At the last meeting of Sisters in Crime at our San Joaquin
chapter, we had a visit from two charming Bay Area writers that delivered a
punch with their talks both at the meeting and at the venue that followed.
Seal of Approval |
CatrionaMcPherson
is the President of National Sister in Crime (an organization that was formed to support women writers who were not getting a fair shake in the publishing/promoting arenas) She has been nominated for an Edgar Award and brought along the Sisters in Crime mascot, Seal of Approval, with her.
is the President of National Sister in Crime (an organization that was formed to support women writers who were not getting a fair shake in the publishing/promoting arenas) She has been nominated for an Edgar Award and brought along the Sisters in Crime mascot, Seal of Approval, with her.
SimonWood
is in charge of Publicity for National Sisters in Crime. He is an accomplished author with more than 150 published stories and articles under his belt and winner of an Anthony Award. He had some writing advice that goes against the grain of what we have been hearing regurgitated in the writing community for quite a while. Some of this advice is opposite what you might have heard.
is in charge of Publicity for National Sisters in Crime. He is an accomplished author with more than 150 published stories and articles under his belt and winner of an Anthony Award. He had some writing advice that goes against the grain of what we have been hearing regurgitated in the writing community for quite a while. Some of this advice is opposite what you might have heard.
Since I began reading his latest thriller first, The One That Got Away, I thought it
would be good to pass along some of the writing advice he shared with us, which
he clearly follows with a facility of style in his novels.
Rules for series characters:
- See the character grow through the series. What is the overarching goal?
1.
You shouldn’t be able to sum up your character
in one line. You can’t describe a ‘personality succinctly. You can get to know
someone–over time.
2.
You need a ‘voice’ for that character. Take out
all that is not her/his voice in the re-write.
3.
The character sees himself and knows that he’s
not perfect.
- On the other hand, a good crime novel does not have to have good or great characters. So, plot, pace and high stakes can make it alone. Think about James Bond, Jack Reacher, Robert Langdon—they are not complicated figures, but they maintain a certain attitude—that’s about it. Yet they pull us through book after book. We don’t have to know why a personality does what he does only that he reacts in certain ways.
- A true flaw in your main character has to have a cost. You have to do it in a way that works. (Girl on a Train and Gone Girl—unlikeable characters).
- Characters do NOT have to want something. It limits where you go with the character. Your hero can have unresolved desires and wants if he is a series character.
The
take away—don’t be bound by the rules and advice of other writers, especially when
they don’t work for your story. Sometimes a new
and fresh way of writing wakes people
up. I guarantee you will find it hard to put down Simon’s novel, The One That Got Away.
Is there a rule that you break in your writing?
Or do you try and follow famous authors' rules consistently?
***
Clowning at the meeting with my gal pals:
"NO, wait, let me take my glasses off!"
"Okay, now we're ready. Everybody say cheese."
"NO, wait, let me take my glasses off!"
"Okay, now we're ready. Everybody say cheese."
6 comments:
Sure, I break the rules all the time. I don't spend much time with character description, I let it come out within the story. I usually open with the murderer like the old Colombo shows. It's more of a Why Dunnit.
Great shots, by the way!
I agree that at times breaking rules works--but I do think one needs to know the rules before they break them. I've read some books that the rule breaking didn't work at all. And maybe that's the questions, Did breaking the rule work?
Rules? What are these things called rules? I don't follow anything except good, common sense.
Atta girl! Break those rules.
Excellent point, Marilyn. You do have to know that your story works the way you've handled it. And, you can't break a rule you don't know.
Common sense is always good sense.
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