In writing news, I'm readying a draft of "The Sense of Reckoning" to send to my editor in March. As part of that, I'm incorporating some input I received from my Mystery Writers of America mentor, Peter James Quirk. One of Mr. Quirk's suggestions was to liven up the first few paragraphs--I thought it was already pretty lively, considering that it involves a young man driving toward a massive forest fire to save "The Lady," but I do see that there are opportunities to heighten the drama.
Coincidentally, at the same time I was working on that, I was reading "Some Luck" by one of my favorite authors, Jane Smiley. Check out my review on Goodreads--the upshot is that although I couldn't put the book down, very little happens plot-wise. In the first half of the book, the most exciting event is that a farmer almost falls into a well. How does Ms. Smiley manage to hold a reader's (at least this reader's) attention with so little drama? (I'm now starting on her book "13 Way of Looking at the Novel" to learn her secret--and to see if any of her methods can be applied to a suspense novel.)
What's a book that contained little drama but still held your interest, and how do you think it did that? Please post your thoughts here or on my author Facebook page!
Published on February 16, 2015 16:26