When I Grow Up...

[image error] I will write intensity a la Stephen King, dialogue a la Dennis Lehane, sex a la Anne Rice (really, she does it well) and Nora Roberts, characterization a la Ted Dekker, and emotion a la Danielle Steele (say what you will, that woman is the only author that has EVER left me in tears). I will also have a white pony, a moat filled with fun balls and snakes, a yard full of gators, and a room with a glass floor where you can view my pet sharks. Clive will be my pool boy/chauffer/toy.



I've got all my goals laid out. Now to reaching them with a perfectly logical, achievable plan. What?



But seriously, I do read these authors, who are among my favorites, because I enjoy them, and because I hope one day I'll suck up their talent through osmosis. People can say what they will about Stephen King, and they have, but the man can strangle every last drop of intensity from a scene without breaking a sweat. That is the consistent element in all of his work, whether I like the novel or not, they're all so intense I have to keep reading. I want to be able to do that. Even if the reader puts it down at the end and says "Well that sucked." He'll still feel an overwhelming need to finish the book. My goal is to force them to continue to the last page.



I'm still working on intensity, and I think I'm improving, But I think dialogue is my favorite part of writing a novel. When I see a story in my head, it's almost entirely in dialogue. This is why I often forget setting. I get wrapped up in what's happening and who is saying what and how they're saying it, that I forget they can't just float in space while they carry on. Dennis Lehane, in my opinion, is a dialogue god. I want to take that man and stuff him in a bottle until I can steal all of the dialogue he has left in him. Brilliant. I loved Shutter Island and Mystic River, but I couldn't pinpoint just what it was that I related to in his writing. As I read those books, I felt like I'd "come home" and it was just so easy and natural to read. Then I picked up Moonlight Mile (READ THIS BOOK) and the lights went on. The man writes like nobody's business to begin with, but dialogue...wow. I'm breathless just thinking about it. I finished Moonlight Mile and started reading it over again immediately. I've never done that. I would marry the man simply for his dialogue skills. No, so far he's not interested. But you know, it could happen. Clive's okay with it.



My other favorite thing? Sex. Or rather, writing about it. Not that I don't enjoy...never mind. Recently I read some articles on writing sex in fiction. Many feel it must have romance in order for it to NOT be porn. I disagree. Sex can be written very tastefully without the romance. In reality, romance rarely enters into sex. Be honest, folks. Sometimes it's simply an itch you must scratch and there ain't enough hearts and flowers in the world that can make it go away in these cases. Sure, you might love the person scratching said itch, but that doesn't mean it's romantic. I think fiction should reflect that. But I'm rather into novels that are raw in many ways. Nora Roberts, though she may be the romance queen, can write sex without romance and it is very believable and not at all pornographic. She can also write scenes that have me gagging on the unlikelines of the whole event, but you know, it happens to the best of us. Sex is a tough thing to write. Now, Anne Rice; the woman can write a love scene without anyone inserting anything anywhere. You just know it happened. And it was awesome. She can also write some pretty interesting erotica. But I'll save that for another post. I'd like to think I can write sex scenes like they appear in my head, but until I have some reviews from people who don't know I'm crazy and might tear their faces off (I kid, I kid) I won't know for sure.



An important element to writing all of the above is your characters. Characterization is crucial, as we all know, to a great story. You could have a kickass plot, but if the reader can't relate to your characters, you might well have spent your time knitting a pretty sweater no one will ever wear. Ted Dekker is an artist (most of the time) when it comes to his characters. So are the others I've listed, mind you, which is why these are among my most favorite authors of all time, but Ted, he adds a little extra to even the most minor character. When I read his work, I recall characters that appear for one paragraph. That is damn good. His major characters are so developed, I feel as though I'm reading about someone I know. As though I must have met them somewhere because I know exactly what they'll do and why. This is good. Why? Because it makes them more real when their actions make sense. Even when he throws a twist in there, makes them do something really retarded, you think, "Why didn't I see that coming? Of course he'd do that!" I think my writing is more character driven than plot driven, although I do try to keep an equal balance between the two. I don't think you can have one without the other and still have a good story, but now and then, one will outshine the other. I'd rather my characters remain with the reader. If they can't recall the ending of a story, I can handle that. If they can't remember the name of the character they just spent 300 pages with, well, there's a problem.



And emotion. I think in I Do, I managed to suck the last drop of emotion left in my body and put it into the pages of this story. I'm a very emotional person, but I'm not often expressive or demonstrative of those deeper emotions. You know, the ones I can't easily show with a well-placed curse or three. I actually cried while writing some parts of I Do. I still get weepy when I read them. I don't know that I could do that novel after novel after novel as Danielle Steele does. I've read many, many novels by Ms. Steele and I must say, she really puts the reader through hell. Emotional hell. Letters From Nam is a book I'll never, ever forget. I had to put it down several times because I just couldn't read through my tears. There are a few others, but that book almost put me on medication. I want to do that to a reader, but on all levels. I want to make them laugh, cry, scream, rant, hate me, love me, you know; all that stuff.



Those are my writing gods. This is what I try to learn from them. I've had a few readers say that this work reminds them of King, that work reminds them of Rice, etc. but I didn't know why. My writing isn't really close to theirs, not at their level and not like their style. So why did the readers connect certain works with writers I love so much? We absorb what we love to read. That's why. I take the parts that make me continue to pick up these writers, and this is how I develop my voice and style. It's how they developed theirs. We all have influences, even the greats, and it shows I think, to anyone who looks close enough.



Who are your writing gods? Why do you love them? Has your work ever been compared to a writer you love? What about one you hate?














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Published on June 26, 2011 12:21
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message 1: by Renee (new)

Renee Robert Jordan is an author I've never heard of. Is that bad? I shall check him out.

My blog is an asshole lately. Well, blogger is. I may have to do something about that.


message 2: by Renee (new)

Renee Oh, Blogger is near the top of The List.


message 3: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb A friend once said to me, "You read Robert Jordan for the world building, not for the writing." His world is definitely deep. He has a couple hundred thousand words JUST IN NOTES for each book, or so I've heard.

But the execution and the characterization needs some work. There's not one female character that I can identify with. They all seem to have the same personality: "I'm better than everyone else and know everything so I need to control/manipulate/badger them to pieces."

Okay, I'm done ranting. Obviously, the guy did something right. He's got a mega following and is worshipped like Tolkien.

Anyway, the biggest part of my writing education these last two years has been reading the books that my target audience is reading. There's a big difference between today's books and the books I read as a kid.

But of today's writers, there are two that stand out for me: Jim Butcher and Patricia Briggs. Both write fantasy and urban fantasy, and for me, their characters have transcended the pages. They have intense characters, complex worlds (without getting bogged down in the details), compelling plots, and their execution (writing) is great.


message 4: by Renee (new)

Renee Interesting Rita. I love hearing both "sides" on the reader experience. Maybe I'll pick up one of his books. I might admire the world building, but I'll admit, the overall style and characterization are what matters most to me as a reader.

PS: LOVE Patricia Briggs.


message 5: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb By the way, Robert Jordan died before finishing the series, and another author (Brian Sanderson???) picked it up to finish it. Jordan had all the notes for 3 or 4 more books, and from what I've heard, Brian Sanderson is a better writer. He's taken Jordan's world and has applied some great writing to the story. My husband says it's worth slogging through the first books to get to these last few, but I can't see me reading that much. I stopped at book 8.


message 6: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb It's probably realistic. Most woman I know (except for Renee & Wendy & Kate & a few others around here) are controlling and manipulative just like he protrays them. Women can be rather scary, to tell you the truth.

But I don't think I'm like that, and so I couldn't really identify with them. See, I view my relationship with TJ as us being a team. We depend on each other, each of us having our own strengths and weaknesses, and each of us seeing things through a different perspective. Together, we have a better chance of success than either would have had on our own.

So without a female figure I could identify with, I couldn't really get into the book.


message 7: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb I couldn't get into the Sookie Stackhouse books either because I couldn't identify with the character, and Renee and Kate loved them. I guess it all depends on the person. That's why our books can never appeal to everybody.


message 8: by Renee (new)

Renee True, Rita. Reading is very personal (IMO) and voice and style play a huge role. I can't read really flowery prose, but for some, that's the best writing there is. I tend to have a very...raw (?) style when I let myself just "go" and that doesn't appeal to a lot of readers. Charlaine Harris's style of writing in the Sookie Stackhouse novels was exactly what I enjoy. I think she showed great skill in creating characters that couldn't possibly exist that were very real.

I think I'm rambling. Need coffee. I went to the library and read a couple of chapters of Robert Jordan...sorry Henry, not for me. I did reserve the first in the series because it wasn't in and I'm going to give it a shot. But judging by what I read in those chapters, he's beyond me. I'd have to think too much.


message 9: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb I know Charlaine Harris is doing something right because no matter how much I dislike the book, I still pick up the next one and I still read it in one sitting, staying up until 3 in the morning if I have to, even if I have work the next day.

But so many times, I just want to reach into the pages and shake Sookie up a bit. Her choices usually make me so angry.

And see, I wouldn't get into such a tither about it if Harris's characterization didn't have something good about it.


message 10: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb Henry, one mistake he made in his world building, plotting, & structure is that he showed too much. His cast grew exponentially and it became hard to follow everybody and remember who they were. By book 8 (which is where I quit), you rarely see Mat, Perrin, or Rand.

But for study material, I think he's one of the best. And see, this is like the Sookie Stackhouse thing. There was so much I liked about the series that I was terribly disappointed. If it didn't have some merits, I wouldn't have cared.


message 11: by Renee (new)

Renee Interesting. I will still read at least one book. Is it one of those series that never ends though? Really, they piss me off when I have to pick up the next book just to know how the previous one ends.

As for Sookie, I agree Rita. I was so angry at her most of the time, I couldn't believe I kept reading. there were also parts where the writing was just atrocious, but still, I kept reading. She did something right, and the only thing I can pinpoint is the characterization. Perhaps the setting as well. It was very vivid for me.


message 12: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb The Robert Jordan books do have an end. There's just one more book to be released.


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