A few thoughts on BURNED (SPOILERS abound)

First, I want to say thank you to all who’ve written to tell me how much you loved BURNED. I love hearing from you guys, getting to meet you at events and am eternally grateful for your support. It means the world to me that you love the characters and come along for the ride with me every time!

But...I’ve also heard from readers that think BURNED isn’t the book I wanted to write. While I hate taking time away from wrapping up FEVERBORN, this mistruth needs to be tended to and disposed of.

BURNED IS the book I wanted to write. To those who felt so much disappointment with where the story went in this installment that they feel the only possible explanation is that I didn’t want to write BURNED the way I did, or I wasn’t in love with the story and following my muse—that’s not true. You didn’t like it. And that’s okay. But it’s not because I don’t love the book. I do.

I didn’t succumb to pressure from anyone, fans or publishing folks, to change my story after ICED. If I made any mistake at all it was in proposing the next three books while I was getting divorced and not taking the time to write a full outline. I pitched one book and stated “plus two more”. Because I’ve been with my publisher for as long and successfully as I have, they accepted it that way. Then, as I began writing ICED, I realized I had some problems to sort out, like: who the hell is going to narrate when Dani becomes Jada? There was also the larger problem that Mac and Barrons’s story had to unfold alongside Dani’s. I couldn’t keep them offstage that long. My mistake: I didn’t see it going in. A bigger mistake would have been to stick to a bad plan just because I made it.

A few say there’s talk that ICED wasn’t well received so I was pressured by my publisher to change the story to ‘appease’ fans. Neither of those assertions is true. ICED was well received by an enormous number of readers, in fact it’s the best reviewed book of my career, and over the past two years has sold very well. My publisher and I are extremely happy with it. If I’d wanted to appease fans with a book, I know how. I did things in BURNED that I knew would upset readers. The goal isn’t to make readers mad, there’s a purpose and that’s simply where the characters and story are right now.

If you think it was hard reading Mac feeling lost and uncertain of herself now that she’s no longer the MVP and has something brewing inside her that terrifies her—it was even harder writing it. It was similar to slogging through her eternal grief at the beginning of SHADOWFEVER. I began to wonder if it would ever end. Yet in the overall story arc, her grief, like her loss of direction right now, had and have purpose. You may not like or even see that purpose, you may feel strongly that I should have written it a different way. You may feel strongly that I should stop writing Mac. Or stop writing Dani. Neither is going to happen.

I follow my muse and my muse put Mac where she is at this time for reasons. I understand that those reasons are not apparent to others because only I know where the story is going. And I can see how that’s hard for the reader.

To those who were upset with what happened to Dani, it WAS foreshadowed in ICED. Dani was always going to go through those silvers and come back older. And as someone else. Jada was there in my head all through ICED, talking in the background, fighting to come out. I adore Dani. It kills me to see her contained in any way. But Jada is only a prelude to the real Mega. I always intended to give Dani to the reader (and hopefully make you adore her)—then take her away in this brutal fashion. The only concession I made in BURNED (and I said this last year) was making Jada 19 instead of 17. Was that because people complained? No. 17? 19? Not that much difference. In terms of freedom with her sexuality, a subtle nuance. It made writing her more interesting to explore and I need to be utterly riveted by what I’m writing.

Was there controversy over Dani’s age in ICED? Sure. There was controversy over Mac in DARKFEVER. There was controversy over the rape in FAEFEVER. There was controversy over the end of DREAMFEVER. There’s constant controversy because my books end in cliffhangers. If I were interested in stopping controversy, I’d stop writing cliffhangers. Hell, I’d go back to writing my stand-alone romance novels

My publisher has never tried to control my writing in any way. They make soft suggestions and if I tell them no because I have a plan, they trust me. I’ve been with Random House for fifteen years, and my current editor for the entire Fever Series, and have never had better champions.

If anyone thinks that writing the Fever books has been easy, I can tell you it’s been a battle every step of the way. First with the readers who wanted me to continue writing stand alone romance, then with my publisher when DARKFEVER sold badly for the first year or two. Then with my publisher when BLOODFEVER sold badly. They, too, suggested I go back to writing what we knew sold: stand alone romance novels with happy endings and no cliffhangers, new couple each time. I just kept saying: wait. I know what I’m doing. And they waited. And they—and you—trusted me. I finished the series and you guys took SHADOWFEVER straight to number 1 on most lists in the country. I’m incredibly proud of those five books.

I’m also incredibly proud of ICED and BURNED. I’m not saying that because I ‘have to put a good face on things.’ I don’t have to do anything I don’t want to do. That’s a rule I live by. I can’t wait to finish FEVERBORN and FEVERSONG, bringing the second story arc that was always coming, to the resting place I need it to achieve.

Voltaire says writing requires a certain complete self-renunciation and self immersion. It does. I do it for me. By myself. To satisfy my muse, my artistic drives and desires. I offer it to the reader and when I’m lucky and all the stars line up—they love it. And when I’m not, they don’t. But reader response will never change the story I’m writing for this reason: I’m not writing my stories to be rich and famous. That was never my goal. I’ve been blessed enough in a challenging field to be fairly successful. But that’s icing on the cake. The cake is the writing. I write because I have these damns stories in my head—and half the time I don’t even understand why I’m so obsessed by them. I write to get them out. And I love it when the readers get it, when they see the intricacies of the web I weave, when they fall in love with the characters I love so much myself.

But when readers don’t like one of my books—accusing me of not having written the book I wanted to write because they didn’t get the book they wanted to read is not only absurd—but not true.

At the end of every writing day, I answer to one person: the bitch muse that drives me bugfuck. She is the only one who must be obeyed.

But back to the happy stuff: thank YOU for reading my books, for feeling passionately about them, for loving to hate and hating to love the people I can’t stop thinking and writing about. At the end of the day, I feel I have the best job in the world and can’t wait to see what tomorrow’s writing brings. That’s the feeling I live for, and you guys make it possible!

Xo
Karen
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Published on February 13, 2015 14:35
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message 151: by Alison (new)

Alison McDonough I devoured Burned! I loved it and am eagerly awaiting the next!!! I adore the Fever series!!!! JZB <3


message 152: by Makenna (last edited May 24, 2015 06:04PM) (new)

Makenna I have read plenty of series on the field of fantasy, and not one kept me after 7 books. Your books are original, the characters have ups and downs, the field of a distopian Dublin is amazing and has limitless stories to tell, and what I love most about this series, is that I haven't yet seen any traces that your writing has been diluted by fans/publishers/lack of skill. Thank you Mrs Moning for all the lovely hours I've had with your books, and I am looking forward for more!


message 153: by Gayle (new)

Gayle I LOVE your books and don't think that you, as the author, need to apologize or explain to anyone!


message 154: by Cathy (new)

Cathy Rawls I've loved all your books. I have no complaints at all with how the story is unfolding. Well, maybe one complaint---- you've ruined me for all other series LOL Seriously, you are the best!!


message 155: by Karelle (new)

Karelle Sen Karen, I love all the Fever books and have to say they are my all time favs! It took me about a year after reading these books to finally start falling in love with other characters again BUT they will never be Mac and Barrons! or Dani and Ryo. I know you will do great with the rest of the books and can't wait to read them. It's just been really difficult to find something as good as fever and it's frustrating lol. Thanks for all you're great work you've made reading really enjoyable for me and I wish you all the best.


message 156: by Linda (new)

Linda You are a brilliant author. When I read one of your books I become so lost in them that I live in this World you created, taste and feel what your characters are feeling. I become so invested in them that when the book ends it feels like I've lost my friends - until the next book comes out.

You have such a gift, and I'm so happy that I found you even in this litte Town in Sweden =) Looking forward to the next book!


message 157: by Titania (last edited Nov 23, 2015 05:40PM) (new)

Titania Remakes the World Love this series, I support your choices. I love all the characters and love to see them in it.

Reality-based relationships: I"m glad you are showing that Mac, Dani, JZB, Ryo, & relationships are more reality based, there are no true Happily-Ever-Afters, just more work hopefully getting to a good place, then more work to keep it. I hope JZB & Mac can hammer-out a longterm relationship with emotional vulnerability outside the Pri-ya-bubble where it was safe.

Dani: not troubled by her age whatsoever in Iced, she is not "vulnerable" and could kill whomever tried to victimize her. I loved & snickered at the "mystery-bogeyman-in-the-room" with males focusing on her, and dancing around that "mystery" interest. (NOTE: they are NOT aggressors, nobody is being victimized.) (Touching on types of comedy: Un-PC, Uncomfortable, Dark, or Sick&Wrong.) Dani never had a traditional Western Modern Childhood, & was a child-soldier/killing machine. I can RELATE to Dani's NOT conforming to the Perpetual-Infant-Modern-Child-Role..I was like the daughter "Wednesday" in Addams family, very macabre, serious, scientific, vengeful. Due to farm-&-hunting-life, and 70's sexual content hidden around parental homes (and my parents not wanting to demonize sex & make it extra attractive), my friends and I developed a very strong scientific research interest in SEX at a VERY early age, although we knew to very discreet about it. While planning our class reunion, other female peers confessed that as young teens, 14, in the 70's, they were like super-hormonal female Super-Wolves, extreme aggressors targeting adult males with all their tricks to relentlessly target & torture them, get them alone. Many times they bagged their quarries after long & difficult hunts. They went on to live very functional, happy lives.


message 158: by CC (new)

CC What a fascinating post! I'm a huge fan of your work and really appreciate your honesty about the writing process! Whew! Seems like a tough road to tread when you're the only one that knows the route. Cheers and write on!


message 159: by Lkscarbrough (new)

Lkscarbrough Hi Karen I have read all your fever series thus far and none of them were offensive to me. In fact they all were entertaining and kept me reading to late in evening. Very few series has accomplished that. Keep writing and don't listen to the nay Sayers!


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