Sunday, January 27, 2013

How do you write a novel?

I have asked myself this question many times. When I first embarked on this journey, I though it would be simple to put pen to paper, but as I quickly discovered, writing such a complex and diverse world as I have chosen to do, is not so easily done. If you have read the Lord of the Rings trilogy, Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin, or the Mistborn series by Brandon Sanderson, you understand the complexity of their worlds; the sheer amount of detail and realism that was embedded into these amazing works of fiction would make any aspiring novelist bow down in humility. If you don’t recognize the books or authors above, find them and read them.

Just to underline my point, Tolkien created entire languages to accompany Middle-Earth. He didn’t just make up a few words and call it good. He created a complete language you could actually learn if you really, really wanted to. That is mind-boggling.

That is exactly what I want. I want to boggle your mind, my dear readers. I want you to read my book(s) and become enthralled with the characters, the cultures, and the world. I want to create an entirely new place for your imagination to run freely and enjoy the new splendors that I have set about for you; I want you to experience my world as though you were truly living within it.

So, how do you write such an epic novel and not have it turn into a complete disaster with no structure, form, or fully developed characters that no one invests in because they don’t care about him or her? I have no clue. BUT I am figuring it out and I am getting help from many places. I have my wonderful husband who gives me great advice and a much needed male perspective. I have my dear friend Kayla, who is the author of the much raved about Nevermore series, who, as a published author, gives me clear insight to my characters and voice. And I have many other friends and family who are all willing to read my Book In Progress and give me honest and well thought out feedback.

I am also using a book written by Donald Maass called How to Write the Next Break Out Novel (workbook edition). This book has been extremely helpful and I have only gone through the first two exercises. However, it is detailed and incredibly thorough. The exercises provided, along with real-world book excerpts, gives a clear perspective of what to do and what NOT to do when creating a new world and developing characters.

Writing a novel is complex, whether or not you are creating a brand new world, or if you are setting it in a time or place that already has or does exist. The most important thing you can do, as an aspiring novelist, is flushing out your characters and making them believable. You want your readers to love your good guys and hate your bad guys. You want your readers to cry when a favorite character dies and jump for joy when the big bad is finally defeated. If you can evoke those emotions in a reader, you have done your job and done it well. I hope that by putting down my process and my thinking as I write my first novel (and hopefully not the last) that someone who wants to be a novelist will be helped and intrigued by my words.

Again, thank you for reading and I hope you have enjoyed your time. I will be posting more and more about my process but I also plan on posting short stories and legends of the world to come. So thank you for spending your time here and I hope you will come back!

Sincerely
A.M.
Friday, January 25, 2013 1 comments

Obsessed With Rowan




Rowan is a complex character, to put it mildly, and I wish I could just lay it all out right here for you, my readers, so you can see how so all-encompassing she has become. There are many trials she will face as you will find out and there are choices she will be forced to make. As you read my book, would you make the same decisions? What you be feeling, alone and cold and full of bloody thoughts? 



Darkness falls upon the flower
Doom for her, this final hour
Only blood will set her free
Yet only her blood will it be

Great is the blackened tower
That sets about to destroy the flower
Shamed she is, for what is done
Yet revels in the delights of nights gone

She cannot move, this tiny flower
For rooted to the ground this hour
Love holds her where she is best
Yet hatred moves her to the test

A choice is made by one so young
To break the bonds of life not done
Keep the world in darkness here
Or set it free by her single tear

In her stead, a tree will grow
Magnificent in its glow
Protection will it offer to the flowers
If her blood doth shed this hour

Darkness falls upon the flower
Doom for her, this final hour
Only blood will set her free
Yet only her blood will it be


From Darkness Falls

Thursday, January 24, 2013 0 comments

How long have you been working on your novel? Oh, just a few years...


I love to write. I have written hundreds of poems, a smattering of short stories, and began about five novels. The novel I am currently working on has been rewritten countless times. The story began when I was in high school which was, oh, seven years ago, as a co-writing project with a sister of mine.



When I first began this novel, it started with a rather simple title and a fairly simple plot. Over the years the story has evolved into something more complex and the characters have come to life. This novel, I feel, will be my greatest work. I cannot wait for the novel to come to fruition and, if everything goes as planned, there will be much, much more to come about Rowan. I hope that you, my readers, will be just as excited as I am for this enticing tale and I hope to share more with you about my creative highs and lows. Please enjoy the brief synopsis below and thank you for reading.


Darkness Falls is the shattered story of a little girl whose young life had been defined before she had ever been conceived. We follow young Rowan as she falls deeper and deeper into a world that is unforgiving and cruel, much different than her vibrant island home. Rowan is taken from her home and thrown into a slave trade known by the common people as the Noble Trade. Her only hope for rescue is her father, the captain of a merchant ship, who had been saved from the carnage while on a voyage. Unbeknownst to Rowan and her father, a dark stranger has been watching and waiting for his moment. And now, he has it.
 
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