I finished my HARD CASE sequel last night. THE LURE OF HELL
came in at close to 98,000 words. Today, I of course start the editing process.
Editing reminds each of us storytellers marketing our word plots, how important
loving what we write, and the characters we create, really is. I can only
imagine what it would be like if I hated everything needing to be honed into a
saleable product, or if the story bored me to tears, or the characters didn’t
strike an emotional connection with me. THE LURE OF HELL is experimental in a
number of ways. I ended up enjoying the experience of writing in first person
point of view for John Harding, Book One, HARD CASE. In Book Two, I’m
introducing two new cold blooded killers to John Harding’s Oakland crew, Clint
Dostiene and Lynn Montoya. The fact no publisher or agent would touch HARD
CASE, and I did send it out nearly seventy times on the query trail, enhances
the fact it is selling very well on the indie market. No publisher or agent
would ever touch THE LURE OF HELL either. I don’t head hop in THE LURE OF HELL,
but I use more than one POV – a mortal sin in the writing world. I have a day
job. Even at my newly advanced age of 63, I can still crank out the repair
jobs, so I can have fun writing as I commit publishing mortal sins. :)
The second observation I realized over the weekend that
should have hit me a while ago is what a distinctly visual society we’ve
become. This may be old news to my writing friends, but it’s something that
didn’t strike me until my books began selling. People can go to the movies,
sucking up the ‘Die Hard’ franchise, Avatar, Avengers, The Expendables, The
Transformers, etc. without any questioning of believability. They suspend
reality like a worn out Kleenex. When they read a fiction novel, however, they
suddenly go nuts if the author creates a larger than life character or plot.
It’s like, ‘hey, you can’t do that’. Well, oh hell yeah I can. I luckily grew
up reading Tarzan, Conan, James Bond, Matt Helm, John Carter, and superhero
comics of all kinds.
I realize I should be wringing my hands, wondering whether
someone who can watch a multicolored robot turn back and forth into a car and
a rocket firing death machine without blinking an eye, will be able to handle a
larger than life character like my icy cold killer, Lynn Montoya in
THE LURE OF HELL. I take my entertainment where I can get it. No wringing of
hands for me. Think about it. Authors worrying about the same people eating up goofy
looking, blue skinned, dragon riders going ‘wow, that’s so realistic’ – but reading
about a larger than life fictional character or plot-line throws them into open
mouthed, stunned disbelief. So funny. :)
Anyway, it’s on to editing and formatting for me today... and of course fixing cars and trucks. :)
Actually, there are a lot of writers who switch character POV's, while writing in 1st person. A tremendous amount of YA authors do that, but also several adults. Melissa Marr is doing it with third person in her upcoming release. Each chapter has a different character POV.
ReplyDeleteThere are no hard and fast rules on that particular element anymore. It all comes down to how well you pull it off. :)
Jordan, it's been done before, but no publishing houses or agents will sanction it, unless they figure to get the keys to the kingdom from a known entity. :)
ReplyDeleteOnly time will tell on how well I pull it off, my friend. :)
The Lure of Hell - I love this title!
ReplyDeleteCongrats on finishing it!
Thanks, V.
ReplyDeleteI'm hoping I can get a cover to match it. :)
I'm just about halfway through Hard Case 1. Enjoying!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Charles. I'm starting your 'Micro Weird: Tiny Tales of the Strange' tonight.
ReplyDeleteBernard, I am loving the attitude, lol!
ReplyDeleteLove the new title, waiting for a kick-ass cover, & thrilled about your growing success.
Onward!
It's a comfortable feeling, Raine. Once I stopped having to consider agents and publishers, writing became more fun than ever. Success is fleeting, but we may as well enjoy it when we get a little. :)
ReplyDelete