Sheralyn Pratt's Blog, page 5

October 12, 2015

You Asked, So I Asked... SLCC15


In the last poll, I asked you who you were most excited to see at this year's Salt Lake Comic Con and what you would ask them, if given the chance.

Truth be told, a lot of the suggested questions were about how to make physical contact with a celebrity without coming across as a creeper. But the question that stuck out as one I wanted to know the answer to was this:

Ask Richard Hatch how it was to work on both Battlestar Galacticas, and what was different about each version.

So that's what I asked.

If you want to read Richard's response, READ THE ARTICLE HERE.
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Published on October 12, 2015 17:56

September 21, 2015

COMIC CON Poll


This week’s poll is all about the upcoming Salt Lake Comic Com, where there will be more than 100 celebrity guests mingling, signing, judging, and participating in panels. I’m going to be reporting from the event for The Super Villain’s Network all 3 days.
Who will I meet? I don’t know.
Which guests might agree to an interview? I have no idea.
So for a moment, pretend you’re me. You’re at the Salt Lake Comic Con... Which celebrity guests are you there to see, and what would you ask them, if given the chance?
This scenario is the background for this week’s poll:Who is your favorite celebrity guest at this year’s Salt Lake Comic Con?What would you ask him/her?
That’s it. You can answer as much as you like, and before Comic Con comes, I’ll print out all of the questions and ask them if I get the chance.
So ask away! And if I get the chance, I'll ask the question for you. :)Loading...
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Published on September 21, 2015 14:48

September 20, 2015

Poll 1 Results

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Published on September 20, 2015 17:31

September 13, 2015

The First of MANY Surveys


As a writer, I am constantly curious about what’s going on inside people heads. Last year, for my birthday, I put up a survey of random questions. About 100 people participated and chose to fill it out, and some people expressed a desire to see survey results.
So here I am (almost a year later), thinking it would be fun to put up a poll each week with different types of questions. Some weeks the questions might be funny, some weeks might be a little more personal, and others (like this one) might be random research.
The goal will be to post new polls on Monday, and post poll results on Sunday.
ALL ANSWERS ARE 100% ANONYMOUS.
Some weeks (like this one) you probably won’t care about the anonymity. Other weeks you might. Just know that in either case, I don’t know who is answering and I won’t put any work into finding out. I’ll just look at the answers and post the most popular results in an infographic.
Sound fun? Then answer the 5 questions below, then feel free to share this page on social media. The more responses we get, the better! Loading...
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Published on September 13, 2015 16:29

July 4, 2015

Are You Ready for Some CHEMISTRY?




If you like my next book, you can thank Kathy Habel and Rachael Anderson for getting me on the romance horse. It took me a couple of years to listen to them, but The Kiss That Launched 1000 Gifsis my (first) response to their request to write romance.

Romance is fun, but you might notice that I like chemistry just a little bit more. That, and synergy. I like it when 1 + 1 is greater than 2, and that's what I like to aim for in my pairings.

A little-known fact is that my niece named the characters of the book. I was having trouble focusing on writing the story (because I had about 50 other logs burning in other fires). I had a couple chapters written, but everywhere a name was supposed to go, I just had underscores waiting to be filled (___).

I was at a family party when my SIL asked me what I was up to. I mentioned the romance along with everything else on the list, and my niece perked up. She asked what my characters names were, and I said they didn't have names. Then I asked her if she wanted to do the honors and name them.

She was totally in, which meant describing the characters to her, and a bit about their story line. Before I left the party, my characters had names and suddenly everything started flowing.

So I guess I should be thanking Kathy, Rachael, AND Hannah for the fact that this book will be released on July 6th.

This book is for you, ladies. I hope you (and everyone else who picks it up) love it! ;)

SynopsisEach weekday from 2:00-4:00 p.m., Grace and Ashton cohost Battle of the Sexes, a radio program arguing the he-said/she-said issues of the day. Their fiery debates often have listeners wondering if there’s more to their relationship than just talk, even though Grace has been dating Phillip, Mr. Tall, Dark, and Perfect, since long before she ever met Ashton Miller. 

Yet when news comes that Battle of the Sexes is on the bubble for cancellation, Grace and Ashton need to step up their efforts to engage their audience to keep the show alive. When a charity organization approaches them and proposes that the two of them kiss for a fund raiser, Grace and Ash agree to kiss for a good cause. A kiss is just a kiss, right? 

Or can one kiss really change everything?

Get "The Kiss That Launched 1000 GIFs" Now on Kindle
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Published on July 04, 2015 16:10

May 11, 2015

October 30, 2014

Your Character Sketch

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Published on October 30, 2014 20:14

May 17, 2014

Thanks for Dropping By!

You'll notice I don't spend a ton of time here. Sorry about that.

For the moment life has me focused more on corporate writing than fictional writing, but feel free to find me on Facebook as me, or to find my business, Wicked Sassy, online as well.

I update that content nearly daily... This site, not so much. But feel free to poke around and let me know if you have any questions.

Big hugs, lots of love, and thanks for reading!!!
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Published on May 17, 2014 00:47

April 19, 2013

Impact Zones

Writers are weird. I think most writers concede this—especially fiction writers. After all, we spend long spans of time with imaginary people, listening to them and giving them as much credibility—and maybe more—than an actual person.

So we’re weird on that level.
Another thing that contributes to our weirdness are the rabbit holes we explore while researching a book or character. I can’t speak for other writers, but I spend at least as much time researching as I do actually writing. If I were writing romance novels maybe this wouldn’t be the case. Maybe all I would need then would be my imagination and latent knowledge, but I like adventure. I like urban fantasy. I love history that happened B.C., myths, legends, and gods.
So I research. And while I may like to focus way-way back, sometimes I also need to learn more about technologies and ideals of current day. So I learn about that. Then, once I learn stuff, I forget that not everyone knows it—that when I see things play out on the news I am considering things that some people are not.
For that reason, I submit this blog for your consideration. And I do it because I see people are confused on a subject: the number of civilian casualties in the Middle East due to targeted US bombings. I have discussed this subject firsthand intelligent people, elected officials, news anchors, and others—all with the same response:
A confused shrug and eventual dismissal of the subject as a whole. They have nothing, or little to say, and they don’t want to talk about it either. And when you mention the studies that claim that the US has a 2% desired casualty rate for its targeted missile strikes no one really believes it. Not really. After all, it only takes elementary math to get to the statistic that 98% of the casualties in the Middle East this year from US bombs were civilian casualties. Children. Women. First response workers. People who rushed in to help people impacted by a first missile strike only to be killed by a second strike on the same area a few minutes later.
These are not narratives the average American believes. That is not who we are. That is not what we stand for, or what we pay our taxes to support. Besides, we know our technology is crazy good!! Our missile systems are too-the-inch accurate. If they are targeting a known terrorist and end up killing civilians around him, how innocent could those people really be?
With unanswered questions like these in our minds, we chock the statistics up to anti-American sentiment and conspiracy theories and move forward.
But for those who dig a bit, moving forward with a blind eye becomes a little bit harder.
On my side, researching missiles was not politically motivated. I’m doing it for a book. And I’m a big believer that when a person picks up one of my books, if they fact check me they should land on a legit trail. It doesn’t matter if I cite a gadget or a study on Magnesium supplements. It should check out. So if I want to write a story about someone surviving a missile attack, I need to know which missile does what and how people have actually survived in real life.
Now all that was the big preamble to the picture I’m going to draw for how that statistic of 98% of undesired casualties does not baffle me, and to illustrate how, I will use the fertilizer plant explosion in Texas.
Why?
Because serendipitously enough, that explosion matches the description of a Tomahawk missile well enough to illustrate the casualty statistic.
According to my (admittedly limited) research, the impact of a Tomahawk missile is as followsPinpoint accurate targeting with controlled explosionAbsolute kill zone of 50-100 yard/meter radiusAnticipated kill zone of up-to 1 mile radius
That one-mile potential-kill radius seems a little unfathomable until you see something like this.

Actually seeing the power of the explosion makes the statistic of civilian casualties a little more fathomable, doesn’t it? The impact of the explosion does not necessarily kill people from its flying debris, although it can. It can be just as common, however, for the shock waves to rupture weak blood cells in the brain or other areas that are not strong enough to withstand such a fierce, sudden percussion. Needless to say, this puts children at high risk.
The other day a reporter finally had the guts to ask the press secretary of the White House if the most recent casualties of civilians due to US bombs counted as terrorism. This is the picture released with the story (click on the image for story, article, and audio):


To all of you who find this picture heartbreaking, trust me, I do, too. It's hard to look at, and even harder to post. But as you can see, none of these children have physical injuries. In fact, most of them look like they are asleep. Such a picture can seem like propaganda until you pair it with the power of the explosions they experience and their probable cause of death.
It is a hard subject to talk about. As Americans we’re taught that we’re the good guys. We help people. We’re the people who run past the finish line at a marathon to give blood to those who might need it. And because that’s who we are, a situation like this can be very easy to dismiss or even rail against.
I understand that. But now maybe you can also understand why some people can’t dismiss it… and why some people think we should be discussing it, at the very least, and stopping it immediately, at best.

On my side, I just wrote this so that people who know me might have a better understanding for why I care. It's because I DO believe in the propaganda of American ideals. I DO believe we are mighty. And I DO believe we have the power to stop this if enough of us dare to actually look at it. Or we can be the other type of Americans many believe us to be... the self-absorbed ones that don't care about anything until it impacts us personally.

Personally, I believe we are all better than that.

Love to all, domestic and abroad.

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Published on April 19, 2013 11:58

April 2, 2013

Subtle Awesomeness

Music is amazing, and like people, it comes in a large spectrum.

For the most part, the majority of the people in a society will all recognize the same songs. For example, everyone reading this would know Canon in D if they heard it. We'd recognize Ode to Joy within a few notes. If the Jaws theme came on we'd all know both the song and the movie. We'd all recognize Beat It if it came on the radio along with thousands of other contemporary songs.

These songs are part of a culture--you can actually test if someone has a shared cultural history with you by their common recognition of them, or their ability to sing Mary Had a Little Lamb or Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star on cue.

Then there are other songs--songs you hear, but you don't actually know. Music that lives on the fringe, even as it reaches in and strokes the culture from time to time.

These songs fascinate me. They don't have the power to hook into the minds of people like a John Williams  or Danny Elfman theme. Yet when you hear them, they touch you somehow. You like them, even as something about the song fades from your mind like a dream upon waking. When it's playing, you're in it. You like it. You feel it. It's kind of a little perfect.But when it stops, it somehow filters back into the white noise of life and you can't hear in anymore. Maybe if you really think about it, but if you don't then in a day or so you'll forget about it entirely until the next time it comes up.

A lot of artistic things fall in this realm--not just music. They are elements that are used to fill out new creations in a way that "creative stars" can't. The Superman theme song, for example, can't be used in any other movie. That's Superman's song! Just like any other horror movie would be ridiculed for using a Jaws theme. There is no flexibility in that.

Such is not the case for the creative elements that live on the fringe. They get to be reincarnated and play a part in many stories.

One song in particular that gets to do this is John Murphy's Surface of the Sun. The first movie it was in was kind of a sleeper movie that flew under the radar. Great cast, but with neither positive nor negative reviews, it kind of just disappeared into the sea of movie meh-ness.

Here is the scene the song was originally scored for (highly recommend watching):




The good-ish news is that the movie didn't make enough money to do things like pay for an official soundtrack, or pay to have exclusive rights to the music it had scored, so this theme (like many others) has kind of dandelioned into into other movies over the years. (And yes, I've just decided I like the word dandelion as a verb.)

The next movie to use the theme in an epic scene is Kick-Ass. And if reading that movie title offended you, I wouldn't recommend watching the clip below. For the record, I like the movie because it does what movie violence SHOULD do: It makes you ill. Yes, there is a lot of glam choreography--especially with Hit Girl. But the violence in the movie honestly makes you hate violence. It never truly lets you off the hook to celebrate something horrible it just choreographed. It leaves you sick and even chastises you for liking it.

That said, this clip is graphic, and if you watch to the last 5 seconds you will hear an f-bomb. So if that worries you, then just take my word that Surface of the Sun adds dramatic impact in this movie as well as a very highly trained little girl tries to save her father's life.



The song has slept a couple of years since appearing here, only to pop up again. This time it's in The Mortal Instruments trailer:


It's like homeless awesomeness just looking for a place to put in its roots, but something about it is still blowing on the wind. This is the state of 99% of creative ideas, I would guess--a perfect little seed just waiting for the right soil and the right synergy to become all it can be.

Until then, however, those ideas, like this song, just sneak around in the white noise, blowing around until they find their one true home.

And until they do, they can be fun to track :)
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Published on April 02, 2013 22:46