As my family and I are on a covered wagon trip I won’t be posting today, I will literally be out on the range! Hope to check in next week when we will be in Yellowstone.
Cheers
Clare
– Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Everyone, it seems, is talking about Stieg Larsson and the girl with the tattoo who plays with fire while kicking the hornet’s nest. I just received an e-mail from a friend in which he reports reading that amazon.com sells a Larsson book in one form or another at the rate of one per second. Can that be true? Wouldn’t it be wonderful if it was? And wouldn’t it be wonderful if every person who bought a Larsson book bought and read another book by another author as well? But I digress. I was in a used bookstore on Wednesday and was talking to a clerk when the topic of Larsson came up as it will in bookstores these days. I mentioned other Swedish mystery and thriller authors and his eyebrows went up. I wound up making a list for him. Henning Mankell was on it, of course, as was Hakan Nesser. Both of these worthies had books published long before Larsson even thought about writing his worthy novels. I expanded the list to include Jo Nesbo from Norway, and Arnaldur Indridason from nearby Iceland. At this point, the clerk was crying “uncle” and we made our farewells. I remembered one more addition to the list as I was getting into my car, however, and had to come back into the store and tell him, because it was perhaps the most important of all: Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö.
The names Sjöwall and Wahlöö are probably unknown or forgotten to the majority of crime fiction readers, yet they are best known for writing a series of ten police procedural novels featuring a Swedish homicide detective named Martin Beck who heads up a special homicide division of the Swedish police. The series achieved great critical and (in some cases commercial) acclaim internationally; THE LAUGHING POLICEMAN, the fourth book in the series, found great success in the United States. It won the Edgar Award for Best Novel of 1971, and a film bearing very little resemblance to the novel was made in 1973, with the setting moved from Stockholm to San Francisco. At this point in time arguably more people have heard about the title than have read it, and if they are familiar with it at all it is as the result the film, rather than the book. All of the Beck books, by the way, have been translated to English and remain in print, though only one, THE LOCKED ROOM, is available in e-book form.
The Beck series and Larsson’s Millennium series have some interesting points of commonality. Sjöwall and Wahlöö were in an established common law relationship and openly collaborated on the series; Larsson was in a long-term, committed relationship with Eva Gabrielsson, who may or may not (depending on who you choose to believe, and on what day) have made a substantial contribution to the books as they exist in their published form. Larsson was an avowed Communist whose political beliefs fueled his journalistic endeavors and which in turn were reflected, though somewhat toned down, in the Millennium trilogy. The Martin Beck series is infused with cultural and social commentary from a socialist viewpoint as well, though, interestingly enough, THE LAUGHING POLICEMAN was in its own way critical of the shortcomings of the Swedish welfare state. For anyone who enjoys well-written police procedural novels, however, the Beck series is worth reading, regardless of one’s politics. If you have read Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy and despair of further volumes ever being published (the last chapter on that topic has yet to be written) you have ten books in the Martin Beck series waiting for your attention, approval, and enjoyment.
One more thing: along with each blogpost I am going to mention what I’m currently reading. Right now that would be THE DOUBLE HUMAN by James O’Neal: Mad Max meets Alien Nation, set in Florida twenty-five years in the future.
by Michelle Gagnon
So I stumbled across an interesting piece in the LA Times the other day about an editor-turned-agent-turned-entrepeneur who has hooked up with the site “OpenSky” to help authors market more than just books to their audience. She listed one intriguing example: fellow crime fiction writer Michael Koryta has a book set in an old hotel in Central Indiana known for its “Pluto Water,” which apparently has health benefits. If Koryta hooked up with Open Sky, the novel could be tied to both the promotion of the hotel and of the water (OpenSky would find a supplier to bottle and ship it).
Another example: A cookbook author not only sells books through OpenSky, but also hawks a favorite barbecue sauce and grill. The author pockets 50% of the profit, with the rest going to OpenSky and others involved in the transaction.
It’s an interesting model. While the author of the piece jokes about whether or not Steig Larsson would have considered peddling the coffee his protagonist drinks, one of the things that struck me while reading THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO was the name dropping. Salander never had a mere generic pizza, she always ate “Billys Pan Pizza” (and lots of them). Likewise, the computer she used (a Mac), the cigarettes everyone smoked (Lucky Strikes), the cell phones they placed calls from (Sony-Ericssons)…all were named repeatedly, to the point where I wondered if Larsson had been secretly hoping for product placement tie-in deals.
Television has already started experimenting with this possibility. Some of the next generation cable boxes will enable consumers to click on the screen if they like, say, the dress that a character is wearing, which will immediately place an order to their account. And voila, a few days later they’re sporting Eva Longoria’s maxi dress.
So should authors consider going to same route?
There are certainly arguments against it (as I read the article, I could almost feel the collective shudder of horr
or emanating from traditional publishing houses). Books are seen by many as more than a mere commodity. A friend of mine compared it to offering happy meal trinkets when buying an oil painting. But in this age of dwindling marketing budgets, can books afford not to think outside the box? Film and television studios have both incorporated significant product placement in their offerings to offset revenue reductions. And with more books being consumed electronically, does it make sense to integrate links for people who develop a hankering for “Billys Pan Pizza” while reading the novel? Wouldn’t a cross-marketing campaign like the one pitched for Koryta’s book benefit everyone involved?
As I read it, I tried to think about what OpenSky would be willing to sell from my books. I suspect that night vision goggles and Glocks wouldn’t be their first choice, although both figure prominently in my last book (and in retrospect, I probably should have incorporated more specific brand names). But it is set in Mexico City- a link to a tourist agency, perhaps? Or an airline? Better yet, the best security company to call should you get kidnapped?
Is OpenSky offering just another opportunity to sell out, or could it provide a much needed boost to authors struggling to market and make money off their work?
Today, our guest is my friend and fellow South Florida writer Nancy Cohen. Nancy is the author of 15 novels including futuristic romance and mysteries. For many years, Nancy and I have served as beta readers for each other’s work.
I like to discuss story development because despite all the advance plotting we do, fiction writing still remains a magical process. My agent is marketing a new mystery series proposal of mine. Here are some insights on how the story developed. It may help you with your own mystery.
I’d written the first 20 pages but then I came to a halt. I was nearly to the point where I had to introduce the suspects, but I needed to know them better first. I’d made a list of the people who were family or acquaintances of the victim. Next, I gave them each a dirty secret so they all appeared to have a motive for murder. The next step, and one at which my subconscious came into play, was to connect the suspects to each other. This is when the story really starts to get more defined. Think of the Milky Way and how the planets swirl in a big sweeping motion around the central core of our sun. They start to condense, tighten, draw together. That’s what happens in my head. The story comes into focus.
Here is where personal experiences come into play as well. An acquaintance told me she sells an anti-aging product, and she handed me a flyer. Cool. One of my characters, a pharmacist, will be a snake oil salesman who markets a false product he claims is derived from water beneath the Fountain of Youth in St. Augustine. That’s where he lives, and I’d already planned to go there on a research trip.
Then I overheard a conversation in our beauty salon. Marla Shore, heroine/sleuth of my Bad Hair Day series, would have been proud of me. One lady spoke about how someone was running down ducks in her neighborhood and the cops were trying to catch him. The police would arrest him on charges of animal abuse. I gave this nasty act to another one of my suspects. It shows his perverted character.
For my people’s occupations, I used a book called The Fiction Writer’s Silent Partner by Martin Roth. This reference is a great source of inspiration. It lists all kinds of things related to character background, plotting, slang, genre conventions, and more.
Once I had the bare bones of my suspects, I searched for pictures to represent them. Here I plowed through my character file, where I keep photos I’ve cut out from magazines. I wait for that “Ah ha!” moment when the person’s face matches my character. This inspires the physical description and maybe adds more background on the individual’s personality.
Each suspect gets a page in my notebook with their picture and a brief description. The heroine/sleuth gets a full page with what I call my Character Development Tool. This includes physical traits, strengths and weaknesses, short and long term goals, dark secret, etc. See Debra Dixon’s book: GMC: Goal, Motivation, & Conflict for excellent advice on this topic. Besides the suspects and victim, then I have to develop the recurrent characters: the sleuth’s friends, family, colleagues, and love interest. Book one requires laying the groundwork for the entire series.
Once the character development is done and the relationships defined, the plot takes shape. Then I can write the synopsis. At this point, the words are ready to spill out on paper.
Do you develop your characters before plotting the story or vice versa? Or are you a pantser rather than a plotter?
Nancy J. Cohen is a multi-published author who writes romance and mysteries. She began her career writing futuristic romances. Her first title, CIRCLE OF LIGHT, won the HOLT Medallion Award. After four books in this genre, she switched to mysteries to write the popular Bad Hair Day series featuring hairdresser Marla Shore, who solves crimes with wit and style under the sultry Florida sun. Several of these titles made the IMBA bestseller list. PERISH BY PEDICURE and KILLER KNOTS are the latest books in this humorous series. Active in the writing community and a featured speaker at libraries and conferences, Nancy is listed in Contemporary Authors, Poets & Writers, and Who’s Who in U.S. Writers, Editors & Poets. Nancy’s new release, SILVER SERENADE, is a sexy space adventure and her fifteenth title.
Recently there’s been a lot of research and discussion about the impact of the Internet on brain function.
The reviews have been mixed. Some studies indicate that surfing the Internet can enhance brain function in older people. That’s a good thing.
On the other side of the argument is a recent article by Nicolas Carr in the Atlantic Monthly, Is Google Making Us Stupid?. In the article, Carr said that his ability to concentrate is evaporating–he said that it has become more difficult to read books or lengthy articles, material that used to be easy for him to digest. “Deep reading” has become a struggle, and he blames the change on the Internet. Citing some research as well as anecdotal cases, he asserts that we are becoming a generation of word skimmers rather than true readers. We are power browsers, not researchers.
I have to say I partially agree with Carr. I’m finding it harder to battle my way through lengthy prose unless it’s so well written and dramatic that it keeps me riveted. In my case, I can pin some of the blame on hydrocephalus, because concentration is supposed to be an issue with that condition. (The brain shunt surgery I’m having later this month should fix that problem). For other people, though, the question remains: Is the Internet altering our brain circuitry in the area that controls deep, sustained attention? Is it enhancing our ability to multitask and “info jump” at the expense of more intense levels of thought and concentration?
The debate makes me wonder what the Internet might be doing to writers. After all, we’re the ones who are supposed to be creating the “lengthy, rich prose” and books for other people to read. If our brains are being rewired somehow by the Internet, what impact will that have on our writing? Has this change already begun to happen? How would we even know?
As a random check, I just browsed over to
The book is supposed to be funny, and it’s had great reviews. I’m sure it’s written in lengthy, rich prose, filled with merit. I’ve heard it was developed from, or inspired by, the author’s
Readers, meet your future.
— KL
p.s. And here’s a question–did you make it to the end of this blog post without skipping off to one of the hyperlinks? If so, God bless your un-rewired brain. If not, no worries. We all do it, more and more all the time.
Firstly, a belated welcome back to fellow blog mate Kathryn. I have only just got back on-line (why is it that free wi-fi at most places just means ‘it-doesn’t-work’ wi-fi???) and I was thrilled to see she posted this week. I am sending out good vibes from Moab, Utah, where my family and I are camped for the moment.
I just finished reading Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers on my iPad and have been musing over his proposition that it typically takes really successful people about 10,000 hours to master their expertise. In the book he does a pretty good job of dispelling the myth of most ‘overnight success’ stories, arguing that innate talent alone is not enough and that most truly outstanding people have a rare combination of talent, opportunity and support to get where they got. They also had to work damned hard – like 10,000 hours – to get that far.
That got me thinking about some of the most successful writers around and I would bet most of them would agree it took many, many years of honing their skills to get them where they are today. As for ‘instant success’ stories, JK Rowling always comes to mind but I have to confess I don’t know how long she toiled at writing before she found that one great idea for the Harry Potter series. I do know she was on the brink of poverty and wrote in a local cafe to keep warm, so things were clearly by no means easy. Is she an exception though to Gladwell’s outlier thesis? What about other so called ‘overnight success stories’ in the fiction writing world? Did they put in the 10,000 hours but we just don’t know it?
What combination goes in to creating the true ‘outlier’ writers? Talent obviously. Determination for sure. Hard work, of course…and luck, lots of luck. But what else? I wonder what Malcolm Gladwell would find if he studied the world of fiction writing…I suspect he would see a similar pattern to the other areas he examined. But do you think 10,000 hours sounds about right? What else do you think is needed to be an ‘outlier’ writer?
John Ramsey Miller
Last week I finished my work with the census and I gathered a lot of material along with a modest paycheck from the Federal Government. Over the past few weeks I traveled a few thousand miles in my Highlander, and spoke to hundreds of people, a few that were glad to see me. So now I am going to get back to writing. Then, due to some family turmoil, I found myself with my three year old grandson for a few days. My grandson lives in town 17 miles from me and he loves spending time with his Dotz, which is what my grandchildren all call me. In my last book, yet unpublished, a man inherits a grandchild, and the appearance of this new addition puts a cramp on his lifestyle and he has to go back into his violent past to save her from bad people with an agenda. For some reason I keep returning to that sort of situation–man with kids to protect. Maybe because I get what it feels like to have a child suddenly changing life as someone knows it.
Yesterday I watched Kung Fu Panda twice, made Duplo Chinook helicopters and “buildings Ha-Ha” all day. Build …demolish… build… demolish… I have no idea what a “ha-ha” is and he just looked at me like I was crazy when I asked what that was we were building and destroying. And he built several things he called “Trapolaters.” We gathered eggs and actually made it back with almost half of the eggs in a state of unbrokness. He followed me through my daily chores and we ended with him swimming in the baby pool we keep on the rear deck. I am out of practice dealing with children, but I must say I’m enjoying his company. In fact his parents told me I could bring him back today, but I don’t think I’ll get around to that today.
It’s storming today, and Rushie and I are probably going to watch Kung Fu Panda a few more times and break a few eggs.
“Every time I leave, they pull me back in.” After writing the first part of this missive I got a call from the LCO asking me to come back to work for Census special ops for three days to clean up some questionable work left by others, and so I dropped Rushie at my youngest son’s gallery while I dashed about between counties.
I had been wrestling with my killer and the kid and spending time with Rushie is helping me get into how a man, who is not a warm and fuzzy type, deals with the contradicting sides of himself. I’ve always been an observer more than a participant in life, and everyone in my family gets that. Most authors I know are outsiders more or less, and the best books are about fish out of water. The past few weeks have demanded that I actively participate in life and it’s not been easy for me, but good for me.
My youngest son is talking about getting married in June, and with that all of my sons will be family men. Life is good and life is bad, but I’m trying to make life as good as possible. So I am going to climb back into my book, and try to write the best book I’ve ever written. I just might do it this time, at least I hope so.
At sixty I’m just starting to learn about life. And maybe one of these days I may even find out what a “Building Ha-Ha” and a “Trapolator” is.