Here's the cover for Red Tide. Patty did an amazing job. I knew it was the right one when I realized I smiled every time I opened the email.
I'm not sure what's next but I'm guessing as far as the cover is concerned, it's the back copy. I might let my husband chose the author photo. He has some very definite ideas. As long as it's not one from when I was twenty I'll probably let him make that selection.
CR: Darkness at the Edge of Town by J. Carson Black. (I'm such a slow reader.)
It's all better with friends.
Showing posts with label new author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new author. Show all posts
Friday, March 9, 2012
Friday, July 31, 2009
Character as a Seasoning
Developing strong, memorable characters who have an impact on readers is an aspiration for every novelist.
For a new suspense novelist, getting there can be a trick.
If my name were Stephen King or Dean Koontz or Mary Higgins Clark, I could lay some characterization down in the beginning pages of my novel. My manuscript would be one of those that agents and editors would grab off the pile and have all of their calls held while they gave it their undivided attention. For as long as it took.
And they would love every word.
But the name Peg Brantley doesn't have the same effect. I don't have the luxury to let readers get a sense of my terrific characters before something gripping happens.
In suspense, by a new author, the grip is more likely to seal the deal than the gripper.
It's important in every genre to thoroughly know your characters. In suspense, because I don't have the luxury of 'growing' them, it's even more important that they be fully realized characters from before the beginning. I know more about my guys than will ever make the final cut.
Find the secret strength in your main character, and it won't matter whether you are working with a hero or an anti-hero. Your readers will bond with both.
~DONALD MAASS, THE FIRE IN FICTION
And something else to consider: Take your character's greatest weakness and tie it inexorably to the plot.
The trick for a suspense novelist, is to sprinkle in characterization when no one is looking.
CR: I'm about 1/2 way through the T.L. Hines. Sometimes woo-woo is fun. And he is definitely keeping me guessing. The book is called The Dead Whisper On.
It's all better with friends.
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