Monday, November 10, 2014

Writing Tools



Writers struggle with plot, and scenes, so when the time comes to plan a tight, crisp blend for both, the task can be overwhelming. Not to mention the big question about whether the plot and resolution is deep enough. Check out this outline that might help put the tools together.

A Plot Resolution Outline
Forces Us to Think Through Scene by Scene.


Shows Quickly and Precisely —

(1) Depth of Protagonist’s Conflict How Deep is Deep Enough?

(2) How to Resolve Obstacle Describe Dilemma in a Short Phrase

(3) How Plot Leads to Resolution

Build Up Emotion From Turmoil

Explore —
A lawyer chooses to take a road of self destruction with race cars that ultimately could kill him — a man-against-himself story.

State Conflict — Starts when he fails in a trial.
What is the character's deep problem? Is it — "lawyer loses client"? How does that tell us anything about the lawyer's inner struggle. Why is the lawyer obsessed by the failure of a trail?

What made that case different? What force from his past played a part? Lawyer knew his client? Owed something? Committed some blunder that cost the trial? An associate made a mistake?

Answers Tell Writer About the Level of Depth in the Story.

Ask — What Makes the Story Important for Reader?

Dig Deeper for Answer Remember the key — lawyer made a miscalculation
Past problem linked to a social force — owed loyalty to partner, overcompensates from past mistake

Blunder results because present loyalty is misplaced — casts doubts on the lawyer's ability

Develop Outline to Find Character's Innermost conflict — Forms a Richer Story 

First line — Lawyer Fears his Past Blunder When He Failed to Consider Loyalty to a Partner

Resolution —

Once the Character's Real Conflict is Disclosed, Move to Outline's Resolution


Ask — Does Lawyer Come to Realization of Flaws Or Become Self-Destructive?

Look at the Outline— Problem = Lawyer Fears his Past Blunder Use Plot Structure

a) b) c)

Resolution: Lawyer Finds New Type of Partner to Restore His Faith

Plot:

[A Lawyer Retreats to Rural Town/ Begins Race Car Hobby — Self Destruction

[B Finds New Love/She Falls Into Legal Problem With Race Cars

[C Lawyer Relives Guilt—New Partner Requires His Loyalty
Conclusion — Lawyer Uses Skills Help New Love

Tuesday, August 19, 2014


Words Come Alive

Showing a Culture’s Development

In a historical novel, waves of migration stream into small villages that struggle to become a culture as outside forces change the protagonist (P). But how does a writer Show those forces instead of bore the reader with textbook-style facts?

When Edward Rutherford reveals his characters in his novel Russia, the author uses Show instead of Tell to see how Lebed fights a roving marauder for her son’s life. Later he pits Ivanushka as a man adrift between the need to travel east for trade, or become a priest with the church as the land vibrates from the crossfire of Christianity and Islam.

Writers usually feel the compulsion to setup the background so the the reader sees the full scope of the P’s world. But the amount of details in Russia could put people to sleep.

Telling the background would list the many migrations from the Scythians, Alans, Bulgars to other groups who headed west. The politics would have to be explained from Rome’s fall, to the rising strength of the Byzantine Empire, Poland and Venice. Religion would have to mention the Jewish Khazars and how the Greek Orthodox community struggled to find a place to worship.

The technique of Show puts the reader right into the scene by making the character the focus instead of the list of facts. The facts emerge as the character tries to solve a conflict.

Lebed searches in the forest for her lost son to find the boy in the arms of a migrating Alan. The woman left her small hamlet without bringing any fighting force. The people lived on farming. The village lacked ties to nearby bigger towns where a force could help. Those forces didn’t exist. The power Lebed saw came from the Alan and the Scythian who moved at will in her land.

Rutherford shows the emergence of a version of a political state around 1,000 years later. The character Ivanushka drifts between trying to understand his world and please his family. His trading venture comes not because of an overabundance of his community, but because his Kiev lies between two economic powers. He drifts to think about being a priest as the changing religious forces threaten Kiev with devastation.

In both examples, readers learn about the facts of history, but from the eyes of the character. Usually Show means a technique where the reader sees the specific action of a character or sees an emotion. Telling is a technique where the reader is told a term like “angry,” instead of seeing, “the man’s wrist tightened on the wrinkled letter.”

Rutherford does more than simply link the technique of Show to reveal the people in Russia. He drives the social structure by showing readers the forces around the character.

A culture’s belief system needs to be described for readers so the page-turner understands some characters. Cultures dictate how many see themselves. For example, a law office culture drives many associates to think of having a limited time to prove themselves — either they advance to become partners or they leave.

Rutherford’s Russia shows a glaring difference between Russian and American culture. In Russia, the culture has formed from centuries of lying in the crossroads of Europe and Asia. As such, the fears developed from how they could not control their own destiny. Migrations and invasions pushed many to respond instead of act.

On the other hand, a character in America’s West would display some dominant confidence as the person has seen his culture move across the continent — no barriers whether nature or tribal could stop the flow of expansion.

Those elements play at the tug-of-war that torments some characters. Those conflicts heighten the story but require planning. Details are needed, but Showing rather than Telling gives a bigger punch for the effort.

Thursday, June 19, 2014



Words Come Alive
Writers seeking to find ways the protagonist (P) faces a conflict can use the 1992 movie Thunderheart as an example of viewing factions around the P.

Any conflict focuses on how P copes with barriers that face P’s goals. Yet those barriers might arise from different factions of social or political forces.

The movie’s P, FBI Special Agent Raymond Levoi, thinks his goal moves him to solve the murder of a local Native resident. Yet he discovers his goal requires him to sort out the groups in play. That is a problem because they are numerous.

His goal faces more understanding of his Lacoka background, a link he has denied. Those forces become personified by: Walter Crow Horse, tribal cop; Milton, the head of the tribal council milita; and Grandpa, a shaman type of wise man.

Each person can be seen through the lens of a faction or cultural mindset. Walter Crow Horse seeks to blend the wisdom of nature from the past with today’s world. That faction turns activist when it sees rights being lost to a community. Milton, despite being Native, has turned his back on nature and the past. His goal seeks to further a status in White society with wealth and power. Grandpa yearns for the days of the past and while he enjoys watching TV, he listens to the wind and the owl for messages of how to proceed in life. His faction keeps the old paths alive with stories and respect for the hills and valleys.

For any story, a conflict exists. To develop that tension, find the ideas in play with the story. Then ask, “who believes in one approach instead of another?” Find a character to represent those ideas. Usually those characters come from one faction or another. Those factions will be lined up to either support or oppose P’s goals. Characters are not stereotypes. But they exist within a cultural mindset. However, each character surrounds himself with several cultural mindsets and can vary his approach depending on the influence of one over others.

Factions are the key. Levoi wheres the shades of the FBI. But evolves when he sees mystical owls.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014


Writing the thriller…a discussion…part two… Reprinted from Steven Moore's Science Fiction Blogsite. Steven is a noted author and creative writing teacher. April 9th, 2014

[Tom Pope is a writing teacher—see the interview with him in a post from a few days ago—and yours truly writes thrillers. We put our emails together to produce this Socratic discussion about several elements associated with writing thrillers. This is part two of that discussion. Enjoy.]

Steve: What you call third person internal is just a temporary lapse into first person. Putting the thoughts into italics allows the writer to make it present tense: What’s my partner doing? Instead of, What was that partner doing? The first moves the prose along more. However, if italics aren’t used in the first, readers are justifiably confused due to the tense change. Moreover, many authors make the mistake of putting italicized thoughts into past tense, which is also confusing to the reader.

I’m even more of a minimalist writer. In one of your dialogue lines, it’s clear who’s talking to whom. You’ve replaced “Are you tracking badges now?” with “You collecting badges now?” while I’d replace it with “Collecting badges now?” The first might be appropriate for that nebulous genre of “literary fiction,” the second for a thriller, and the third for a hard-boiled mystery or police procedural. Depending on the person with whom I’m conversing, I might say any of the three in an office situation, but the last really moves the dialogue forward.

These examples are minutia, of course, but over the length of a novel, probably 60 to 80 kwords, the minutia can add up. Same goes for slang and street jive. If there’s a lot of dialogue—I mean pages and pages of it—and the slang or street jive used isn’t found in my normal conversational quirks, I’ll eventually tire of it as a reader. There’s nothing bigoted or hypocritical about this. When I lived in the Boston area, I found the ubiquitous accent there tiresome at times. This is a cultural phenomenon. Same goes for foreign language terms—I use those more than most authors, but I’ve become more careful. The Goldilocks rule applies here: use just enough to provide color, but not too much. Of course, too little and too much depend on the reader—you have to aim for the average person in your targeted audience.

That leads to another question: who’s the targeted audience? It’s my personal impression, but borne out by many stats, that women are more avid readers than men. Given that, perhaps male authors should adapt their prose accordingly? I’m not talking about vampire romances or things like that, but thrillers still. Jon Land, for example, has created a kick-ass female deputy sheriff. James Patterson has created a strong female detective. Most thrillers I’ve written have strong female protagonists. First, do you think a male writer can get inside the female mind enough to write in first person or third person internal and be convincing? Second, will thrillers, with their fast-paced action, heavy violence, strong language, and sex scenes, deviant or not, appeal to female readers if the protagonist is female? While mine are at the level of cable TV (no erotica or porn), they tend to have those elements. I know that some women are turned off by these thriller “features.”

Tom: Actually let me suggest that the internal can be used beyond a temporary lapse and that avoids the confusion of tenses. The character can from the outset speak from his mind and the use of the emotion brings that sense of immediacy that appears as the first person.

The targeted audience is a great point. Authors have to foresee a profile of their readers. While women do buy more books, I think they are attracted to specific cultures. Rather than thinking like a woman instead of a man, the cultural framing might be more crucial.

One culture might be the multitasking middle management of legal or business firms. That female’s attraction to thrillers would appreciate the fast paced problem solving she sees as necessary in her world. Her enjoyment of dialogue could arrive at seeing how others use the jargon of the legal system or the management arena. Yet another woman might grow up in a slum in India and her culture might enjoy seeing the character speak in a similar dialect.

Having said that, yes, female characters are demanding to be more real to the woman who picks up the thriller. Hence the development of the female FBI agent. Our design of these characters must take into account the woman of today who is more feisty, and aware of the obstacles we see in thrillers compared to the Donna Reed of yesterday.

Steve: Probably similar comments can be made about settings. A female reader might feel more comfortable with more domestic venues, even though these are invaded by bad guys intent on doing the female protagonist and her family harm. Sometimes the suspense is heightened when the very familiar becomes a battleground, psychological or otherwise. The movie Prisoners is an example where bad things start happening in a quiet middle class suburb. Or, will the female reader react negatively to this because it hits too close to home?

Tom: Actually, I see this as a cultural issue rather than a female one. One culture is linked to being a female, but another one exists in the office of the FBI or the diner. So a female blue-collar worker might feel less comfortable reading about the female FBI agent despite the fact that the protagonist is a female.

Note the switch in an internal psyche of Liz in the TV Series The Blacklist. Her natural instincts of nurturing and being a mother exist, but only when she is off duty. During a crisis, she has switched off that part of herself. That driving force has been repressed. So, the average woman category is really a problem because that group is divided into many subcultures. The female CEO might share some of Liz’s struggles due to the politics of her business. Those issues could duplicate the crisis seen in Blacklist. Yet the Diner waitress could have more things in common with a character who struggles with paying finances, dealing with sexism from dining customers, or handling the child at home.

One other item, though, which relates to some previous content in our discussions. I think the thriller requires more attention to how the characters present backstory. You’re right about the constant need to move forward. I find some thriller authors are not aware of how to show items like a planned abduction of a key person that occurred before the story began. Or, the details of the enemy vessel as described by just by two characters in a dialogue. The emphasis in both often comes across as telling instead of showing.

One technique to avoid this would be to start a description of the information by translating the details into something visual where the reader sees the material as happening in the present.

Instead of: Jake told the captain about the abduction. “They waited for the chief of staff in the alley of the hotel and when his SS detail responded to an explosion, unmarked vans drove up to seize the chief of staff.”

How about: Jake opened his laptop and punched in a code. The screen showed a dark alley as lights of the St. Regis glowed. Off to the side the van hummed. Dark covered faces saw the eruption of light on the other side of the hotel. SS pulled their guns and ran to check out the explosion.

Or, another example, instead of:

Jake had to ask about the weapons on the attack sub. The captain frowned. “Twenty five MK 48 torpedoes and Tomahawk Cruise missiles.” “Why the frown?” “The diving planes have been moved from the sail to the bow to strengthen the sail for under ice conditions.”

Instead, how about having the sub encounter an enemy attack sub and the characters see the info from their view screens:

Jake watched the captain nod to track the contact. A blur lit the screen as they rounded the enemy vessel. Jake noticed the bow and rear tubes as the grey ship yawed away from their view.

“Almost twenty five tubes?”

“MK 48s.”

Jake watched the ship turn as the sail dipped away. “”Where are the diving planes?”

“In the bow—ensures extra strength for under ice conditions.”

Steve: All good examples. Tom, you’ve had the last words. Well, almost. I’ve enjoyed this Socratic discussion about writing the thriller. We’ve only touched on some of the aspects. If any readers have questions, contact me. If they’re for Tom, I’ll forward them to him. Tom and I hope that readers have enjoyed this dialogue as well as writers.

In libris libertas….
- See more at: http://stevenmmoore.com/?p=2913#more-2913

Wednesday, April 16, 2014



Writing the thriller: A Discussion Between Two of Bookpleasures.com's Reviewers Steve Moore and Tom Pope By Norm Goldman Published April 8, 2014 Reviewers' & Guest Authors' Views Norm Goldman<

Norm Goldman, B.A. LL.L, is the Publisher & Editor of Bookpleasures, which he created in 2002.' Practicing law for over 35 years enabled Norm to transfer and apply to book reviewing his many skills that he had perfected during his career in the legal profession and as a result he became a prolific free lance book reviewer & author interviewer.

Bookpleasures.com is excited to hear from two of our reviewers, Tom Pope and Steve Moore.They have put together a discussion based on their email exchanges to produce a Socratic discussion about several elements associated with writing thrillers. Enjoy.

Steve Moore is a full-time writer and ex-scientist. Besides his many technical publications, he has written six sci-fi thrillers (one a novel for young adults), many short stories, and frequent comments on writing and the digital revolution in publishing. His interests also include physics, mathematics, genetics, robotics, forensics, and scientific ethics.

Tom Pope is a writing teacher and fiction coach who strives to spark the imagination. As a teacher, he works with tutoring services to help students organize essays and understand literary elements likee the point of view. As a fiction coach, he aids authors to develop characters, brainstorm conflict pacing and design worldbuilding.

Tom:
What are your impressions on the role of the clock with the threat? I think that a threat should be a major one and the protagonist should face some time limit before all havoc breaks out. Example: The protagonist has to stop a nanite infection of fifty cases in a major hospital within twelve hours or the infection spreads to the entire country.

However, the role of the clock does not end there. I think the clock can work with segmenting the conflict into mini conflicts. Example: Your protagonist has one hour to find the exact nature of the nanite, but doctors block every step. He solves the nature of the nanite, but then faces a two hour window to find how the nanites are being activated by outside EM frequencies.

Of course, those are just the beginnings of the major problem, but the use of the clock and threat seem to work hand in hand.

Steve: The first movie I ever saw was High Noon, the quintessential "clock movie" and a thriller in its own right (my father let me tag along—he was a Gary Cooper fan). Of course, there was that famous Fox series too. In my thriller, The Midas Bomb, Detectives Chen and Castilblanco are working against the clock to stop a terrorist strike. In the last tale of my short story anthology, Pop Two Antacids and Have Some Java, Castilblanco is waiting for a drug-crazed killer to return home. The clock is almost a protagonist in this yarn.

A thriller without any time crunch lacks suspense. It's a critical element. It also provides a key distinction between mystery and thriller. In the former, something bad has already happened and the protagonist has to figure out the how's, why's, and who's. In the latter, something bad is going to happen and the protagonist has to try to stop it, usually with a time constraint. Of course, there are other differences between the two genres, but these are key. In brief, the time crunch makes a thriller differ from a mystery.

Tom: I think you home in on the key factor of when the threat occurs. The mystery does offer a threat that happened already, while the thriller poses an incoming threat. But some aspect of a coming threat still exists in a mystery. The presence of a killer in a mystery could be considered a subtle new threat. The classics of Inspector Morse or Holmes make readers feel a new threat looms over their shoulders because the killer still lurks. And what’s happening to those family members who are either guilty or innocent?

Yet, I think the role of the clock can be even more dominant than that in High Noon. The clock becomes an aid to segment the mini conflict. Cooper’s character faced one vital threat that revolved around the clock. The protagonist also had to deal with some psychological issues and ethical ones. But those were all linked to the overriding threat.

In contrast, the clock struck many mini conflicts for Jack Bauer in the final year of 24. The clock threatened solving intel on a Senate staff member’s betrayal, the way the White House had to be protected, the way Jack viewed his relationship with Tony, and then the way he had to deal with a contractor. I think thrillers demand writers to think beyond the initial conflict to break it down and delve into the many parts of the threat. Then each one can become a subject for a mini conflict.

Steve: I agree that, even in the mystery genre, the potential that the murderer plans to kill again, for example, can add a time constraint—the protagonist must stop him before that happens. That’s when the mystery genre crosses over to the thriller genre, though, if the clock is really key. I wouldn’t get hung up on mini-conflicts. 24 created them to match the soap-opera nature of the TV series. Books don’t need that. Many good thrillers have only one, albeit a major one, if the story is a novel. Of course, sustaining that conflict, whether through mini conflicts or not, is key to creating a fast-paced thriller that holds the reader’s interest. That’s why extensive backstory in a thriller is so dangerous—an author wants to move forward in his thriller writing. Occasional flashbacks (a brief backstory) is OK if it helps explain characters’ actions and/or motives. Again, mysteries are different—extensive backstory is often included, maybe in bits and pieces, as the sleuth unravels the mystery.

Tom: I suggest the mini conflict adds to the suspense. The past featured antagonists who set up a threat and the major threat was the conflict the protagonist sought to end. Yet that format could lead in a straight path to the climax. I think today’s antagonists hide their endgame so the initial threat is a cover for the larger major threat, which becomes unfurled later. Those twists could add to the suspense.

Yes, I agree that flashbacks have to be brief so that the author moves forward. Yet, two or three sentences could add to the understanding of the character.

For example, the protagonist churns with trusting his partner as he goes dark. He recalls the death of the partner in a quick flashback. Then his image morphs to the face of the present partner as he says, “Be back later. Can’t explain.”

Actually, that leads to another question about the thriller. Do you see a different style of dialogue needed with thrillers compared to other genres?

Steve: I suppose it depends on how important dialogue is to the story. I can certainly imagine a tale where the protagonist is all wrapped up in his own internal conflict—the reader is privy to his thoughts. This can be done in third person POV of the protagonist, possibly using italics to indicate personal thoughts, but it’s easiest in first person.

On the other hand, snappy dialogue between characters can move a story along in a way that descriptive prose can’t. In that sense, it’s not necessarily like a real conversation between people, and shouldn’t be. We walk into our workplace and greet people, for example, as part of our normal day’s activities, but the reader will be bored if all the author accomplishes is basically a “Hello, how is everyone?”

Dialogue has other perils for the inexperienced writer. I once reviewed a book where the characters never used contractions—people don’t talk that way, even if your word processor doesn’t like contractions. On the other hand, too much slang and jive and tidbits from other languages can be annoying. The author can use them sparingly to add color, but no more.

Moreover, I find it annoying when an author writes something like: “My goodness, aren’t you perky today?” she winked. Or: “Are you hit?” asked the detective with concern. In the first, winked is no substitute for said or asked. In the second, the question already implies the detective is concerned. Mistakes like these can bring the forward motion of your thriller to a screeching halt—at least, they do for me.

Tom: First, I think the idea of internal can be used without it distracting from the desire to keep the movement forward in a thriller. The use of the third person internal hits readers almost like the impact of the first person. The language doesn’t need italics if the internal conversation is so obvious that it’s an internal struggle. And that can heighten a thriller because the conflict is brought right into the psyche of the protagonist.

Yet your point about writing snappy and avoiding trite dialogue is a good one. Those items halt the forward motion. The snappy quality also adds to the needed speed that shapes a thriller. Instead of the trite examples you posed that annoy you, writers could change the dynamics with this example:

Jake’s eyes scanned the squad room as he entered. No sign of Bill. He blinked, worried about that. What was that partner doing? “Jake. In my office.”

Jake twisted his head to the voice. That grating micro-manager had to go. As his feet moved to the Captain’s office, he spotted the shield and badge on the desk. Bill’s.

Jake saw that scene from two years ago when Bill saved his bacon. Now he had failed to save Bill. “Jake. You’ve been dark for two days.” Jake leaned over the desk to peer right into the Captain. “You collecting badges now? Easier than tracking down our lead?”

In the previous scene, you might imagine a trite comment made by an office worker as Jake enters the office. However, Jake does not have to respond to that. He is lost in his concern for his partner, and the dialogue tends to move the action forward.

One suggestion about the use of some language sparingly. You’re right on with the idea that the same type of language from each character is boring. Readers lose sense of a character that way. However, a person with a patois does not use the language sparingly. To display that character with only one or two words would come off as unrealistic. The ethnic and cultural writers like Toni Morrison wrap the reader around the dialogue and that brings the reader into the world of the character.

Of course the amount can be controlled by having short spurts of dialogue. Most conversations happen with only a sentence or two. People don’t usually speak in two to three paragraphs of content.

Steve: What you call third person internal is just a temporary lapse into first person. Putting the thoughts into italics allows the writer to make it present tense: What’s my partner doing? Instead of, What was that partner doing? The first moves the prose along more. However, if italics aren’t used in the first, readers are justifiably confused due to the tense change. Moreover, many authors make the mistake of putting italicized thoughts into past tense, which is also confusing to the reader.

I’m even more of a minimalist writer. In one of your dialogue lines, it’s clear who’s talking to whom. You’ve replaced “Are you tracking badges now?” with “You collecting badges now?” while I’d replace it with “Collecting badges now?” The first might be appropriate for that nebulous genre of “literary fiction,” the second for a thriller, and the third for a hard-boiled mystery or police procedural. Depending on the person with whom I’m conversing, I might say any of the three in an office situation, but the last really moves the dialogue forward.

These examples are minutia, of course, but over the length of a novel, probably 60 to 80 kwords, the minutia can add up. Same goes for slang and street jive. If there’s a lot of dialogue—I mean pages and pages of it—and the slang or street jive used isn’t found in my normal conversational quirks, I’ll eventually tire of it as a reader. There’s nothing bigoted or hypocritical about this. When I lived in the Boston area, I found the ubiquitous accent there tiresome at times. This is a cultural phenomenon. Same goes for foreign language terms—I use those more than most authors, but I’ve become more careful. The Goldilocks rule applies here: use just enough to provide color, but not too much. Of course, too little and too much depend on the reader—you have to aim for the average person in your targeted audience.

That leads to another question: who’s the targeted audience? It’s my personal impression, but borne out by many stats, that women are more avid readers than men. Given that, perhaps male authors should adapt their prose accordingly? I’m not talking about vampire romances or things like that, but thrillers still. Jon Land, for example, has created a kick-ass female deputy sheriff. James Patterson has created a strong female detective. Most thrillers I’ve written have strong female protagonists. First, do you think a male writer can get inside the female mind enough to write in first person or third person internal and be convincing? Second, will thrillers, with their fast-paced action, heavy violence, strong language, and sex scenes, deviant or not, appeal to female readers if the protagonist is female? While mine are at the level of cable TV (no erotica or porn), they tend to have those elements. I know that some women are turned off by these thriller “features.”

Tom: Actually let me suggest that the internal can be used beyond a temporary lapse and that avoids the confusion of tenses. The character can from the outset speak from his mind and the use of the emotion brings that sense of immediacy that appears as the first person.

The targeted audience is a great point. Authors have to foresee a profile of their readers. While women do buy more books, I think they are attracted to specific cultures. Rather than thinking like a woman instead of a man, the cultural framing might be more crucial.

One culture might be the multitasking middle management of legal or business firms. That female’s attraction to thrillers would appreciate the fast paced problem solving she sees as necessary in her world. Her enjoyment of dialogue could arrive at seeing how others use the jargon of the legal system or the management arena. Yet another woman might grow up in a slum in India and her culture might enjoy seeing the character speak in a similar dialect.

Having said that, yes, female characters are demanding to be more real to the woman who picks up the thriller. Hence the development of the female FBI agent. Our design of these characters must take into account the woman of today who is more feisty, and aware of the obstacles we see in thrillers compared to the Donna Reed of yesterday.

Steve: Probably similar comments can be made about settings. A female reader might feel more comfortable with more domestic venues, even though these are invaded by bad guys intent on doing the female protagonist and her family harm. Sometimes the suspense is heightened when the very familiar becomes a battleground, psychological or otherwise. The movie Prisoners is an example where bad things start happening in a quiet middle class suburb. Or, will the female reader react negatively to this because it hits too close to home?

Tom: Actually, I see this as a cultural issue rather than a female one. One culture is linked to being a female, but another one exists in the office of the FBI or the diner. So a female blue-collar worker might feel less comfortable reading about the female FBI agent despite the fact that the protagonist is a female.

Note the switch in an internal psyche of Liz in the TV Series The Blacklist. Her natural instincts of nurturing and being a mother exist, but only when she is off duty. During a crisis, she has switched off that part of herself. That driving force has been repressed. So, the average woman category is really a problem because that group is divided into many subcultures. The female CEO might share some of Liz’s struggles due to the politics of her business. Those issues could duplicate the crisis seen in Blacklist. Yet the Diner waitress could have more things in common with a character who struggles with paying finances, dealing with sexism from dining customers, or handling the child at home.

One other item, though, which relates to some previous content in our discussions. I think the thriller requires more attention to how the characters present backstory. You’re right about the constant need to move forward. I find some thriller authors are not aware of how to show items like a planned abduction of a key person that occurred before the story began. Or, the details of the enemy vessel as described by just by two characters in a dialogue. The emphasis in both often comes across as telling instead of showing.

One technique to avoid this would be to start a description of the information by translating the details into something visual where the reader sees the material as happening in the present.

Instead of: Jake told the captain about the abduction. “They waited for the chief of staff in the alley of the hotel and when his SS detail responded to an explosion, unmarked vans drove up to seize the chief of staff.”

How about: Jake opened his laptop and punched in a code. The screen showed a dark alley as lights of the St. Regis glowed. Off to the side the van hummed. Dark covered faces saw the eruption of light on the other side of the hotel. SS pulled their guns and ran to check out the explosion.

Or, another example, instead of: Jake had to ask about the weapons on the attack sub. The captain frowned. “Twenty five MK 48 torpedoes and Tomahawk Cruise missiles.” “Why the frown?” “The diving planes have been moved from the sail to the bow to strengthen the sail for under ice conditions.”

Instead, how about having the sub encounter an enemy attack sub and the characters see the info from their view screens:

Jake watched the captain nod to track the contact. A blur lit the screen as they rounded the enemy vessel. Jake noticed the bow and rear tubes as the grey ship yawed away from their view. “Almost twenty five tubes?” “MK 48s.” Jake watched the ship turn as the sail dipped away. “”Where are the diving planes?” “In the bow—ensures extra strength for under ice conditions.”

Steve: All good examples. Tom, you’ve had the last words. Well, almost. I’ve enjoyed this Socratic discussion about writing the thriller. We’ve only touched on some of the aspects. If any readers have questions, contact me. If they’re for Tom, I’ll forward them to him. Tom and I hope that readers have enjoyed this dialogue as well as writers.

In libris libertas….

Monday, March 31, 2014

Book Review of Immigrant Problems Asks, Where is the Community


The Secret Side of Empty Reviewed By Tom Pope of Bookpleasures.com
Author: Maria E. Andreu ISBN: 978-0-7624-5192-0 E-book ISBN: 978-0-7624-5205-7 Where is the young person’s community when the mainstream society says you’re White, but you’re Argentinian family pulls you into another direction. Maria E. Andreu’s coming of age character MT walks by her mother without looking at her. The mother cleans MT’s high school and MT’s White mainstream friends might be embarrassed at thinking the female cleaner is connected to MT. MT wants to fit in. She shortens her name from Monserrat Thalia to MT to avoid explaining her past. That becomes the vice of emptiness — a state of alienation, depression. A void. Or separation. A sense many Latinos feel, especially those who don’t have legal documents. Emptiness could also be invisible. Where is the Latino when White Mexicans shun Diego and Frida’s art? Where are they in the image of the Guatemalan flag when that Quetzal was killed by the Spanish conquistador Alvarado? MT is invisible as The Secret Side of Empty explores the ways people become invisible to others. MT’s senior year in high school draws her more into an empty world. Her skin is more White than other Latinas. But she feels more American than Argentinian where she fled with her family. But MT is invisible. She can’t share her full spirit with Nate, a sensitive yet upper class boyfriend with a family that seems to thrive on shopping in the mall. MT can’t share her hopes with a father who dreams of returning to the European-focused streets of Argentina. And she can’t even tell her fears to Chelsea, a childhood friend from kindergarden. A major difference between nonfiction and fiction’s effect on readers is the way the reader obtains information. The distance seen between the person and the viewer of the alienated state in nonfiction makes the topic an item for cocktail conversations. But MT’s emptiness in a novel brings the viewer to the shoes of the character. Andreu takes you though the daily life obstacles and private sensations of MT. Readers probably know something about the struggle immigrants face, but Andreu’s hand grabs the reader to whirl beyond the tip of the hearsay. She whisks you through the daily life where a trembling glance at a policeman makes you fear deportation. She dashes your hopes by contrasting the future. MT yearns to further her energy as an honor student who excels in English. But she drowns with the knowledge that college is another borderline — no papers, no college. MT wraps emptiness around her like the drain of hope. When hope leaves, people can’t just constantly strive. No light shines at the end of a tunnel. Her day becomes filled with looking over her shoulder to avoid an authority figure tapping into a database to find her status. She rides a bike because a driver’s license requires papers. She avoids going home at times to see a mother who cowers under the macho power of father. Can she find ways to reverse her slide? How does MT remain truthful to a love that could thrive in the future? Nate strikes readers as the ideal of a sharing partner. But he still lives beyond MT’s zone of trust. Fears about telling him why she can’t go to college make her silent. His world of KNICK prime-box seating holds friends who could view her as an alien. How does MT plan to grow past her itinerant father? Her father distrusts books or anything in the country. Her love of language that leads her to a tutoring job seems miles away from her possibilities. Her visit to a college where a feisty teacher demands questioning norms could inspire many. But MT reels with the believe that these teasers burn the soul — like the tortured lament from Dulcina in Don Quixote. And how does her fear of the unknown coming from deportation mix with the fear of a beating from father when she shows some knowledge of learning? Such is the vacuum that draws MT into that spiral of hopeless paralysis. Yet, this is the same MT that reached out to tutor students when she needed money. The same MT who spent time with Nate’s other world. And the same MT who avoids some of her father’s violence. Could she turn her strengths up a higher level to overcome her obstacles?