I have, check out a sample, see what you think. Then, if you like the sample, you can order the paperback if the smell of ink is your thing.

Feels Like Monday

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Something fun for Monday Tuesday.  My husband has been taking Monday’s off to use up the vacation he’ll lose otherwise.  So I’m having three day weekends from now until the end of the year, which sounds fun, and mostly is.  I’m easily distracted by him, and it’s not his fault.

In writerly news, I’m having my two released books edited by someone who isn’t me.  I have a lot of readers who are reading for fun and catching the character, plot, and continuity errors.  What I’ve needed is someone to find the things that slip through, like missing words you assume are there, things corrected that have messed up other words, and the ever popular missing quotes.  As in, He said, “I don’t think you should break up these sentences.” They work better together.”

Plus, since I have a bit of a migraine, I’m totally NOT working today.  With one of these, everything wrong looks right and I’ll have to spend most of tomorrow fixing what I broke today.  Thus, it’s all no-brainer stuff on my agenda.  I can spend all day tomorrow writing, reading, and doing other brain stuff.

 

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The Very Best Man!

Ok!  The book is out on Amazon exclusively.  If there’s a demand, I’ll see about putting it on Nook, iBooks, and others in the future.

At the back of this is an excerpt from The Very Worst Man, which is 75% done and has been fun to write.  The hero is a loveable nice guy who decides to be bad to get the girl.  There’s sex, drama, murder, beer, and Wyoming, so you know it’s going to be fun.

Is anything ever fast enough?

My idea for this entry was a wa wa about how long it’s taken me to get The Very Best Man out the door and onto Kindle.

I’ve changed my mind.

Instead, I’m posting some writing rules I tend to follow.  I’ve been writing fiction of some sort for the past 22 years and have picked up a few things.  Of course, I’ve not picked up perfect grammar, but that’s why Microsoft’s Word checks for it, now.

1. Show, don’t tell.  Really.  Because when I read a lot of something told to me in fiction, I think “Bla bla bla, get to the good stuff.”  Should I blame the Age of Instant?  Historically, a lot of writers have done this, telling is what happened/is happening versus letting the story unfold before our eyes.  At any rate, during my editing process, telling always gets cut or rewritten.

2. Linking verbs are icky.  Linking verbs are passive. Or, how about, “Avoid the passive and icky linking verbs.”  In a world of CGI and the effects making writing moot, you’ll need to up the voltage on your verbs.  If you can avoid am, is, are, was, were, had, has, could, would, should, and their various had been, could be, should have’s, then do so.  There’s always an exception, though, and passives can be used in a good way.  If your character is a passive person, letting things happen to them, then putting their entire point of view in a passive form is a subtle way of conveying their state of mind without having to tell the reader.  Score one for showing.

3. Point of view.  This is fun and difficult.  I tend to struggle with this at times, being the omnipotent writer and all.  If I’ve done my work and created 3D characters, it’s not so tough to put myself in their place and think their thoughts.  Which is what POV is.  As a writer, you are not yourself in a story, you’re the character.  Is the character you?  Not unless you’re writing an autobiography.  You’ll want your character to be so real that if they knocked on your door, you’d know them instantly.  The problems in POV come from the writer forgetting a character can’t see the blush on her own face.  Another character in the story can’t know the hero’s thoughts unless she’s saying them, or he knows her facial expressions so well he can guess.  Sometimes, I keep a single POV for the entire chapter, sometimes, I divide up the chapter and give it the he says/she says treatment.  One thing to avoid is switching POV’s in the middle of a paragraph.  He’s thinking about the other person and without a paragraph break to let the reader know it, the other person says something.

George looked at Martha.  Her dress, soiled around the hem, clued him in on her morning gardening activities.   “You’ve been busy already.” He smiled at her.  “I’ve picked plenty of okra for dinner tonight,” she said, holding up a basket of greenery.

It’s crude and off the cuff, but my own example.  While not totally confusing, the lack of a paragraph break kicks the reader out of the story and you don’t want that.  Which leads to…

4. Hooks.  You need them.  Even the best written story in the world isn’t going to work if there’s nothing keeping the pages turning.  We’ve evolved past the Me Generation into the What’s In It For Me? mentality.  You need to have a pay off for the reader.  What does this mean?  The protagonist needs a secret, an ultimate goal, a reason to get from point a to point b.  Thanks to the Age of Instant and What’s In It For Me?, hooking the reader in the first five pages is the writer’s goal.  Show us why the hero is keeping a secret, has a goal bigger than himself, or needs to get from a to b.  After that, throw roadblocks/hurdles for him to overcome until the final “no one can survive/surpass this” hurdle.

5. Sex, Violence, and Drama.  Readers love all three.  Look at the top five of any list, movies in theaters, best sellers, even songs, and you’ll see how true this is.  This final point would actually be a really good discussion point.  As much as I’d like to, I have a tough time inserting gratuitous sex and violence into my work, and the drama is somewhat tough, too.  I’d love to hear from other writers who are struggling to keep OUT the three, and readers’ opinions on how much is too much or not enough.

The cover for “The Very Best Man”

The Very Best ManThis whole having to look at men and their washboard abs for a book cover has been tough!  Hours and hours spent and I didn’t even pick a shirtless guy.  I may have to go back and review why I didn’t pick any of the somewhat nude men for this.

Kidding aside, this cover perfectly shows the sweet and spicy contemporary romance I have planned for release this week.  Let me know what you think about this being a good back of the book blurb:

“Jane Lawson planned everything to the last detail.  When her sister, the maid of honor, flakes out on every task, the best man, David Wells steps up to the job.  He sacrifices his time for cake and wine tasting, dress shopping, and other duties as assigned.

David is in trouble.  Spending time with his childhood friend’s fiance has turned an attraction into love.  He wanted to bow out of the ceremony, but to walk away meant less time spent with Jane.  With no light at the end of this wedding’s tunnel, he’s not willing to give up a single second with her.”

Like it?  Don’t like it?  Nothing is etched in stone so go ahead and tell me!

It’s Monday!

Of course, since it’s 1:00am, there’s something I need to do, called ‘sleep.’

After that, though, I’m going to be cranking out words on my next novel, “The Very Best Man.”  It’s a short, sweet, sexy story.  Totally contemporary and it’s really fun.  Sure!  There will be drama, and since the time is more modern, I can get away with adding some serious spice to the story.  This will be a five day to a week detour, then I’m back at work on Undesirable.

Something odd I’ve noticed is how much Dave from “The Very Best Man” and Nick from “Undeniable” resemble each other in past histories and somewhat in looks.  While I’d rather there be variety, especially in my first two self-published books, there’s been a lot of words written between the two heroes.  After I hit my National Novel Writing Month goal of 50K words with “Undeniable”, I hit it a year later with “Undesirable”, and two years  after that with “Uncivilized.”  Then came “The Very Best Man”, the “Supermarket” screenplay, and “Fifty Shades of Chick-fil-a”, a South Park spec script.  These are just the half  to completed works.  There are other ideas with other protagonists, all waiting for me to type up their stories.

This is going to be so much fun!

Center Stage on the Mic

Welcome to my professional blog.  Here will be the latest and greatest in what’s going on in my corner of the literary world.  WordPress is so different from Blogger, so expect there will be changes, enhancements, upgrades, and other fun things happening.

What do I have planned?  A lot, really.  Undeniable, the first book in my Oregon Trail series is already available for Kindle and paperback.  Amazon is the quick and easiest way to get it, while Createspace is a great avenue, too.  I’m still thinking about handing it over for Nook readers, since I don’t like them being left out of anything.  Actually, I don’t like leaving anyone out of anything.  I’m very inclusionary that way.

But, back to the plans.  The Oregon Trail series is a set of three books that are part of my bigger series of the American West.  I have plans to write novels about the Santa Fe trail, orphan trains, and the Pony Express, too.

I’m not sure if I have ADD or just a vast variety of interests.  I do know for sure I’d love to publish a few contemporary romances that are short and sweet.  While I like the right here, right now of them, I also have at least three science fiction novels planned, probably romantic if the story dictates.  There’s a lot on the appearances can be deceiving aspect I’d like to explore in them.

But wait!  There’s more!  I have novels planned with settings in eight other countries just for the armchair traveler.  The goal is to have eight books where when the reader looks up, they’re amazed to find themselves still in their home country.

Most advice to writers has been stick to one genre, build your brand, and readers will love you.  I’d like to think people can be more versatile than that.  Comment below on your own thoughts of reading more than one genre in fiction.  Love it, hate it, or don’t care?  Tell me, because I’m totally curious.