KazG

  • Two bits of advice ‘freed’ me up wrt location, because I usually start with somewhere I know then make adjustments as necessary. Reading a disclaimer along the lines of “geographical liberties have been taken” I much appreciated.
    Also, Eimear McBride said when she wrote of Camden, she did it from a 5 year old memory of the place and never…[Read more]

  • BTW I think your book DOES sound very original! Setting, the manananggal etc…. My point was that it is best to ‘show’ this through your blurb and chapters, rather state this claim directly.

  • Hi Alan,

    I really enjoyed “Ice” although it is a very strange book. Worth reading to the end though, if you can.

    Yes, my understanding is that Anna Kavan struggled with various problems, including depression and addictions.

    It’s probably a bit of an old and obscure novel to use as a comp title, but hope it will lead to other relevant books

  • Hi guys,

    I’m just wondering if any of you are planning to go to Sophie Draper’s book launch in November. I really liked the sound of the book when I heard an extract at York, and I’ve been following Sophie’s progress since then. If any of you are thinking of going, let me know as it will be lovely to meet up around the…[Read more]

  • It sounds like a really difficult issue, Janeshuff. However well done on you for listening to your reader feedback.

    I think as others have suggested, a close psychic distance is your answer. The character’s subjective thoughts, feelings, and reactions can never be gratuitous. These will also advance your plot, by contributing to your character’s…[Read more]

  • Thanks guys. That’s really helpful.

    I’m leaning more towards going with a fictional place, although based on a real location to help me be consistent with geographical details. For me, I think it’s becoming clear that there is a particular kind of place I envisage as the setting for this particular story.

    Trying to shoehorn my story into a…[Read more]

  • RichardB replied to the topic Violence in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 7 months ago

    I had a problem like this in my last effort, and it cost me more sweat than anything else in that story. It was all the harder because it was a husband beating up his wife. I really didn’t want to go there and tried everything to skate round it, but the plot demanded that I meet it head-on. In the end I did almost exactly what Jonathan suggests: I…[Read more]

  • Some great ideas in there, thanks Jonathan

  • Jonathan replied to the topic Violence in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 7 months ago

    I imagine details such as the number of times someone is hit – or even the exact manner – would be gratuitous; I don’t think anyone would keep track and I think it could actually lessen the realism as well as being rather unpleasant to read and write imo. But I do wonder if there is a chance to show character, eg sympathy for the victim by showing…[Read more]

  • Sandra replied to the topic Violence in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 7 months ago

    “if it doesn’t advance the plot or reveal something about character, don’t prolong it.” – excellent advice! Thanks Jane.

  • Jonathan, I don’t want to write more detail of exactly where and how many times they hit her and how much it hurts (or doesn’t) mainly because I don’t think it advances the scene and would therefore be gratuitous. I’ve tried, now, to write enough for the reader to understand that it was horrifying, callous and caused life-threatening damage (which…[Read more]

  • Jonathan replied to the topic Violence in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 7 months ago

    My question would be why do you not want to write the scene in more detail? Is it a matter of taste? (ie you’re not keen on doing it) Or is it more in keeping with the rest of the book that way?

  • Sandra replied to the topic Violence in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 7 months ago

    For severe violence done well I’d look at Malcolm Mackay, Ray Banks, Stuart Neville’s ‘The Twelve’. Benjamin Myers ‘Turning Blue’ had me commenting ‘Stomach-churning details precisely told’, or Sarah Hilary. Denise Mina might be good, but I cannot remember which is the most violent.

  • Thriller/Psychological thriller, Anna. If you have any suggestions of books where you think the violence is done well, I’d be interested!

  • Kate, I think I am may have let my decision to keep the violence short stop the scene from developing in other ways so I’ve been working on that but I can see, nevertheless, that the violence has been threatened for a long time and I’ve ramped up the tension and fear leading up to it and maybe that is why it seems a let down.

  • Sandra replied to the topic Violence in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 7 years, 7 months ago

    I’d agree with you Jane, ‘less is more’ works for violent scenes much as it does for sex scenes, though I suppose you’d have to work harder so as to bring something fresh for the readers’ mind to work on.
    Those long, graphic scenes can be effective, up to a point but can tun as many off as they do on, so go with your gut feeling.

  • I am struggling with editing a couple of violent scenes in my WIP. They need to be there. My preference is to keep them short and allusive (spelling?) and leave the reader’s imagination to do the work but a couple of beta readers have felt cheated. I’d post them but they make no sense out of context. Any advice?

  • Congratulations! I’m so excited for you, that’s such great news. *lifts glass of wine*

  • Giselle replied to the topic Festival Dreams in the forum Blogs 7 years, 7 months ago

    Coming in late as I’ve been plunged in post-York wip modifications.
    Mandy, you were brilliant, funny, natural, endearing, strong and gracious. Like many, I’ve followed your journey, but to hear it all, from the beginning to now, was just wonderful.
    Seeing so many of you at York really charged my batteries. There were definitely less cloudies this…[Read more]

  • Janette posted an update 7 years, 7 months ago

    @sandradavies – your comp. Wow, moody, gritty and tension filled. Nail on the head, I’d say for Haloween.

    • Ah … hadn’t thought Halloween so much as WWI – thanks for reading and appreciating.

      • Of course – a re-read, bearing that in mind, cast another light altogether and Ioved it all the more. I suppose I just had halloween on my mind.

        • In fairness, there’s not so much of a reference to WWI as there was in the tale from which this developed.

  • Load More