Today, I’m feeling like I will never crack this writing lark.
Doesn’t mean I am giving up, just that it’s bloody hard going some days. I love reading romance, but every time I read a good one, I just can’t help the comparisons. I made the even worse mistake of reading one suggested by one of my CPs, with some similarities in the theme and set up with the story I’m writing.
The story is Nikki Logan’s Their Newborn Gift, one of the free Mills and Boon ebooks on their Everyone’s Reading site.
It’s excellent. And very sensual for a Sweet Romance. No sex, but the sensual awareness between them sizzles!
It’s also depressing the frick out of me. The basic premise is similar to mine, the heroine has to find the hero, father of the child he doesn’t know about, to help the child’s serious health problems. And she’s done it so much better!
Of course she has, she’s an experienced, multi-published author, and I’m, well, not. But she’s done it not just a little bit, don’t-worry-Autumn-you’re-nearly-there better. A helluva lot better. She’s wrung so much emotion out of the situation, and these two people who are so right for each other but can’t see it. I honestly can’t imagine I will ever write that well.
Maybe I really just don’t have what it takes, the natural talent, the voice. Maybe determination and sticking with it won’t be enough.
*sigh*
I can’t let myself believe that, or I’d have to give up now. Keeping on going, reflecting on what I’m writing, working to keep improving- it’s got to be enough. Shirley Jump, who now writes an amazing eight books a year, took ten manuscripts and eight years of solid writing to get published in fiction.
That’s kinda reassuring. She writes like a dream.
So I have a better plan than giving up. I’m going to reread some of these books I love. Very slowly. Very analytically.
What made Nikki’s story so good? How did she infuse their interactions with so much sexual tension and heart deep emotion, simultaneously. How did she make the heroine and heroine not simply realising they loved each other and getting together about half way through the story work and not just seem Too Stupid To Live like my characters? How does she put in so much lush description without slowing down the pacing?
That might help.
Actually, I just found this on Nikki’s website-
Plagiarising technique – a great learning tool
Some new writers live in fear of unconsciously plagiarising content or mimicking someone elses style and avoid reading as some kind of safety net.
Don’t.
If you want to get published you should be reading recent, quality works in your genre specifically so you CAN pull them apart to see what makes them so good. You don’t want to adopt plots characters or text, of course, but you do want to adopt good technique. Having said that… if you pitch a work with some terribly obvious, high profile trademark technique in it… that’s gonna get noticed and not in a good way. Everything in moderation.
So maybe instead of doing another writing workshop next month, I’ll do my own workshop, analysing a good published story a week. As well as keeping on writing.
Right now, what I’m doing for my story is cutting out a whole load of backstory infodump in the first chapter. My Prologue (I know, they are the Kiss of Death, but this story seems to need one!) has gone from two pages to eighty-eight words.
I’m also wondering if another plot device that’s part of what keeps them apart can be cut. Seems like I cut one out last week, but I’m realising today that I didn’t completely excise it. remnants of the same thing are still there, in the shape of the misunderstanding that split them up ten years before. All I did was remove the real event that lay behind it in the original version. Took out the date rape from the first draft, changed it to the same creep of a guy simply spreading rumours that she had sex with him. The hero, the town’s bad boy, was too insecure and prickly to doubt it, the heroine, the town’s golden girl, was too proud and too upset that the hero could believe it to deny it. And they still are the same emotionally, ten years later, even though their roles are reversed.
But it seems unnecessary to keep the misunderstanding. If only they’d drop their bloody pride for a minute and talk about it, it could be cleared up. Except they won’t drop their protective facades. Not that far. But it can’t be the misunderstanding that’s the true relationship block, it’s the misplaced pride, the lack of trust, the basic belief that no-one would ever love them that really keeps them apart. Those roles and beliefs they were given in childhood that they haven’t shaken off yet. So, is the misunderstanding needed at all? Can I get to the bones of what their issues are without having a silly thing like that between them? Or is that a way in, shorthand to symbolise all their deeper issues.
I’m not sure!
I do need to work this out soon, because Chapter One is full of allusions to it.
February 26, 2011 at 6:25 pm
I think that is a great idea to really study a book that works for me and tease out why it does work so well.
I read the first part of Nikki’s book and it certainly does work well. I love how she makes the ordinary things her heroine does seem so filled with emotion.
February 26, 2011 at 7:45 pm
Analysing a good published story a week is a great idea.
Off to read that Nikki Logan story now.
February 26, 2011 at 8:39 pm
I so understand what you are going through. I’m at the same stage as you with my writing. I’ve got the idea but does it have that certain something that makes it a truly wonderful read. I’ve been thinking about analysing some books myself (after I’ve read them for enjoyment) and seeing what makes them work. Good luck with your novel – the fact that you can see that something isn’t quite right is a step in the right direction to making it right.
February 26, 2011 at 11:44 pm
I loved Their Newborn Gift too
Happy analysing!
February 27, 2011 at 10:43 am
That is a great idea about analyzing a book a week. That’s what the editors recommend too.
I wouldn’t worry too much about your similar premise. There’s no real original storyline anyway. It’s all in the execution.
March 1, 2011 at 3:04 am
Hey Autumn, a friend who follows your blog directed me to this post so I wanted to pop by for two reasons.
First, just to say *thankyou*. I love hearing about people who’ve read one of my books, moreso those who’ve liked them…and I really like to hear when people love them. I’m still new enough to the publishing game to value that feedback. (Who am I kidding, that need to know you don’t suck never ever leaves…)
But more importantly my second reason for popping in was to say:
Do not give up, Autumn. Do not despair and absolutely do not compare yourself to shelf product without remembering how many people got it there. Three months before I wrote “Newborn Gift” I was exactly where you are…writing madly as an unpubbed author, trying different things, wondering where my place was in the big publishing picture, studying other books and believing I could never write one that would rate.
And then the right editor picked up the right manuscript at the right moment and the rest is history.
The most important thing to remember with any book you read off a shelf is that the book almost certainly didn’t come out of the author’s head shiny and perfect and flawless. Quite the contrary. Author loops are full of people struggling with revisions, sometimes multiple, might-as-well-start-over revs.
The major difference between me and you is not some magical authorly skill that I have and you don’t, it’s access to highly trained editorial staff who know exactly what to look for flaws-wise. Several of them. The feedback I get always starts with ‘we think’ which means a couple of people have read it and pooled their thoughts on what can be done better.
Without boring you, let me tell you that I took several wrong turns with this story and had to be reminded to show them falling in love *forehead slap*. I had to be reminded to make sure that my characters were talking, not just doing all their thinking about each other in their heads. I had to strip out my prologue that I LOVED because it really wasn’t adding value to the story.
So the book that was finally ‘right’ went ‘wrong’ quite a bit. By pulling it to pieces and inspecting it now, you’re actually inspecting the work of not just the author but also the editorial team who shaped it. So that’s a really GOOD idea.
Yes, there’s voice to consider. Yes, there’s instinctual story-telling to consider. But as we hear all the time, writing is a CRAFT not an ART. You can learn to tick all those boxes through analysis and repetition of practice.
I love that you love the book, but I hate the thought that it has made you doubt yourself and your story. You tell your story, your way. Trust your instincts, Autumn. And yay you for your determination and resilience.
OK, time for a group-hug…
xx
Nikki
March 2, 2011 at 12:01 am
Sorry I haven’t replied sooner- massive computer problems. My laptop got killed dead by an evil virus, despite me being super careful and having loads of protection. Luckily I have a tiny old laptop I use when I travel, it’s painfully slooooooow but will do most things. And even more luckily, I had safe copies of all my writing! I lost a few things, photos, workshop homework, but nothing that’s a big deal.
So the moral of the story is- back up, back up, back up! Or at least email your day’s writing to yourself.
Thanks for all the replies, and especially to Nikki for such a lovely, long, encouraging reply. I promise how good your story is only made me feel bad for a minute, max! I’m going to have fun really digging deep into the story and seeing what made it work so well.
March 2, 2011 at 11:57 pm
Yay, Nikki got here!
Just wanted to add though, that anaylsing a good book is a fantastic idea! I did this recently, and set up a spreadsheet where I did a chapter by chapter breakdown of what happened, and the changes in the internal and external conflicts. I also noted anything that is “incorrect” (ie use of additional characters) and then figured out how the author made it work. Because, of course, it’s all in the execution!
March 7, 2011 at 10:44 am
Yay, finally have proper internet access so I can answer comments like I want to. Sorry for the sketchy replies to everyone who commented earlier.
LOL, Leah! Love that idea of looking at how the published writer managed to break “the rules” too. Can I just add- anyone who hasn’t should zip over to Laeh’s blog to read her Call story. Inspiring or what!
I have a day off work today (yippee!) and my goal for the day is to analyse Nikki’s first three chapters