Author Archive

Story structure and Gospel »

The reading was from Mark 1:35-45.
It is a perfectly plotted story arc. This is no accident.
Here’s the story (liberally rephrased):
Jesus, wants solitary time with God. He wants it badly enough to get up very early and go out to a quiet place. [OPPORTUNITY]
But the guys come and get him. They say, “What are you doing? [...]

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Wise words for fiction writers from an advertising guy turned mystery writer »

Say something smart, get their attention, say something smart. Don’t waste people’s time. Earn the desire to turn the page.
There’s a lot of wisdom in marketing and advertising writing for folks who write fiction. Here’s a nugget from a top advertising writer-turned-mystery writer. Read the whole interview at Lawrence Bernstein’s Info Marketing Blog.
Read the whole [...]

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The inner essence of genres »

Amazon.com WidgetsAt a party the other night, I asked a writer working on his first novel what kind of novel it was. He said it was a romance, and he said it with that self-deprecating expression that makes you know that he expects you to sneer.
I told him that I thought romance was a [...]

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On listening to characters talk to each other »

Mystery author David Hewson talks about a technique he uses for getting into the heads of his characters. He listens to conversations between the on ordinary subjects, how they express themselves, what opinions they hold, how they react to each other.
It looks like a valuable resource, and I plan to try it.
Heck, I talk to [...]

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Fictional name generators — a Mixmaster of characters, possibilities »

Populating a novel can demand quite a cast of characters. School friends, great-grandparents, pizza delivery boys, and the accident victim, along with the regular cast of major, minor, and walk-on characters who have to names, ages, ethnic extraction, and all the rest of the paraphernalia that comes with being alive.
Not only that, but they have [...]

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Odyssey Writing Workshop to offer online class »

A lot of fiction suffers because the author mishandles showing versus telling. Both are necessary in a piece of writing. Showing is what brings the reader into the midst of the action and makes the reader feel what the character is feeling. There are times, however, when it’s wise to skip lightly over events that [...]

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Writing for Technorati »

I’m signing up to write for Technorati. The site will launch an article aggregator.
Anyway, the process asks bloggers to post a bit of code to find out if we really own our blogs. Here it is: ctgkwxv96d.

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Chinese translations of English picture books »

Does anybody here have an interest in doing children’s picture books for the Chinese market? I heard from a Chinese Canadian who wants to work what seems to be some kind of joint venture. All I know about is what the email says, but I’ll forward the email to anyone who is interested. Email [...]

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Complete screenplay (or novel) course in one blog post »

Don’t miss this terrific analysis of a poster for Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid” at Big Hollywood. I’m blogging it partly because I want to go back and review it a few more times to get it all.

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A video on nonverbal communication »

They say nonverbal communication is 55 percent of the total message, and I believe it. In fact, if verbal and nonverbal are in dispute, nonverbal trumps. Another word for that, for fiction writers, is text and subtext.
Here’s the video.

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