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I Hate You. I Love You.

Thursday, January 19th, 2012

Last week, I was reading a book that pulled the "I hate you. No, wait, I love you" thing and it made me crazy. IMO, it can’t be pulled off successfully. I’ve never, ever read a book or an author who’s made it work.

In the book that inspired this post, the hero and heroine hate each other. They don’t have one charitable thought about the other. Then about halfway through the story, without warning or cause, the hero and heroine are in lurvvvv. More than in love, they’re soul mates. Kissy, kissy, huggy, huggy. Sexing it up.

Um, no. I didn’t buy it, especially the way their feelings for each other turned on a dime and without any real, earthshaking events occurring.

The only way something like this could possibly work (and I still have my doubts) is a gradual thawing of relations between the characters. Maybe seeing the other in a new light and grudgingly reconsidering their preconceptions of one another.

The other idea that comes to mind that might make it workable as a plot device is having them say one thing and think another. Maybe there’s a reason why they want the other one to believe they don’t like them, but in their head, there’s admiration and positive thoughts. Maybe, but I still have my doubts.

I hated this device when I was mainly a reader, and TBH, I hate it even more now that I write. I think some writers believe this kind of petty arguing/sniping is conflict and it’s not. Conflict is more than this and true, honest-to-goodness character impacting conflict can’t turn off on a whim. If it can, it’s not a real conflict, it’s an author convenience.

I’ve read books in the past where the h/h have "hated" each other right up until the last few pages of the story. Really? And the author expects me to believe the Happily Ever After? I don’t think so.

 

Did You Get an E-Reader For Christmas?

Tuesday, December 27th, 2011

If you received an e-reader for Christmas and are looking for titles to fill it up, why don’t you check out my stories?

Kindle:

Through a Crimson Veil (Crimson City 3)
Dark Awakening (A novella originally published in Shards of Crimson)
The Troll Bridge (A short story set on Jarved Nine)
Blood Feud (A short story)

Nook:

Through a Crimson Veil (Crimson City 3)
Dark Awakening (A novella originally published in Shards of Crimson)
The Troll Bridge (A short story set on Jarved Nine)
Blood Feud (A short story)

Other E-Readers:

Through a Crimson Veil (Crimson City 3)
Dark Awakening (A novella originally published in Shards of Crimson)
The Troll Bridge (A short story set on Jarved Nine)
Blood Feud (A short story)

To check out my other books in electronic format, please visit my website.

To Epilogue Or Not To Epilogue

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

When I first wrote Ravyn’s Flight there was no epilogue. My editor asked me to write one and what finally was published is the second version of it. Originally, I had the epilogue taking place on Earth and my editor wanted it on J9. She was right. In hindsight, the story did need to end on the planet where the story took place and I like this version best of the two.

Since then, I have almost always added an epilogue to my books. I’m pretty sure all my full-length books have epilogues, but I don’t think two of the short stories do. Anyway, the reason I’ve chosen to add an epilogue is because I write action/adventure romance, sometimes there’s so much going on in the story that I think the reader needs time with the couple when there aren’t shoot-outs going on to see that yes, it is true love and to have that ahh moment. But this isn’t something I’ve given a great deal of thought to in years. Until this week.

I’ve been reading on my lunch at work and the book had quite a bit of action going on. And then it ended and there wasn’t an epilogue. As a reader, I wanted that epilogue. I needed the epilogue. I wanted to see the hero and heroine together without assassins lurking, without bullets flying.

I’m pretty sure the author thought she’d wrapped the story up just fine and didn’t need an epilogue. I thought the same thing with Ravyn’s Flight, but I was wrong and this author was, too. I’m still irked a couple of days after finishing the story that I didn’t get to see the h/h six months in the future or a year or ten years. Anything would have made me happy.

The fact that I feel so cheated is interesting to me as a writer and it has me looking at this, analyzing it. I’m fairly confident that it does have to do with the amount of action in the story, that it nearly begs for a quiet, serene epilogue, but I’m mulling a little more, trying to figure out if there’s something else going on. Writers really do read differently than normal people.

Before I really dedicated myself to the writing, I wouldn’t have taken the time to think about this. I just would have complained about it and felt cheated for a while, until some other book pushed the memory of this one from my mind. Now, though, when something does or doesn’t work for me as a reader, I find myself turning it around, studying it, trying to come up with whys.

I’m a Thwarted Book Cheater

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

Today, I was talking ebooks with a couple of my friends. I love my Kindle, I can’t say that enough, but there’s a limitation to reading electronically that makes me nuts–I can’t skip ahead. Not conveniently.

I cheat when I read. When I’m reading a paperback, I’ll skip ahead and skim a few pages farther on. I’ll jump a few chapters forward and do the same. And my favorite thing of all, I’ll jump to the end and read the last scene. Sure you can do this kind of in a Kindle, but not as easily as in paper.

Maybe I shouldn’t cheat as I read. I know readers who are appalled that I do this, but I also know there are other readers who do the same thing I do. We discussed it and the numbers seemed pretty evenly split, not that I kept a tally of any sort.

I’m not sure why I cheat ahead when I read or when it started, but I do know it’s a very ingrained habit and my biggest frustration reading ebooks. If only I could skip ahead without messing up my place in the book. If only I could skip ahead without having to hit page forward repeatedly until I get far enough ahead from where I’m at to do my skim reading.

If there’s a Table of Contents, it makes it slightly easier, but not by much. Then I have to open the menu, click on go to TOC, and then hit the hyperlink to take me forward. If there is a clickable TOC. :-(

When I talked to my friends, I also expressed my dissatisfaction with the rereading experience in electronic format. You see, usually when I reread, I don’t go through the entire book. I just hit the scenes or parts of the scenes that I really enjoyed and want to revisit. Sure, I can bookmark the spot in the Kindle, but while I’m reading, I’m either too enthralled by the story to think of bookmarking or I don’t realize that this particular scene is going to end up being a favorite. Sometimes that only makes itself known after I’m finished.

All this said, I still buy the bulk of my fiction now in electronic format. I love the instant gratification. I love having multiple choices on what to read when I have my Kindle with me. I love not having to build more bookshelves. LOL! My dad was getting a little crabby when I asked him to make me one toward the end.

Reading, Oh How I Miss It

Monday, December 8th, 2008

Once upon a time, a long, long time ago I used to read a book a day. I’d start the book at lunch time at the Evil Day Job (EDJ) and then pick it up again when I arrived home. If I stayed up too late and went to work tired the next day, it was because I had a longer book that I couldn’t finish before it was time to go to bed and I couldn’t put it down.

Way back in this time frame, I used to take week-long vacations to a cabin in Wisconsin and I would bring an enormous bag of books with me and spend all day reading. On these vacations, there’d be days where I’d read four, even five books from the time I woke up until I went to sleep. It was nirvana.

I used to be able to answer all kinds of questions about books that any romance reader on any board had. After all, I’d probably already read the story. (Unless it was historical. I gave up reading historicals when month after month they sat in my To Be Read (TBR) pile while I finished all the contemporary romances and paranormals.) If anyone was trying to come up with the title of a book that they’d read and couldn’t remember, I probably knew it.

You might have guessed that while I was reading like this, I wasn’t exactly spending a lot of time writing. You’d be correct. I wrote on Sundays. Sometimes. And for the 2.5 years before I started Ravyn’s Flight, I hadn’t written at all. (I think of this as preparation time, BTW, and not wasted years. I spent a lot of it working on becoming a better balanced, more grounded human being, something that’s helped enormously in the roller coaster world of publishing.)

And then a friend of mine got me interested in writing again. It came back slowly–a poem here, a short story there, but then one day I was driving home from the EDJ and I saw Ravyn huddled on the floor and I knew something bad had happened. I just didn’t know what and I had to write to find out. Then I had to write to learn the rest of the story and get to the end. I was dying of curiosity. Despite this, though, I still spent a lot of time reading. I devoured books–and I like to think, learned from each book I read.

Then I sold Ravyn’s Flight and things changed. I couldn’t take 18 months to write a book any longer. I learned to write during my lunch hour instead of read and I wrote when I got home. With a four-month deadline for my second contracted book, if I came into work exhausted the next day, it was because I’d stayed up too late getting my page count in.

The time between deadlines was spent on proposals for other books or on gardening or my website or promotion or a dozen other things that piled up. Reading became a luxury.

For the month of November, I finished one book and that was because I’d listened to it on my iPod while I worked on a project at the EDJ. I have a lot of books I want to read. Books by friends of mine. Books by acquaintances who bought one of my books and took the time to tell me they enjoyed it. Books that I’ve heard good things about from other people that I trust. And they all sit, waiting for me to find time to read them. I’m trying to think of the last book I actually read and not listened to, and it’s been so long, I can’t even come up with a title. That’s sad.

And don’t even get me started about the pile of magazines that I don’t have time to read. Maybe after the current WIP is finished. :-)

Quickies

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

I read my first short romance story today–one publisher calls them Quickies and another calls them Bites–and the one I read was around 40 pages or so. I’m not sure how I feel about it, TBH.

I liked the story and the hero and heroine, and the writing was good. And that’s where my problem came in–I wanted more. Forty pages just wasn’t enough. I wanted to see the story completely unfold between the hero and heroine. I wanted to know why they made the choices they made. I wanted to spend more time with them. It was so frustrating to be enjoying everything and have it come to an abrupt end.

On the other side of the coin, I don’t have much reading time so the length actually worked for me. I was able to read a romantic story with sex in less than half an hour. If it had been a full-length, single-title story, I wouldn’t have been able to take the time to read it. And if I could just figure out how to load PDFs on my iPod, the short length would be perfect to read on that rather than the computer.

And I wonder how the story premise would have held up over 100,000 words. It was a great premise, one that had me thinking cool, but could it be stretched to support a novel? I don’t know. For that reason, maybe the short length was a good thing.

It also intrigued me–I’m infamous for writing 115,000 word books. I laugh when I see the contract clause about writing at least 90,000 words because the only way that’s going to be a problem is if they won’t let me go over that number. But reading this story made me wonder if I could write something that short and have it be as satisfying a read as this one was? Because even though I wanted more, the story was a satisfying read. I don’t know. Short is not my natural length. :-)

I’m interested enough to want to try. I won’t, of course. I have another story I need to be working on that has a deadline and I don’t have any characters I want to use up on something short when I could get a full book about them. But. But what if I did like a series of little vignettes about the same characters? Kind of a serial-type thing?

Argh! Back to the WIP, the one that’s due March 1st.

Look What "Cereal Killer" Started

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

This morning shortly after I arrived at work, someone joked about another person being a “cereal killer.” I could only roll my eyes. It was funny when Susan Elizabeth Phillips used it in Nobody’s Baby But Mine, but that was ten years ago. Now, it’s so old, all you can do is roll your eyes.

I started thinking, though, when did the SEP book come out? Has it really been 10 years? That just doesn’t seem possible. Nobody’s Baby is the book that made SEP a must-buy author for me and it’s still my favorite of her titles. So, wanting to check out just how old the “cereal killer” humor was, I popped over to Amazon and I was right–the book’s been out for ten years.

But what really amazed me was that there were people who didn’t like this book. Oh, I know that there’s no way everyone in the world is going to love the same things, but this is Nobody’s Baby! I checked out a couple of these low-rated reviews and I had to wonder if they’d read the same book I had. Wow.

I was introduced to SEP at a conference a few years ago and I probably came off as a complete idiot because I had no clue what to say to her. Okay, yeah, I’m shy so I usually have trouble meeting people, but this was worse because this was SEP! I was so tongue-tied, I don’t think I even managed to tell her how much I loved her books. Probably, though, I would have looked even more idiotic if I’d started gushing because I never do that well.

Now I’m thinking, I should reread Nobody’s Baby But Mine and then after that I could reread Susan Andersen’s Head Over Heels, another favorite book of mine and one that I read over and over on my last real vacation (Jan 2002, right before I sold my first book). Of course, I don’t know when I’d squeeze the rereads in, but it’s oh, so tempting.

Anyone else have any favorite books that you love so much, you can’t understand how come everyone doesn’t love them? Seriously, I do know we all don’t have the same taste in books, but is there one book where most people agree?

The Treadmill of Life

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

Yesterday was one busy day! I spent my lunch hour at the Evil Day Job and my evening once I got home from the EDJ trying to catch up with the cyber world. I didn’t make it. I still have email to respond to and blog comments and other stuff. I started a triage method of dealing with life last night–what’s most critical that I need to handle right now?

I felt like I was running all evening–I didn’t even get to sit down and watch the Cubs game last night–yet I couldn’t seem to make any progress. I’m going to try again today. :-)

One of the things I forgot to mention about waiting in the hospital emergency room was how I passed the time. At first, I was too anxious to do anything, but once they took my dad’s vitals and everything was okay, I was able to relax some. I had one book in the car with me: Open Season by Linda Howard. I’ve already read this book a couple of times, but desperate times and all that, so I jammed it in my purse in case I needed it.

I really, really, really needed it. Like I mentioned yesterday, 6 hours. I read OS twice. Yep, twice while I waited. After the second time I read it, I looked for magazines. The only one near me was something like Home Handyman. I finished that, too. The only other reading material near me was children’s books. I was debating starting on them, that’s how desperate I was.

Conclusion? I must keep more books in the car with me just in case. This showed me the importance of being prepared.

In other news, I was interviewed yesterday by The Wall Street Journal! Not about my writing, which would have been totally super cool, but about my buying things from HSN and QVC, which was still cool, but not totally super cool. ;-) I’m hoping something I said makes it into the article and that–fingers crossed–the fact I’m a published author gets mentioned. Maybe it’ll be enough to drive people to my website to check out my books.

That Wascal Wabbit!

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

I went out to water my lilies yesterday evening and I noticed something seemed a little off on one of the plants. It took me a second to realize that all the leafs except for three at the very top had been chomped off to the stalk!

Rabbits!

Specifically one fat rabbit I’ve seen hopping in my backyard. Grrr!

This necessitated picking up the bat phone and calling in my parents. :-) My dad didn’t have the right fencing to keep the rabbit out, but he thought mothballs would do the trick. He’s going to get some and put them out for me today.

I can’t believe my plants survived cutworms only to face the destructive force of a hungry rabbit. It’s a jungle in suburbia–no one realizes just how much peril my plants are facing! The rabbit had also munched on my toad lily, but apparently didn’t like those leafs since she left most of that alone. Either that or she’d gorged on my starfighter lily and was too full to eat the toad lily.

This is war!

I had to turn the air conditioning on again last night. We’ve had really nice weather for the past week or so with dew points in the 40s or low 50s, but yesterday it became humid again. I know. Southerners would be laughing at me over this humidity level, but hey, after the nice, dry air we have been having, this was sticky.

Anyway, I was sorry that it was back to the AC at home. I get something I call an air conditioner cough and it was just going away. :-(

I read a really interesting article yesterday on one of the critical battles of the American Revolution and of the general who led it. Greene (his first name slips my mind) has apparently been largely forgotten throughout history, but if it weren’t for him, we probably wouldn’t be the US.

I also read an article about the Casbah in Algiers. I learned all kinds of stuff I’d never known before. There were two pictures side by side of the same place inside the city. One was taken about the turn of the century and the other was taken while the writer was there. It was amazing how little had changed.

Linda Howard

Friday, June 1st, 2007

I don’t know where the morning went, but it flew by and I’m running late again. Sigh.

I started reading Linda Howard’s Raintree: Inferno last night, and so far, I’m enjoying it. She’s one of my all time favorite authors and I usually love her stories and her characters.

I still remember how I found her. I was on the old Prodigy Classic and one of the topics was favorite first lines. Someone posted a line from Mackenzie’s Mountain, you know the one where Wolf thinks, He needed a woman. Bad. Or something close to that. As soon as the weekend hit, I was out looking for that book. Found it at the first UBS I went, too. They had more of her Silhouette Intimate Moments stories, but I just bought the one. I got home, read the book, got back in the car and bought every other IM the bookstore had. :-) I’ve been a huge fan ever since.

It’s really hard to pick a favorite Linda Howard book because I’ve loved so many of them, but I think it might be Kill and Tell. Marc Chastain. Oooh, baby!

Anyone else have a favorite Linda Howard book?


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