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Do you think some kinds of fiction are intrinsically harder to write than others?
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Plots of a mystery I find to be more difficult. You have to leave clues both real and red herrings yet still not give away the villain too soon. Since you are combining both I image you need lots of notes!

The trick is to find a project that is just hard enough. Difficult enough so that you really do have to bone up on Roman villas or the medical treatments in 1837, but with enough of the stuff you are quite good at to make it go.


Who knows? He might have had hidden talents. I think I could do some kinds of cold war stuff, but military hardware is NOT one of my strengths.



That could be interesting!
As for what one loves, I like reading both mysteries and historicals. My trouble isn't dislike, but just trying to make my brain fall into that pattern.



I do, I do, although I'm not a huge consumer of contemporaries, and I read plenty of other genres, including mysteries. I have wondered if I'm more comfortable with writing romances because they are more character than plot driven, and that plays into my strengths as a writer.

I love reading historical mysteries, but I know I'd never be able to handle both those elements.

I was amused and flattered when I read this in a review:
But he’s also a fine plotsmith, creating interlocking components that never get out of place so that every unexpected twist in the plot seems, once revealed, to have been perfectly logical. This is a harder trick to pull off then it seems, and is the heart of a good thriller.
The word used here, 'plotsmith', would indicate that my plot is carefully arranged, with clues strewn deliberately and carefully through the story, but my way of writing is much more organic.
So I have the antagonist pose a problem for my protagonist, where he counts on a certain spectrum of reactions (like most readers do), while my protagonist, a freelance assassin, has a different way of looking at situations and her approach to finding the appropriate (for her) solution is often radically different from what the antagonist would expect, but it makes perfect sense when looking through her eyes.
It's the same with some favourite scenes with readers. A reader mentioned that one of her favourite scenes was where the protagonist is gearing up in full assassin battle dress and, just before she leaves her apartment, she blows her pet a kiss. That's not something I planned for emotional effect or something, it's just something I saw in my mind's eyes when I wrote the scene, so I included blowing the kiss, never knowing what reaction people would have to something so 'insignificant'.
I wanted my assassin to have a pet, but nothing ordinary like a cat or a dog. I mused about a lizard, but decided on a macaw. I've been a caretaker of parrots in an upscale pet shop, so her macaw is an amalgam of those pets I cared for. One of them was crazy about skating on tiny rollerskates, another would keep asking 'Are you good?" and he wouldn't stop until you said, 'Yes, I'm good'. Another imitated the barking of a dog whenever you came close to his stand.
So I created Kourou, a macaw who barks like a dog when someone opens the door, loves skating but is accident prone and skates into the furniture, and will ask 'Happy?' until you reply with 'Happy!'. And he's a huge hit with readers, some reviewers even claim he's their favourite character. Again, not something I planned to happen.
So it's immensely gratifying if readers give you feedback like that, how they enjoy the little things that you didn't think anyone would notice or enjoy as much as you do. That's one of the most beautiful things there is, to me, that I can touch a stranger's mind and create fictional characters that become 'real' to them.

I agree. I wrote a short story for a SF anthology called Time Twist and it took me more time to research the period and specifically FDR's family, than it took to actually write it.
Easiest: Stories about the future. You can make it up and all you need to do is be consistent.

I can attest to historical fiction demanding serious research. My first two are the result of fifteen years of research.
Anything that deals with technology is going to take some knowledge of the topic. Even dealing with a foreign setting requires research and probably travel. Even if you write crime stories you have to understand the legal system.
I guess what I'm saying is if it doesn't require some effort and a deep understanding of the topic, it's fluff.



The advantage is that you can extrapolate whatever you wish and no history student is going to catch some error in facts and pummel you over the head with it. Yes, believability can be difficult, but I still have less trouble writing in the future than the past. Harry Turtledove is a history teacher and best-selling writer of alternate history books. In spite of all the research he does, he still gets "gotcha" mail from people who've spotted some small error in his stories.

Nothing wrong with fluff! Seriously, though, there are plenty of things that don't require much research and do require effort. Fantasy, for example, where the universe can be thought up out of whole cloth, BUT it must be consistent and detailed, and shouldn't be derivative. Or most non-historical romance, where you need to pay attention and avoid howlers and inconsistencies, but most of it really can come straight out of your head.
By the way, today after dutifully composing three or four hundred words of Regency-era blackmail, I gave in to the temptation and started the contemporary I have banging around (and I have a couple of others in various stages of completion I could be working on too) and got three thousand words done before my wrist started to hurt.
Now, I've written a few historicals, and I always feel like they are more work. I have a historical short story with a mystery element cooking, and it has been kicking my butt. I'm not really stuck, but it seems like a lot more work than a story should normally be. Some of it's the need for research, of course, and some of it just seems to be trying to make my brain do unaccustomed things. Does anyone have similar experiences?