Sunday words…

"Whatever you can do or dream you can do; begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it." Goethe.

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Atmosphere before action, tone before plot.

On writing - getting the tone and texture rightOne of the things that I found particularly interesting in my interview with Chris Ewan earlier this week was his advice to get the feel of a novel right before anything else. He said:

“I think it’s really important to be able to visualise the exact type of book you want to write before you begin work. I’m not talking about story here. Forget about plot and characters. I’m talking about the tone and texture of the book you’re aiming to produce. How should writing it make you feel? How will finishing it make your readers feel? Once you have that locked down, the real work begins.”

That struck a chord with me because although I’m currently working on an historical crime novel I don’t want it to be a ‘cosy’. Yes, there are plenty of glamorous weekend house parties and Vionnet and Chanel dresses in the novel but my heroine’s life is not blithe and carefree. It’s complicated and messy and not at all how she imagined it would be. Far from a drawing room, the place where my denouement happens is an altogether more bleak and lonely place. Rather than imitating Golden Age crime fiction (which I love) I want my book to feel more like a crime novel that happens to be set in 1920.

To answer Chris’ questions, I want writing it to feel as though I’m doing Tessa justice and also paying tribute to the women like her who gave so much and came home to a world that hadn’t changed as much as they have. That sounds worthy and a bit dull so I also want to feel excited by her adventures, triumphant at her victories and empathy for her hardships.

When they’ve finished the book I want my readers to feel much as I do about Tessa; that they’re rooting for her as she looks to the future and forges a new kind of life. I want them to feel empathy for this woman who went off to join the war effort so full of optimism and came home broken, not just in body but in the nightmares that haunt her sleep. I want them to know her bravery – that in a tricky spot she’d aways have your back. As she heads off to Nice with her aunt, I want my readers to be looking forward to the next book about my brave, damaged, and independent heroine that will keep them up late.

How to get the ‘tone and texture’ so that I achieve all those things? For me, I think it’s going to be a mixture of talking to myself and seeing how my characters sound and keeping an eye on pace so that I don’t digress into lengthy bouts of exposition.  I’ll also use some of the character sketch templates in Scrivener as I need to know how my characters look and what their verbal and physical tics are.

From writing the current version, I know that once I’ve got the first couple of chapters right, the rest will flow much better and so I’ll continue to ignore all the advice to just get to the end of the first draft before beginning to edit. Once those chapters feel right I’ll be away. This time it should be easier because I’m rewriting an existing manuscript rather than starting from scratch and even though I’m changing the plot a good deal the beginning is pretty much the same so hopefully some sharpening up in the edit will get me back into the zone.

Now that my cold has almost gone and I’ve just a slightly rattly chest, it’s time to crack on so this weekend, I’ll be starting to rewrite that opening chapter, keeping an eye on whether I’m getting the tone and texture right.

Writers – what are your techniques for getting the right feel to your writing?

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Shelf Notes: The Pierced Heart by Lynn Shepherd

The Puerced Heart by Lynn Shepherd. Blends Bram Stoker’s Dracula with a  Victorian detective story in an ambitious but successful novel. Click to read full reviewLynn Shepherd’s The Pierced Heart blends Bram Stoker’s Dracula with a Victorian detective story in an ambitious but successful novel.

To summarise, an Austrian nobleman offers a substantial donation to the University of Oxford and renowned investigator Charles Maddox is called upon to ascertain that the generous Baron von Reisenberg is all he appears. However, the Baron’s bleak castle is far from the Viennese opulence expected and the Baron himself is the subject of macabre rumours and nervous whispers. By night Maddox is haunted by nightmares although in daylight all seems (relatively) normal. When he returns to London, barely possessed of his sanity, he soon finds the city in the grip of a panic due to a series of gruesome murders attributed to The Vampire. Maddox is certain of the culprit’s identity and also that his nickname might be more accurate than most suppose.

This is the first book that I’ve read by this author and picked it up after a recommendation on Twitter from someone whose name I can’t remember. I was a little dubious I have to say for haven’t we had enough vampire books? Once I started reading though I was capitivated. Shepherd’s writing is stylish, echoing the novel that provided the inspiration without mimicry or parody. Charles Maddox – like all good detectives – is a complex and falliable character and I plan to read the two earlier books, A Treacherous Likeness and Tom All Alone’s (which draw on the story of Percy Bysshe Shelley and his wife Mary, and Dicken’s Bleak House respectively) so that I can find out more of his backstory.

If you like your crime fiction a little more literary or you have a taste for the Gothic, this is the book for you. The first two books in the series are available in paperback published by Little, Brown. The Pierced Heart is currently only available in the UK in the American hardback edition. Not a hardship though as US editions, with their deckle-edged pages are much nicer than most British ones. But I digress – whatever version you read it in, this book is perfect fireside reading now that the nights are drawing in.

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September’s writing – highs and lows

typewriterFrom a writing point of view, September did not go the way that I planned. In terms of my success at Bloody Scotland’s Pitch Perfect, it far exceeded expectations and I’m still really skippy about that. It’s given me objective reassurance that I’m not completely clueless and the confidence to actually call myself a writer. That’s been news to a lot of people as hardly anyone knew that I was scribbling away. I’ve had lots of lovely tweets and emails from other writers and publishing people that I know and I feel very inspired to crack on.

However, straight after Pitch Perfect – on the way home from Stirling in fact – I came down with the most horrible cold and although it’s more than two weeks later I still feel quite rough. In fact, as I type this, I can feel the resurgence of the rasping sore throat and I have my fingers crossed (metaphorically obviously, as that would make typing really uncomfortable) that I’m not going to relapse back into the coughing, sniffling state that I was.

The upshot of this germ-riddled condition is that I’ve done next to no writing as my brain has felt like cottonwool. I tried one day last week and it was the hardest 200 words I’ve ever written and looking back at it the next day, it was probably 200 of the dullest, most turgid words I’ve ever written.

So I’m shovelling down zinc and cod liver oil and mainlining hot Ribena (nearest thing to penicillin that you can get without a prescription) and hoping that October will be a better month for writing. To that end, in the hope that organisation will triumph over lurgy, I have a list…

  • I’m currently dismantling Version 1 of the novel and putting it back together with a stronger structure. I think I’ve pretty much cracked it but I plan to polish up the detailed outline (about 5k words) that I’ve mapped out and then give it to a couple of my beta readers for their thoughts – if there’s a plot hole, they’ll spot it.
  • Next, I need to break down the outline into a chapter plan in Scrivener. I’ll write about Scrivener in more detail another time but I couldn’t write without it. Obviously I could, but it would take longer and require endless scrolling and opening of different files whereas with Scrivener, everything is in front of me and to check a detail in a previous chapter or something in my notes takes two clicks at most. The best 40 bucks I’ve ever spent.
  • I also have a few pages of scribbled notes for the opening chapter and it would be good to spend some time redrafting those. If I can get the opening right then the rest of the novel will flow better. Everyone advises not to edit until you’ve finished the first draft but I need that first chapter to feel right before I can get going.
  • Aside from novel-writing, I need to get back to the blogging routine I was establishing. I have some book reviews to finish, a couple of author interviews to edit and post, some bloggers to finalise details of guest posts with and so on. I think I’ll try to block off a day this week for blog admin.

That all feels quite achievable, even allowing for a couple of poorly days on the sofa watching Miss Marple reruns…

What are your goals for October?

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Congratulations Sharron!

Just to let eThe first four books in the Mirabelle Bevan series by Sara Sheridan.veryone know that the winner of the signed Sara Sheridan books is Sharron Simmons – I’ve emailed her and the books will be on their way to her shortly.

For all those who lost out, do visit the interview I did with crime writer Chris Ewan and enter the draw to win a copy of Dark Tides, his latest novel.

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