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Thursday 31 March 2011

Edit Now Close to the End

Hornsea+Writers+by+Weronika+Dziok+(lo+rez)Image by stuartaken via FlickrAfter a few days suffering with a co-occurrence of my CFS, I've found it difficult to get on with the edit. But, today, after a good rest, I've really been able to plough on. I'm now ready to work on Ch14 of book 2 and the pile of paper MS that has decorated my desk for so many days is now down to a mere 19 pages. I'll soon be able to start the actual writing. But, before then, there are still a few chapters on file that were the original starting chapters of book 2, so those will now have to be absorbed into the body of the work before the new stuff can progress. Much as I enjoy the editing, I'm really eager to get on with the writing again.
Today has been mostly quiet with little activity, apart from that above. I walked with Kate to town and helped her open a student account at the bank, so she can now start the process of applying for her student funding. And I took some stuff out of the loft to pack into damp-proof boxes to keep it from spoiling up there in the cold. The fence at the side of the house has finally succumbed to the weather and partly disintegrated, but we've already engaged a local man to build a new one; he'll be coming toward the end of the month, so we'll have to put up with the rickety arrangement until then. The strong blow from today was the final straw for a fence that should really have been replaced some years ago.
Last night, at my writing group, I read out a short story I'm intending to place in an anthology of romantic tales in the near future. It went down well, with a suggestion I alter the name of the heroine; something I agreed with after a short discussion.
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R.S. Charles, Author, Interviewed.


Please tell us a little about yourself, Richard.

Hi! My ‘nom de plume’ is R.S. Charles and I am a writer and novelist.
I developed an interest in language from a very early age. My mother was German and my father was Cornish, so I was fortunate enough to spend my early childhood in both Germany and England. I also lived in Paris and Montpellier in France. I consider myself to be a true European.
After an English Grammar School education, I went to University and studied French, which I subsequently taught, along with German and English, for 25 years.
Having spent 15 of those years as Head of a large Modern Languages Faculty in an inner- city Community College, I wanted to experience life outside the harness of education, so my long-term partner and I decided to buy and run a small, seaside Hotel.
We are presently living in our home town, Plymouth, England, with our two dogs and cat.
So, how would others describe me? I can be grumpy, feisty, and impatient, but also sociable and fun. Being a typical ‘Libran’, I like things to be balanced and fair. I still have a strong sense of humour, though life’s trials and tribulations have knocked it about somewhat. I am a very open person and narrowly missed out on the post of Deputy Head in my first school by naively telling the interviewing panel that fellow staff referred to me as the ‘Head of Light Entertainment’ because I made them laugh so much! I still impersonate many of them to this day.

Tell us about Whispering Palms in a few sentences.

It’s a mystery/suspense novel with a ‘liberal sprinkling of racy romance’. The intrigue takes place on a remote, paradise island where the rich and anonymous entertain themselves by interfering in each others’ lives. It’s the first novel in a Trilogy. And with such suitable ingredients as glitz, glamour, greed, lust and blackmail, all tangled up in a web of hypocrisy and deceit, readers seem to think it would make a good mini-series/soap. I do too!

How did you come to write this particular book?

During our time at the hotel, I used to sit at the Reception desk and give a running commentary on the comings and goings of guests to amuse myself and others. One afternoon, I decided to write down my observations. I sat at the computer, allowed my imagination to embellish my thoughts, turned fact into fanciful fiction, and was soon surprised to find I’d produced enough material for at least one chapter of a novel. After that, there was no going back.

If you have a favourite character in your novel, why that particular one?

I love all my characters, ranging from the English aristocrats to the enigmatic, foreign visitors who meander in and out of their lives. I couldn’t pick a favourite. I don’t really feel there is a main character. After all, “Everyone has a past and everyone has a reason to be there.”

Where and when is your novel set and why did you make these specific choices?

The year is 1986 and the setting is a remote, secluded island in the Caribbean. Both these facts are of little real significance since, being so isolated, the cloistered community regards itself as merely being ‘somewhere in the Tropics’, does not take kindly to strangers or change, and chooses to continue to live by old Colonial values. It is as though they permanently exist in the 1950s, or even a time previous to that.

To be honest, I gave little thought to the actual time or place for the novel. I am a visual writer and simply imagined an opulent, old-fashioned lifestyle in a sun-drenched paradise. Perhaps the Caribbean cruise we went on in 2001 subconsciously came to the fore? It’s been my only taste of luxury…so far.

Where and how can readers buy your book?

"Whispering Palms" was originally published in hardback in 2010, and can be purchased ‘on-line’ from all Amazon outlets, WH Smith, (cheapest option), Barnes & Noble, and Waterstones. Some branches stock it ‘in-store’.
 
It is also now available for immediate download on Amazon Kindle, for PC, iphone, pad, Android and other e-readers, as well as cell phones/mobiles and Smartphones, and Nook from Barnes&Noble.
(I love phrases like ‘on-line’ and ‘in-store’. Currently, one can apparently throw any incongruous words together to suit one’s purpose! And now I’m sounding too much like one of my characters!)

What qualities are needed by a successful writer?

I could trot out all sorts of clichés, but nowadays, the whole notion of ‘successful writing’ in relation to novels largely depends on publishers and marketing. Some of the best writers probably aren’t ever published. Their work is still languishing in slush piles. And a good number of those who are published don’t receive enough exposure and get lost in the crowd.

Writing is like painting. You have to immerse people in what you have created. You have to appeal to someone. Different writers do this in different ways. And what appeals to one reader/publisher won’t necessarily appeal to another. All your efforts can be of little value if you don’t get the breaks, regardless of your qualities!

What is your working method?

I have the luxury of usually being able to write when I want to write. There is no routine. If the creative juices are flowing, it’s time to write, even in the middle of the night. If not, forget it! As far as actual ‘method’ is concerned, I always maintain that “Whispering Palms” wrote itself. I merely had some characters and an idea. Each time I sat down to write, the characters took over, did what they wanted to do, said what they wanted to say, and dealt with the situations they had put themselves in. Most of the time, I consciously had no idea what was going to happen until I wrote it.
It sounds glib, but planning and organisation were sketchy. Knowing one’s characters is the key to gauging their reactions, behaviour, dialogue, and the outcome of their follies. Also, being a mystery novel, there was a puzzle to solve. All the clues had to be there. Readers hate random reasoning. Fortunately, everything seemed to fall into place at the big reveal. Perhaps more by luck than judgement!
A Senior Police Officer wrote to me and said he had read the novel while he was off work, incapacitated with a bad back. He openly admitted all the clues were there, but he’d failed to solve the mystery. He had one desperate question, but I won’t tell you what that was. The answer is the key to the puzzle! I have to say, however, that I am finding the sequel to “Whispering Palms” more difficult to write. Having had one novel published, the pressure seems greater. This time I have a plot and I know the ending. Getting there is not so easy!

What single biggest mistake do beginners to writing make?

Putting all you have into your first novel!

To what extent are grammar and spelling important to a writer?

To me, any writer must endeavour to be a master of the basic mechanics of his or her own language; spelling, grammar, punctuation. It allows confidence and fluency. Relying on correction devices provided by modern computers is risky. Context and dialogue may influence style and language. “Fragment-consider revising” flashing at you is not helpful when you know what you have written is perfectly acceptable!
We all need to check spelling now and again, but if one word is spelt in several different ways, a writer should at least know which one to use. And if you leave it all to editors, they may re-write your book. BUT, we are all human. Commas are still somewhat of a mystery to me. And somehow the phrase ‘piece of mind’ found its way into the hard copy of “Whispering Palms”. Ooops!

How much revision of your MS do you do before you send it off?

I like to edit as I go, and give my work another thorough edit and check when finished. You can, however, do too much and change things for the sake of it, only to change them back again to what you originally wrote. I find working to an edit deadline quite pressurising. I made the mistake of working for long periods when I was tired. Not to be advised!

To what extent do you think genre is useful in the publishing world?

Genre allows writers to be pigeon-holed and readers to easily select what they wish to read. It can, however, be restrictive. If we wish to sell books, should we write what we wish to write and are comfortable with, or should we ‘go with the flow’ and venture into other genres which appear to be in vogue at the time? Many writers cross genre boundaries nowadays, and some readers never explore genres they are not familiar with. They rely on their favourite authors to continually produce novels which are similar in style and content to previous work. They like to feel ‘safe’.
One of my proofreaders told me that mystery novels ‘were not for her’. (Un)fortunately, she enjoyed “Whispering Palms” so much, she forgot she was actually proofreading it!

Marketing is often considered a chore. What is your opinion on this issue and how do you deal with it?

Don’t get me started on this one! I’ll say no more!

How do you know where to begin any given story?

Just pitch in. Start at the end, or in the middle. Have flashbacks. Look into the future. Run two storylines simultaneously. The rules have gone out of the window. Who knows? The main thing is to hook the reader from page one.

What sort of displacement activities keep you from actually writing?

I’m quite lucky, I suppose. I write when I’m in the mood. Of course, everyday life interferes now and then. We have dogs to walk, chores to do, and we even socialise occasionally. I don’t really have hobbies as such. Writing has become my passion. I watch much less television now, but networking on social websites can waste an inordinate amount of time and become totally addictive.
Recently, my writing has been greatly hindered by a dodgy, temperamental computer. On days I’ve wished to write, it has refused to work, and when it felt like working, I didn’t have the inspiration. I had a new ‘mouse’, and a new ‘memory’ installed, as both were not functioning properly. And then, to top it all, the hard drive mangled itself, out of the blue, a week later. The air was blue. I hadn’t saved the last 4,000+ words I had written to a back-up memory stick, only to the hard drive. I assumed I didn’t immediately need to. The computer had just been repaired. I have lost two pivotal chapters of my sequel, which I really laboured to write. They were leading to the big ‘reveal’ and had to be ‘just right’. Eventually they were.
Unfortunately, these chapters cannot be retrieved. Professionals have tried. I still haven’t come to terms with that. All that work for nothing! It’s going to take me a while to face the challenge of trying to re-create something I was really happy with. There’s a lesson there for everyone.

Do you have support from family and friends, or a writing group?

Generally, my friends and family are encouraging. At times, however, they think I become too obsessed with what I’m doing. And they are right!
I belong to ‘on-line’ writing groups for social interaction and moral support.

Is presentation of the MS as important as agents and publishers suggest?

I think you should give it your best shot. You are presenting yourself and your work. Often, you only have one chance to make an impression. Even then, you are competing with everybody else. If your presentation is good that’s at least something in your favour.

How long does it normally take you to write a novel?

It varies. “Whispering Palms” took about a year, but I also had a job at the time. I’ve nearly finished my WIP, and that has taken about the same time. The present project has been plagued by different problems, mostly to do with technology!

What are your inspirations?

Pictures, photographs, paintings, places, people, films. I am, as I have said, a visual writer. I need to be able to see and feel what I am writing about, albeit in my imagination. Before that can happen, there will have been some sort of stimulus. I am a great ‘people-watcher’. Well, that’s my excuse for spending so much time in cafes.
When I initially re-read the chapters I have now ‘lost’, I experienced exactly the atmosphere I wanted to be immersed in. Something has to inspire a writer to find the right words to fluently create the scene (s)he wishes to convey, rather like an artist needs to find exactly the right blend of colours to produce the picture (s)he wishes to paint.

If there’s a single aspect to writing that really frustrates you, what is it?

Having to use a computer! As much as it helps, it hinders. My scribble is not presentable enough, and publishers have ‘guidelines’.

Is there an aspect of writing that you really enjoy?

I really enjoy the experience of losing myself in the world of my imagination. If you can’t be where you want to be, write about it. If you are not able to be who you want to be, write about it. If you’re not doing what you want to do, write about it.

Do you think writing is a natural gift or an acquired skill?

I don’t want to discourage anyone, but in my opinion, we are all born to do some things well. Other things we have to work at. I spent years interviewing people for teaching posts in my department. Some candidates were extremely well qualified or had years of experience, but they weren’t natural teachers. Other candidates were less experienced, less well qualified, but had that ‘special something’. I knew it as soon as I met them. And that was not about me, it was about them. They may have needed a little guidance, but they were definitely born to teach.
Writers are the same. Some slog away and need to acquire skills to be competent. For others, it’s a breeze. Anyway, who’s to judge? If it’s what you want to do, and readers like what you write, who really knows how you got there? I doubt there’s ever been a good writer who has not been rejected many times!

What are you writing now?

I am just completing the sequel to “Whispering Palms”. It carries directly on from the last page of the first novel.

Do you have a website or blog that readers can visit?

My website,  www.mymysterybooks.com   has just be revamped and contains all the necessary useful links to blogs and further information. Please check it out.

Given unlimited resources, what would be your ideal writing environment?

A luxury mansion, surrounded by palm trees, overlooking the beach on a sun-drenched tropical island. Sound familiar?

Where do you actually write?

We live in a rambling period property, and I used to have the back bedroom, (complete with bed and cosy chairs), overlooking our lovely garden and neighbouring park as my office. But now, needs must, and it has been converted into a guest room. I’ve been relegated to a corner in the back ‘parlour’! The desk and computer fit snugly into the alcove which looks out onto an old, cobbled lane.
Thank God for my imagination!

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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Pachyderm

RhinocerosImage via Wikipedia
Pachyderm: noun - Any thick-skinned quadruped, elephant, rhinoceros, hippopotamus; thick-skinned individual.

‘At the zoo, Jennifer was always eager to visit the pachyderms, finding the folds and creases of their hides utterly fascinating and revolting.’

‘You pachyderm; you’re so impervious to criticism and adverse comment, Adolph, that it’s no wonder people don’t like you.’

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Wednesday 30 March 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Oakum

Kuniyoshi Utagawa, Caulking boatsImage via Wikipedia
Oakum: noun – loose fibre obtained by untwisting old rope and used in caulking ships' seams –originally the picking of this was a job for convicts.

‘Martha sneezed as she plucked the oakum from the pile of old rope, her fingers sore from constant plucking at the rough fibres.’

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Tuesday 29 March 2011

Edit Now on Book 2

Hands collaborating in co-writing or co-editin...Image via WikipediaHad a bad day yesterday (not much better, today). But it meant I did no editing yesterday and have managed only to do the first chapter corrections and amendments. There were a lot more of these for this chapter, as it was originally part of Book 1 and I had to build in hints and clues about the preceding book for those who won't have read the first one. But that first chapter is now done; another 14 to go before I can start the writing again; something I'm really looking forward to.
No editing tomorrow, as I'll be at my writing group, reading them a short story I'm hoping to place in a proposed anthology of gentle romance I intend to publish shortly. Watch this space, you lovers of love stories.
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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Nacelle

A hot air balloon takes off from Royal Victori...Image via Wikipedia
Nacelle: noun - the basket of a balloon or car of an airship; streamlined bulge on an aircraft holding an engine; similarly shaped part of a motor vehicle.

‘Gloria gasped in horror as she watched the nacelle of the hot air balloon catch fire and set alight the canopy until the whole flying device was a falling ball of flame.’

‘Customising his SUV, Gordon covered the front end with multiple nacelles until it looked as if the vehicle had a bad dose of boils.’

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Monday 28 March 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Macabre

Dance macabreImage via Wikipedia
Macabre: adjective – gruesome, grim, originally in dance macabre.

‘Janet, after appearing the Rocky Horror Show with her friend, Brad, felt his jokey arrival at her flat, covered in blood and with a fake human arm in one hand, was a little macabre, so she sent him packing.’

By the way, those of you who regularly follow this series will find it interesting to click on the post tile. I usually link to a different dictionary or word site each time, though I have to circulate, as I'm running out of options.

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Sunday 27 March 2011

Edit, Close to Complete.

Brian CoxCover of Brian CoxWell, the final chapter of the original typescript is now edited in pen and awaiting its turn, along with the other 14,  for the typing corrections to the file. Then begins the job of continuing the writing of book 2, which is what I really want to do.
So, today, I have written and posted a review for Stacey Danson's amazing 'Empty Chairs', sending the review to all the places where people should see it. We've had our usual Sunday walk. I've been in the loft to start on the process of sorting the stuff up there. A few more posts scheduled for the blog. The census form is now complete and ready to post. Have you done yours, if you're in the UK?
And, now I shall go and watch a couple of TV programmes I've been following. The one on Western Civilisation is quite interesting and the other, Brian Cox's 'Wonders of the Universe', is so full of breathtaking images, it's worth watching for the pictures alone.
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Empty Chairs by Stacey Danson, Reviewed.

Sexually Abused child.Image via Wikipedia
Empty Chairs, by Stacey Danson, is a remarkable piece of writing. This autobiographical insight into the early life of a girl subject to physical and sexual abuse is honest, frank and characterised by a refusal to hide unpleasant detail. That the abuse was initiated by her mother, who acted as her pimp, when Stacey was the tender age of 3, makes the revelations all the more horrific.
It is natural to expect that an account of this type would be driven by bitterness and revenge but the author manages to tell her story without undue hostility. And that, in itself, is an amazing feat. If ever a woman had just cause to resent the world into which she was born, Stacey Danson is that woman. But she simply lays out the facts; emotional, physical, mental, spiritual and rational. There are places where the text is almost too hard to read. I have been kept awake nights by some of her descriptions. This is, as you would expect, a difficult book to read. But I urge you to read it simply because it is hard.
The prose style is simple, yet eloquent. She writes pretty much as you would expect her to think and spares none of the expletives that, for her, have been an integral part of her upbringing. There is no attempt to deviate from the truth for effect, no attempt to embroider or exaggerate the facts. The simple truth is enough here, and Stacey has recognised that and allowed integrity to describe her experiences.
I am, by nature, an optimist and a lover of women in general. The experience of this book has caused me to question some of my beliefs about people more than any other work I’ve read; and I include such classics as All Quiet on the Western Front and A Town Like Alice as examples of man’s inhumanity in this comparison.
Men and women, authorities and victims, the respected and the reviled, all feature in this book as adults. And all are shown as flawed, many of them seriously so. There are those who simply looked the other way and thus allowed the terrible abuse to continue. There are those who worked in trusted occupations and yet tormented and harmed the vulnerable child they should have been protecting. There are those who exploited, or wished to exploit, a girl who so distrusted people that even those who might have been her friends could not win her trust. And, in the end, it was the children, the other victims, who rescued her from what might otherwise have been a violent and untimely death.
There is no sentimentality, no attempt to rouse the reader’s pity, in the words on these pages. What you get is the simple truth of a life damaged and abused. Yet, through it all, the spirit of the writer rises and grows to become aware of the greater world and, as the book ends, to begin to wonder if there are, after all, some good people in the world, after all.
Stacey wrote this account to alert the world to the reality of child abuse; to tell those complacent souls who blind themselves to facts, by blaming victims, that sometimes children have no choice; to educate those in authority about the reality of life on the streets for the abused. But she has achieved something more than that. She has made a work of such integrity that the reader emerges from the experience both wiser and more compassionate. And she has earned the unbounded admiration of this reader for telling it exactly as it is. 

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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Labial

Divisions of the United KingdomImage via Wikipedia
Labial: adjective - of or pertaining to the lips; designating sounds that need complete or partial closure of the lips for formation, like the consonants /p/, /b/, /m/, /f/, /v/, /w/, and vowels for which the lips are rounded; associated with, of the nature of, or located on a lip or labium.

'The speech therapist insisted on the proper pronunciation of those labial consonants, emphasising the sound as she spoke each word in turn; "potty, bottom, moron, fatty, vulgar and walrus", though she insisted her chosen words were not related to her portly student.'

'Tenderly toying with her hair and moving in closer, he noted that some strands, close to the opening, were labial.'

By the way, reminder to my UK readers. Today is census day; don't forget to fill in your forms and keep those statisticians out of mischief.

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Saturday 26 March 2011

Edit, Almost Done

Today, I've completed the work on Book 1. It now consists of 216,000 words, broken down into 518 pages and 53 chapters. I can let that lie now and concentrate on book 2, which consists, at present, of 15 chapters that were originally the end of book 1, some other chapters, previously written but in need of editing, and a few short sections,ready for incorporation into new chapters. of the 15 chapters, I've now edited 14. I've also, today, amended my timeline, which is an Excel spreadsheet. I've closed the timeline for book 1 onto one sheet and opened a new one on a second sheet, so that everything is easier to follow. I'm getting quite excited about finishing the current editing session and starting n some new writing. It'll be a little while before I'm at that stage, but it's a lot closer than it was.
I thought I might start giving tasters of the first book. Any of you interested in reading some of that at this stage?
Been to the library to pick up some books I ordered on line. Taken rubbish and recycling to the local recycling facility. Also, selected some short stories for an anthology I intend to publish on romance, and then sought a reasonable picture from one of the online stockists to act as a cover background. Read some more of the current read - Empty Chairs, by Stacey Danson; a harrowing but inspiring book about and by a woman who suffered physical and sexual abuse from the age of 3, initiated at the hands of her own mother, would you believe?
Had a man in today, to move the Magnolia before it comes into bloom; a job too physically demanding for me. It was in the way of the proposed turning point I need to put in at the front of the house. Once I'm done here, I shall take a short walk with Valerie and then settle down to relax for the evening. Kate is out on the town with friends.
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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Kali

Salsola kali flowers close up Campo de Calatra...Image via Wikipedia
Kali: noun - plants of the genus Salsola, goosefoot family, the prickly saltwort; soda ash, alkali, vegetable alkali, potash; Hindu goddess of destruction, the most terrible and malignant aspect of the goddess Sakti, often depicted as having many arms, a fierce countenance and hands dripping with blood.

'They grew kali to produce the potash essential for making their glass and soap; a versatile plant, though prickly and difficult to pick by hand.'

'Gupta murmured softly in the ear of his bought wife, who had failed to provide his tea at the right temperature, "May Kali, destroyer of worlds, lay her many hands on your body and tear you limb from limb." Before he threw her out into the rains to fend for herself.'

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Friday 25 March 2011

Edit:Making up for Lost Time.

The Complete Series "A" DVDImage via WikipediaOn book 2, I managed 3 chapters today, so ready to start chap 12 there. On book 1, I corrected another 15 chapters of typescript, one of which needed a page and a half of hand written amendments inserting, so ready for chap 46 there. not a bad day's work all told.
Another interview, with mystery author R.S. Charles, prepared and scheduled for next Thursday, more of my Daily Word Spots completed, some comments made on various social sites I belong to - Goodreads is an excellent site for readers, allowing you to compare reading lists and read multiple reviews, and I belong to a number of the readers' groups there. Facebook,  well, everyone knows about that one, and I belong to a number of writing groups on there. I also belong to a number of groups on the excellent connection site, LinkedIn as well, so I'm kept quite busy.
Managed a couple of hours in the sun in the garden this morning and shifted a couple of plants to new locations and finally removed a couple of small evergreens from tubs that they had outgrown and planted them at the entrance to the patio; sort of guardians to the paved area. So, a pretty active day.
Now I shall retire to the sitting room and watch Mastermind and QI to see if I can answer any of the questions - keeps the brain active, you know. Mind you, whether the red wine will hinder or help is an open question in itself.
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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Jacaranda

Jacaranda trees in Montagu Ave, Salisbury, Rho...Image via Wikipedia
Jacaranda: noun - any tree of the genus Jacaranda (fam. Bignoniaceae), having showy tubular purple or blue flowers and fragrant and ornamental wood; the wood of such trees.

'Daisy drifted in a dream along an avenue lined by Jacaranda trees in full bloom, the purple flowers matching almost exactly the colour of her delighted eyes.'


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Thursday 24 March 2011

Edit,Edit, Edit.

"Study drawing shows the allegorical figu...Image via WikipediaTwo more chaps done on book 2. 10 more of book 1 corrected. So, not a bad day.
Posted another author interview and wrote and posted a review for a book by the same author.
Walked to the doc's to pick up prescriptions - timely, as my chronic problem decided to haunt me again this morning. As rest is the only cure, I've not done half the things I intended and will now have to give up for the day and go and relax for the rest of the evening. Still, there's a new dramatisation of Women In Love on the goggle box, so I'll put my feet up and imbibe a drop of the red stuff whilst I see what sort of job they make of this one.

And, why, you ask, the nude? Well, she's the allegorical figure of 'Romance' and came up from the links that Zemanta found from trawling the content of this text. This application seems to have a mind of its own and sometimes makes the most inexplicable links. This one happens to be in the public domain, so is free from copyright. And it's a piece that celebrates rather than exploits female beauty, so it's fine with me. How about you?
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Zoe Winters, Author, Interviewed.


Zoe Winters writes quirky and sometimes dark paranormal romance. Information about her Preternaturals series can be found at zoewinters.org


SA: Tell us about Save My Soul in a few sentences.

ZW: Anna just bought a house she's fantasized about since childhood, but she doesn't know there is an incubus trapped inside. Basically the book is about her trying to resist getting involved with him (and losing her soul) while she tries several methods to get him out of her house including exorcism, gypsies, witches, and paranormal investigators. The book is a paranormal romance that is heavy in both humor/snark and angst.
 
 SA: How did you come to write this particular book?

ZW: A few  years ago I was trying to think of something to write for Nanowrimo (back when I did Nanowrimo), and I was driving down this road in my town past this old plantation-style house I love, and basically almost the whole plot just fell into my head. It was bizarre. I don't usually get book ideas in such a: "Here's the story" kind of way.

 
SA: If you have a favourite character in your novel, why that particular one?

ZW: Cain is my favorite. And he appears across several books in the series. He's the villain in Save My Soul, but he gets his own book later. I love him because he's just so "wrong" and funny. Like, he's an incubus and he kills his prey, but because my world has reincarnation he doesn't think of it as "ending them", just "inconveniencing them". Cain is someone you shouldn't like, but once you get to know him, it's kind of hard not to. At least that's true for me.
 

SA: How can people buy your books?

ZW: If people are looking for Save My Soul, here are all the active buy links for print and E:

http://zoewinters.wordpress.com/2011/01/25/save-my-soul-now-available-in-ebook/  

For other titles, people can search my name out at major online retailers like Barnes and Noble, Amazon, or Smashwords.com

Save My Soul is book 2 in my series, but it can be read first without any difficulties/confusion. Book 1 is my anthology trilogy: Blood Lust, which contains the stories: Kept, Claimed, and Mated.  Book 3 will bring in some characters from both book 1 and 2, plus a new hero and heroine for the romance part.

SA: What is your working method?

ZW: I'm probably the most boring writer on the planet. I sit down, open a document, and start typing.  I use an app called Focus Booster and Freedom to help me focus on the task at hand. I do outline and worldbuild for the series, but my method is so intuitive that there really isn't anything wham bam pop that you can SEE, or any special rituals that will make me seem quirky and awesome. I just type stuff. When necessary I Google stuff to make sure I'm not writing completely unbelievable weirdness.

 
SA: What single biggest mistake do beginners to writing make?

ZW: I think they don't learn how to respect their subconscious mind. Some people call this the "muse" but I've never liked the "muse" metaphor. It's easier for me to remember it's a part of ME and not some outside divine inspiration or whatever. A lot of writers try to make their book "perfect" the first time, and they try to edit too much during the rough draft process. But those are two very different parts of the brain. I know there are some writers who that is their process, and it works great for them. But for most it's best to let the subconscious play without judgment in the rough draft, then in the editing phase you can start being more logical/critical.


SA: To what extent are grammar and spelling important to a writer?

ZW: To the same extent oxygen is important to living beings.
 
SA: You write Paranormal Romance. What attracted you to this particular genre?

ZW: I really like growly alpha males. Bad boys. I think we've reached the end of the bad line when the sentiment is: "You could be my dinner or you could be my lover, or... if you're very lucky, you could be both."
 
SA: To what extent do you think genre is useful in the publishing world?

ZW: Well, it's a marketing categorization. Anything that helps you define and find your target audience is a good thing. A lot of people complain about how genre limits their brilliance or whatever, but no matter how brilliant you are, you have to be able to find your audience. If you don't have a short tag/hook/category to attract those readers, good luck. lol.
 
SA: Marketing is often considered a chore, especially by indie authors. What is your opinion on this issue and how do you deal with it?

ZW: Marketing is just building awareness and brand. It encompasses things like social media and blogging, guest interviews like what I'm doing here, guest blogs, sales, pricing, description, book cover, paid advertising... it's basically anything and everything having to do with the packaging of what you're selling and raising your visibility. If people can't see you, they can't buy you. I do feel that after awhile too much marketing cuts into your writing time. Like I do a little bit of it now, but I do less of it than I used to because my primary focus at this point is writing because I've got a strong enough platform to not babysit it 24/7, and my goal right now is to focus on building backlist.

SA: How long does it normally take you to write a novel?

ZW: It varies. Sometimes I can get a rough draft written in a month, sometimes it takes three months. Rarely it takes longer, but that's only when I'm going long periods of time without actually writing. So I'm not sure I can count that in "how long it takes me".

SA: If there’s a single aspect to writing that really frustrates you, what is it?

ZW: The fact that everybody has an opinion about everything. How you publish. What you publish. And if you're indie, every aspect of everything you do. The stories themselves, etc. Sometimes it's just too much noise for me, and I take an Internet sabbatical.

SA: Is there an aspect of writing that you really enjoy?

ZW: I really enjoy all of it except the aforementioned noise. (Though I do love hearing from fans!)


SA: Do you think writing is a natural gift or an acquired skill?

ZW: A little of both. I think more than anything, it's a passion and love affair.

SA: What are you writing now?

ZW: Right now I'm working on worldbuilding and planning the next few books in my series. I am writing stuff, but not for this name because I'm taking a series-writing course to make sure I'm not setting anything stupid in motion that will kill my series down the line.

SA: Do you have a website or blog that readers can visit?

ZW: Both.
Site: http://www.zoewinters.org
Blog: http://zoewinters.wordpress.com
Also, Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/zoewinters


SA: Given unlimited resources, what would be your ideal writing environment?

ZW: A cottage on the beach.

SA: Where do you actually write?

ZW: It varies. Sometimes in the living room, sometimes in the bedroom (depends on the time of year due to AC/heating)

Zoe was recently a guest on the brilliant and well-known J.A. Konrath blog. I suggest all authors read her post: you'll find it here - http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2011/03/guest-post-by-zoe-winters.html


And here is my review of Save My Soul, for what it's worth:



Save My Soul, by Zoe Winters, is a paranormal romance with edge. This is not a genre I've read much, but, in interviewing Zoe for the blog, I became fascinated by the ideas and themes she explores in her writing. There are associations and asides in the narrative, which will have greater resonance with those fully conversant with the genre. But, even as a newcomer, I found the book engaging and entertaining.

Zoe contrasts the tension with humour, and does this well. Her characters are fully formed; even the demons. Her confident descriptions of, and familiarity with, these supernatural beings begs the question, 'How come you know so much about them, Zoe?' And makes me wonder if she's had personal experience of them; such is the depth of detail and intimacy she displays.
There are biblical references in the text that cast, for me, a new light on perceptions of god and religion. As an agnostic, I'm already seriously sceptical about such matters, but Zoe's story telling skills are such that I was willing to suspend my disbelief sufficiently to enjoy the tale.
And that's the most seductive element of this book: the story. It's a great story, with twists and turns, threats to the spunky heroine, mysteries in need of solutions, periods of naughtiness both sexual and otherwise, and a mix of characters that brings real depth to the tale. It manages to be erotic without ever straying into pornography and it keeps the reader turning pages, wondering what will happen next. I'm glad I read it.

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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Iatrogenic

An example of a heart attack, which can occur ...Image via Wikipedia
Iatrogenic: adjective - a disease or symptom induced unintentionally by a medic's treatment or examination; pertaining to the inducing of disease in this way.

'When Dr Death prescribed a performance enhancing drug for Joanne, her resultant heart attack was described as an iatrogenic event and, in spite of his patient's death, he was found to be not culpable by the board of enquiry.' 

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Wednesday 23 March 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Habergeon

Detail of a fragment. Each plate has six holes...Image via Wikipedia
Habergeon: noun – a sleeveless coat or jacket of mail or scale armour; a small hauberk (which is the longer version).

'The Duke of Camdarathananman donned his habergeon in preparation for the fight to come against the fearsome hordes of hamsters that were about to invade his bed chamber.'

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Tuesday 22 March 2011

Edit Not Moving On

Agh! No movement yesterday, or today, or tomorrow. Too many things getting in the way.
Still, Thursday will see some movement.
And, at least, now I've assembled them, Kate and I have comfortable new seats to rest on whilst at our computers. Our old ones had given up the ghost and comfort is so vital for concentration.

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Gabble

James Craggs the Younger (d. 1721) british whi...Image via Wikipedia
Gabble: noun - confused and unintelligible talk; an example of this; inarticulate noises made by some animals.

'Miriam stood by the entrance to the chamber, where the political leaders were supposed to be debating a serious issue but all she heard was gabble from these representatives of the people.'

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Monday 21 March 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Fable

DrumnadrochitImage via Wikipedia
Fable: noun - a fictional narrative or statement; myth or legend; fiction devised to deceive; ridiculous or untrustworthy tale, idle talk; falsely claimed to exist, or without existence beyond popular legend; short story, with animal characters, conveying a moral; an individual or thing which is now proverbial.

'It seems to me that all religious scripts and sacred texts are, in reality, no more than fables designed as ways to either explain what was once inexplicable or, more sinisterly, to form a hold over people to make them obedient to some hierarchy.'

'Aesop designed his fables to educate folk into ways that are more tolerant, wise and thoughtful.'

'Stories of the Loch Ness Monster, Bigfoot and the Yeti are clearly nothing more than fables, since extensive attempts to prove the existence of these creatures have always failed to come up with any reliable evidence.'   

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Sunday 20 March 2011

Editing Still

Clouds 1 bg 082403Image via WikipediaA further chapter for book 2 edited and ready for correction, and 5 more chapters from book 1 corrected and saved in readiness for the day I approach an agent /publisher.
Another full day, with an early morning rise after Kate returned from her seaside trip for sunrise pix unfulfilled due to cloud cover. At least she has a location for the next attempt. Valerie and I took a different walk and saw more of the local countryside; unfortunately the light wasn't good enough to produce any worthwhile photos.
Sunday dinner was my duty today, as Kate is studying and Valerie is desperately trying to compile her table of fixtures for the bowls league. The chicken was good, served with the trimmings and a glass of vino to help with the preparation.
Now it's time for relaxation in readiness for tomorrow at work. Roll on retirement and a time I can spend more hours actually writing.
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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Earn

National Bank of the Republic, Salt Lake City 1908Image via Wikipedia
Earn: verb - receive or be entitled to wages for work or services; have as income; obtain or deserve as payment for efforts or merit; gain as interest or profit; acquire a name or reputation, incur. L16.

'Although the banker was said to earn a multi-million pound bonus, his actual actions and results could not be used as justification to say he merited this reward.'

'Many of the world's top bankers have justly earned reputations for both ineptitude and greed in their handling of the finances and economies of their businesses.'

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Saturday 19 March 2011

Edit, Edit and More Edit.

Last night's TV marathon kept me up until the early hours, and, after all that sitting, we felt the need for a bit of movement and fresh air, so took a short walk. Home and in bed just before 03.30, so up rather late this morning.
Nevertheless, I've corrected another 5 chaps of book 1 and edited another 2 of book 2. All still going well, I'm both pleased and surprised to report.
More blog posts done and scheduled. Emails answered, social networks commented on and Valerie helped with her bowls stuff on the laptop.
Now it's time for some R & R. Kate is out for the night at a friend's, nearer the coast, so she can take some sunrise pictures tomorrow - let's hope the sky is friendly to her.
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Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Dacoit

Burma (Myanmar) (dark green) / ASEAN (dark grey)Image via Wikipedia
Dacoit: noun – Hindi = ḍakait, from ḍākā gang-robbery; a member of an Indian or Myanmar gang of armed robbers: verb -  to rob as a dacoit.

'Did you know Ajeet was a dacoit, when you sent him into the bank with his friends to withdraw some cash for you?'

'I did, but I never expected he'd dacoit the bank and pull a gun on the poor teller.'

Sometimes, I like to throw in an unusual word; just to keep you on your toes.

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Friday 18 March 2011

Edit Going Well

Red Nose Day - Press LaunchImage by Red Nose Day 2009 via FlickrAn interesting and, in some ways, productive day. Chapter 4 of the new book 2 is now done, with some small additions to reflect its new position in the scheme of things. Book 1 is now up to chapter 16 with the alterations and corrections to the text.

The buddleia is trimmed back, the hedge bordering the south western side of the garden is tamed. And both will now give better displays when spring comes into its own. Two of the four borders are now free of their weeds and a couple of plants that were in unsuitable spots have been transplanted to better locations.

Tonight, in the UK, is Red Nose Day, a celebration of comedy on the TV, run to raise money for charitable organisations here and in Africa. Its a biennial event, alternating with Children In Need, which does the same sort of thing exclusively for children's charities. For me, these are two nights when I must participate and watch. There is  mix of pathos and comedy and a great deal of money is generally raised for good causes, so I shall sign off now and spend the evening in front of the box with my family.
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