CURRENT GIVEAWAYS


My interview over at The Art and Craft of Writing Creatively is HERE

Purchase my book Images of America: Detroit Lakes HERE

Monday, July 16, 2012

Guest Post: Creating a Novel by Bill Wetterman



Thanks for having me on Kelsey’s Book Corner. Room1515 represents the culmination of seven years of serious writing—critique groups, workshops and conference, and award winning contests entries. Having learned the craft, I set out to challenge conventional thinking with plots and themes that are controversial and sometimes dark. Selecting my genre was easy, I’m a thriller fanatic, particularly international-psychological thrillers with political storylines and aspects of romance and betrayal. Stories of anti-heroines pitted against the flawed love interests in their lives fascinate me. My novels deal with greed, betrayal, lust, and murder, all the things that make life interesting.

Three writers influence my writing. Tom Clancy’s novels, particularly Debt of Honor, are examples of well-researched political thrillers. He set the standard for me for attention to detail. I labor long to produce accurate scenes, detailed descriptions, and recognizable sites. Locals living in the cities I write about will relate the surroundings.

Thomas Harris’s Silenceof the Lambs stands out as the psychological thriller. I strive to produce the emotional reaction he produces. I can only hope to achieve his level one day. How can you not love Hannibal Lecter?

Finally, Stieg Larrson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo features the perfect anti-heroine, Lisbeth Salander. Her character is a model for me to play off. Peacock, from Room 1515, fits the template. Emotionally wounded, unable to attach, yet possessing the ability to act the seductress, Peacock becomes my ideal anti-heroine.   

My teaser for Room 1515 reads as follows. Pour one seductive female CIA agent. Mix in the most powerful financier in the world. Drop in ice cubes of betrayal and romance, and you have Room 1515. Readers love good hooks.

The one paragraph description in bookseller sites like Amazon reads. Ever feel unsure of the financial future and the future of the USA? Greed drives decisions, and greed-driven decisions are always short-term. Say a shrewd group of power players is manipulating the world economy to accumulate long-term wealth. They could rule the world. Don't fear the 1% against whom crowds protest. Fear the .0001%. You never hear their names. However, they exist. One man will emerge to lead them.

Creating a novel begins for me by researching the world into which I will drop my characters. In Room 1515, the settings are Washington D.C. and Great Britain, primarily London. The action takes place a few years in the future. I have the liberty to alter the surroundings a bit. I can put a new hotel in a location where there isn’t one today, and that’s all right. I’ve been to Washington and London. This helps. Even if I hadn’t, the Internet provides views of buildings and layouts of the inside and outside of each. I research every building, park, etc. for accuracy before I write about it. I research where domestic and foreign politicians hold meetings, so I don’t have an event in my book going on in a place where it shouldn’t. I’m sorry, but I love Wikipedia.

Once I’ve fleshed out the physical world and the mood of that world, I’m ready to create the tension. Yes. I have an idea about my characters. However, I need to have a world that is tension packed to drop my characters into that world. In Room 1515, I take the conflict in today’s world and make it worse. The world economy is collapsing. A group of rich financiers is causing that collapse for its own purposes. American sends a seductress to woo the leader of this group and steal his secrets. 

Now, I ask myself a million questions. What would each side’s motivation be? How could they achieve what they desire? Who could best accomplish each major task? Again, there is a lot of research. I have to study how the economy in one part of the world affects another. Having done the research, I give each main character motives and plans. Tension must increase as the story moves along or readers go to sleep.  

Ever read novels were the bad guys have no redeeming character and the good guys are Dudley Do-Rights? The real world is not this way. The more conflicted people and events are the better my novel will be. I mentioned the anti-heroine earlier. To put a true protagonist, loyal, honest, loves dogs, into Room 1515, would be sinful. I want an anti-heroine, a flawed woman pursuing the enemies of her country, until she questions the tactics of her own government. I don’t want an evil antagonist either. Instead of a Doctor No, I want to create a unique, sympathetic character with a noble purpose, likeable while being ruthless. Emotionally complex characters hold readers interests. 

Having established the conflicts my characters will face, I ask myself more questions. What is each character’s worldview? What events shape their past? What strengths and weaknesses cause them to succeed or fail? I research where the main characters were born, and if it’s important, the history of the area.
Once the character is solid in my mind, I talk to them. I show them the outline of the book. I set the rules. “I’ll give you some freedom in each scene. Surprise me by showing me something unique. However, do not Sin. I am God. I determine the outcome I want. Don’t change my novel. Enjoy yourself within your scenes. Sin, in the world of my novel, is a character attempting to change the outcome I’ve slaved so hard to build. 

Once I flesh out my characters, I’m ready to write. A novel takes me two months of planning, two months of writing, and two months of editing to complete. Room 1515 is the first novel of an intended trilogy. The novel stands alone, but works best with sequels. Between those sequels, I’m planning to release an unrelated thriller. By the end of 2012, I’ll have three novels in print. By the end of 2013, the number will be between five and six.

To buy Room 1515, go to www.bwetterman.wordpress.com and click the buy button for your favorite online bookseller. Or type in Room 1515 on your bookseller’s website directly.

Kelsey thanks again for having me as a guest.
 
 ABOUT THE AUTHOR
After over twenty-five years in the executive search business with Wolters Search Group, I retired in 2008 to write full-time. Since then, I've had some moderate success. Four of my short stories have been selected for publication by Chicken Soul. I have my first novel, Room 1515, available in eBook and paperback form. 
 
AUTHOR LINKS
 Website  /  Facebook
 
ABOUT ROOM 1515
International Thriller. A female agent named Peacock is sent on a mission to woo and win the heart of the world’s most powerful powerbroker. Her job is to learn his secrets and foil his plans. Instead, she falls in love. A story of the balance of world financial power, betrayal, and romance.
 
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Tuesday, July 10, 2012

ARC Review: Shadow of Night by Deborah Harkness


Publisher: Viking
Release Date: July 10, 2012
Format: e-ARC
Source: publisher

FIRST LINE
(may differ from final copy)
We arrived in an undignified heap of witch and vampire.

Harkness starts Shadow of Night right where her debut, A Discovery of Witches, left off. After falling head over heels in love Diana and Matthew now travel back in time to 16th-century England in search of the Ashmole 782 along with the hope that they will discover more about Diana’s powers. They know they are going to face ridicule and that they will have to tread carefully so that they don’t alert people around them that they are from the future. Unfortunately for Diana, that is not possible and fitting in proves to be harder then Diana thought it would be.

Diana finally gets to meet the notorious School of Night group which includes many historic figures. One in particular, Christopher Marlowe, is hell bent on making Diana’s life miserable (due to the fact that he is in love with Matthew.) Besides trying to find the Ashmole 782, Diana must learn what type of Witch she is and how to harness her magic to get them home. Unfortunately for her, for every new discovery, bigger and more complicated matters emerge.

Matthew is hot-headed as ever and having to bring Diana back to this time in his life has him constantly on edge. He doesn’t want her to discover all the crimes against witches that he committed. Once he finally lets the shield down around his heart he learns to accept that he can’t change the past (even though he and Diana are trying). He now has to focus on the future of him and his bride and their bundle that is on the way.

The reader is taken on a fantastic journey back in time to one of my favorite time periods to read about. Set against the backdrop of Elizabeth I’s reign, Harkness pulls you in with her descriptions on how it was to live back then. I love that Diana had to learn to “fit” in and even though she is a historian, nothing can prepare someone to have to actually live the culture. Diana and Matthew’s characters really start to grow as does their family (including a few street urchins who worm their way into their hearts). Even though at times the writing becomes quite wordy, in the end it was worth reading this amazing voyage that Diana and Matthew embark on and I anxiously await the conclusion of their story.


PURCHASE SHADOW OF NIGHT

PURCHASE A DISCOVERY OF WITCHES

Monday, July 9, 2012

Author Interview: Lorrie Kruse

I would like to thank Lorrie Kruse for taking time out of her busy schedule to answer a few questions about herself and her book, A Life Worth Living.
 
Can you tell us a little bit about yourself? 
I’m just your every-day, average girl who has people living inside her head. I have a wonderful husband (Brian), a seventeen-year-old son (Tyler) that I’m very proud of, and an Alaskan husky (Token) who brings many a swear word from my mouth but also brings plenty of smiles. One thing that people quickly learn about me is that I love teddy bears. You cannot stand anywhere in my house without seeing a bear of some sort. Because I like to eat and have a roof over my head, I’m forced to have a full-time job, but I’m lucky enough that I enjoy my job as a legal secretary. When I’m not working or writing, I’m probably creating jewelry or crocheting yet another pair of socks.
 
Can you tell us about your book A Life Worth Living
A Life Worth Living is Matt’s journey after he wakes up in the hospital to discover he’s paralyzed. The poor guy has a highly physical job working for his father in construction. He needs the use of his legs. But what’s he supposed to do when he is forced with the reality that he might not walk again? That, right there, is the true story, Matt’s learning how to adapt to his new world.
 
What was your favorite part of the writing process of your book? 
I loved getting to know the characters. It is so weird how they take on personalities of their own and how they do what they want to do instead of what I want them to do. Crystal was probably the character who asserted her independence the most. I kept trying to urge her to be a nicer person and to think more about Matt than herself, but she insisted on being who she wanted to be. I must admit though that the Crystal in the final book is so much nicer than the original Crystal (thank heavens!).
 
What is your favorite scene from A Life Worth Living and why?
My favorite scene is when Matt goes to visit Abby in the physical therapy gym after hours and they play Yahtzee. I love this scene because you can see Matt and Abby’s friendship growing roots. I also love this scene as Matt shares a childhood story about the time he took apart his mother’s toaster. It’s just so neat the way his memories turn him into a “real” person. Oh, and we can’t forget the moment at the end of the scene where Crystal walks in to find her fiance alone with Abby in a quiet room playing games. 
 
What has been the best advice you have ever been given? 
To always wear clean underwear (thanks Mom!). Oh, wait, you probably mean the best writing advice, huh? That would be to develop a thick skin and to be persistent. Without those two qualities, A Life Worth Living would be A Life Stuck in My Computer Forever. Once upon a time, I thought all there was to writing a book was to sit down and write it and then it’d get published quite easily and everyone would love it. Silly me. There is so much more to it than that. I discovered you actually need a plot (A plot? Really??). And that I couldn’t just write whatever sounded logical to me. Instead, I actually had to do this thing called research. But, I truly believe I found a plot that will interest most readers. And I have to say that doing the research for A Life Worth Living was a real eye-opener. I never realized just how much a paralyzed person goes through. I have developed a huge appreciation for my health.
 
Do you follow a writing schedule or do you just write whenever?
I used to write every day during my lunch hour and then I spent most Saturdays curled up on the couch with my laptop. These days, however, I’m forced to resort to writing whenever I can squeeze it in. Someday my life will settle down again and I’ll be able to devote more regular time to writing.
 
Who is your favorite author and why?
You want me to narrow it down to just one? How cruel. That’s like asking me if I could only eat one food for the rest of my life, which of the hundreds I love is going to be the life-long winner. At this moment, I have to say I am really enjoying Jeff Lindsay, the author of the Dexter series. His writing is so fresh and unusual. I mean, to create a serial killer that you actually like? Making readers love someone you should hate is really a sign of a great writer. Harlan Coben is like that, too. Not that he writes characters you should hate, but that you end up loving the characters. (Like the way I snuck in another favorite writer?)
 
What is the best book you have ever read and why?
Yikes! Again with the narrowing it down to just one. Okay, I’m going to go in a different direction from what first came to mind. The best book I have ever read is Albert Zuckerman’s Writing the Blockbuster Novel because it was the first book on the craft of writing that made sense. I learned that your characters have to have motivation for everything they do and that everything they do must relate to the plot in some way. My writing improved drastically after reading that book.
 
Where do you see yourself in five years?
Doing another interview with you for another new release, hopefully not just a second book but a third. Hey, why stop there? Let’s make it a fourth book. Shall we shake on it?
 
Most definitely Lorrie! Come back anytime..:D
 
What is coming up next for you?  
I am working on an anthology of short stories of the thriller/paranormal genre. After that, I have to get back to the romantic suspense that’s percolating in my computer. Poor Jason and Katrina are dying to know if they resolve their differences, solve the murders, and live happily ever after.

AUTHOR INFO
Lorrie is many things besides a writer. By day she’s a legal secretary (not to be confused with the illegal secretary of her evening hours). She’s a wife (to a wonderful prince of a husband, Brian) and a mom (to a non-furry two-legged critter (Tyler) and a very furry four-legged critter (Token, an Alaskan husky)). Lorrie rarely sits idle. If she’s not writing or working, she’s probably making jewelry or crocheting another pair of socks (much to the dismay of her hubby who says why don’t you just buy socks at Walmart). And, if there’s a wayward teddy bear in need of a home, Lorrie’s your go-to-gal, as long as that bear doesn’t mind living in a log home in the country in often-chilly central Wisconsin.
 
AUTHOR LINKS

BOOK BLURB
A surefire way to jinx your future is to perfectly map it out and then expect your journey to go as planned. Twenty-six year old home builder, Matthew Huntz, is on his way to making his dreams a realty - gorgeous fiancée, perfect job, and the house he’s always wanted - until the accident. Paralyzed from the chest down, with his GPS offline, Matt is forced to recalculate his path in life.

PURCHASE A LIFE WORTH LIVING


Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Review: Pulse by John Lutz


Publisher: Kensington
Release Date: July 3, 2012
Format: Paperback
Source: publisher

FIRST LINE
It gave Garvey the creeps, transferring somebody like Daniel Danielle.

In 2002 the serial killer Daniel Danielle disappears when the transport vehicle carrying him to a maximum security prison flips when it is caught in a hurricane. Everyone assumed Daniel died in the hurricane but know they aren’t so sure. Bodies are starting to show up in the same M.O. as the Daniel Danielle killings. Frank Quinn and his partner, Pearl, must figure out what is going on. When the Police Commissioner Renz calls, they know this is serious business.

Pearl’s long lost daughter, Jody Jason, makes her debut. Even though it felt too easy for her to infiltrate Pearl and Quinn’s life, her character finds its place. Jody’s internship with a law firm ends up tying together the loose ends that Pearl and Quinn are looking for. Add in the fact that in addition to having the same M.O., the killer is murdering women that look just like Pearl so to Quinn, this is personal.

The serial killer is a mystery. Is it Daniel Danielle or is this someone that was obsessed with him and wants to "bring" him back from the dead? The chapters that provide the insight into the killer's mind are intriguing because the monster doesn't truly believe that what he is doing is wrong.

Lutz knows how to write a suspenseful story that keeps a person glued to its pages. Non-stop action keeps the thrilling storyline rolling and the reader's pulse never has a chance to slow down. I highly recommend Pulse to all mystery/thriller lovers.


PURCHASE PULSE


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