Today I am headed to
Culpeper, Virginia, about an hour southwest of Fredericksburg to attend their
library’s “Local Author Extravaganza.” There are twenty-six authors registered,
and I look forward to meeting other local authors.
I didn’t realize I had
been put on a panel until Wednesday afternoon when I received an email listing
the panel members and questions. That was a nice surprise, because I have already met
two of the panel members, Suzi Weinert and Melinda Crocker.
Below is a sneak peek at
the panel questions and my advice to aspiring writers:
"How do you develop
characters?" "How do you make your stories feel like they are set in
a specific city (or a specific time)?"
I develop bios of each character; I get to know them, their
personalities, likes, dislikes, physical features. And don’t be surprised when
you do that and start writing that the characters take over and change the
story. It happened to me in both my books!
Setting is character – describe the place, think about the
senses, what does it look like (colors), smell like (pine forest, ocean, etc.),
sound like?
How do you keep your plots
unpredictable without sacrificing believability?
Careful plotting, planning/planting subtle red herrings, and my beta
readers catch inconsistencies and help keep my stories believable.
Why do you choose to work in this
genre? Do you consider yourself a genre writer, or do you want to try other
modes
I love puzzles, and always loved reading mysteries. So, yes, I am a
genre writer.
What is the question you would
most/least like to be asked by the audience, and what is your answer
Question: What is your advice to aspiring writers?
Answer: Decide your ultimate writing goal. Then figure out how
to get there. Do your homework – publishing has changed. You have to
provide a near perfect manuscript (do you have the skill level for grammar,
punctuation, editing, proof reading, or will you have to hire these out?), you
have to do your own marketing, what will your royalties be? Bottom line:
Research carefully all aspects and decide which option is best for you.
Who is your favorite mystery
writer?
I am going to say a lesser-known author, Kate Charles. I love
her characters and the way she describes the setting – small English cathedral
towns.
I love Elizabeth George’s earlier books, though I feel her more
recent books are novels rather than mysteries.
Kate Charles does such a wonderful job of putting us into the place and introducing interesting, well-defined characters. Good recommendation!
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