Low Fantasy

Hi, gang. ✋ Craig here again. We’re continuing my series dive into the speculative genres. Today we’re tackling Low Fantasy. First of all, let me go …

Low Fantasy
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Revisit: When One Book Just Won’t Do

Originally posted on May 1, 2013 . . . This one tries to hit everything, which shows where my mind was.  I was more interested in promos, poems, and random stuff as if this was a Livejournal.  Yet, flickers of the type of blog posts I would create show up from time to time.

Cover Art by Alison Hunt

So, you’re writing your book and burning through your story like an author possessed by a word-obsessed demon.  You’re nearing the end of your manuscript with a twinkle in your eye that is just slightly brighter than the bit of anxious drool in the corner of your mouth.  Then you stop like somebody slapped you.  The story will end and the characters will no longer be at your fingertips.  You contemplate slowing down or not finishing the story.  Possibly a lifetime of edits can stave off the horror of completion.  Once this insanity passes, you come to the only logical conclusion:

You’re going to write a series.

Welcome to the major challenge of developing characters and extending a story beyond a single book.  It works differently in this world.  You can’t end with finality.  You need to end on a balance of closure and cliffhanger.  The adventure for this book is done, but the heroes have more trials ahead.  You need to make that clear and that isn’t always easy.  If your heroes have achieved everything then they have no reason to move into another book.  If they have accomplished nothing then you just wasted your readers’ time.  Even a step back for the heroes can be appealing because it means they have a mess to fix in the next book.  The point is to make the reader want more.

There are various ways you can embed your story in your reader in terms of an ending.  Some methods are ending on a villain scene with them hinting at future plans.  You can have the heroes end with a feeling that something is coming.  Is it possible to continue a series while having complete closure in a book?  Yes, but that typically requires you make a time jump, so the hero has time to settle before the next threat arrives.  Another trick is to put a message at the end saying, ‘The Adventure Continues in . . .’  Truthfully, making it clear that another book is coming is one of the hardest tricks for an author with a series.

Coming in a close second is actually planning the series.  If you didn’t plan on it beforehand then you will find that you need to change some things.  Add some foreshadowing and a few events that give you an opening for a series.  You could very well be on the fence about writing a series, so just leave these openings in case you get the urge.  Don’t make them too big or blatant because that makes them plot holes.  Maybe a mention of a bigger threat from the past or the hero loses an important item that he/she manages to win without.  It’s all about subtlety when you aren’t sure.

When you are sure about writing a series, you can get away with a few blunt events.  Characters that appear and practically have a sign screaming, ‘We will be main characters in the future!’ or ‘I’m really a villain!’  Remember that you’re working a long game with a series, so you have to play Time Master.  You need to consider the past, focus on the present, and keep an eye on the future to make sure continuity is held.  This is why you want to keep notes and return to older books whenever you feel a twinge of doubt.  Forget a character’s eye color?  Go to their debut and NEVER guess.  I did this with Luke once where he started with green eyes and by book 3, he had blue.  Readers notice these things.  Having notes about future events helps too because these are what you would use for foreshadowing.  Is a character going to be faced with his fear of spiders in the future?  Then make sure there are a few incidents with spiders before you reach that plot point.

Patience is definitely important for writing a series.  You need to make sure your chapter scenes are deep enough to develop your characters because the readers are going to be with them for a long time.  Give your cast hopes, dreams, fears, quirks, and various subplots that will gradually play out alongside the main quest.  By the end of the series, you want the readers to look at the characters as old friends that they have to say good-bye to.  To this end, you also have to be careful not to overstay your welcome.  If it looks like the heroes are never going to reach their goals then the reader will either quit or start rooting for the villains.  A good example of this is Inuyasha.  An anime series (and manga, but I never read it) where every season, the heroes are rushing to gain a new power to permanently kill the villain.  Every time, they get the new power and the villain is already too strong for them.  Doing this repeatedly can turn your series into a joke instead of a serious form of entertainment.

Now, you might be wondering how you can develop a character through a series.  If you aren’t wondering then you need more coffee.  Again, patience is key.  In a series, a character can develop slowly.  The first book should not see them reach their full potential, but they can step on the right path to get there.  You can even have them evolve in the wrong direction at first to make the crash and rebuild later in the series.  For example, a hero that gets very cocky and arrogant with every victory only to be defeated in book 5 and then needs to rebuild his courage for the rest of the series.  As long as your character doesn’t peak too early or stay in the same position for the entire series, you’ll be fine.  Truthfully, there are so many ways to do this and some ways that haven’t even been invented yet.

The series isn’t for everyone and some series aren’t even directly connected to each other.  You can write a series that takes place in the same world, but with a different set of characters for each book.  I would recommend having a few characters make cameos either physically or by character conversation in the other books.  You need to give a sense of connection between the series.

So to all of you series writers, good luck and remember to enjoy the journey.  In other words, proceed forward in a calm, rational manner and no rushing ahead because you have an amazing idea.  If it really is amazing then it will be there when you need it.

Posted in Thoughts | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

Guest Post – Andrew Joyce and His New Book – Wicked – The men of Wicked Tuna.

I am very pleased to welcome Andrew Joyce to Fiction Favorites. He has a new book and it look like it is going to be a good one. Here’s the blurb. …

Guest Post – Andrew Joyce and His New Book – Wicked – The men of Wicked Tuna.
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Teaser Tuesday: Bad Luck?

Cover Art by Circecorp

Here we have a piece from The Life & Times of Ichabod Brooks.  Short stories are definitely harder to get excerpts from unless you want to spoil the whole thing.  Enjoy!

Continue reading

Posted in Ichabod Brooks, Teaser Tuesday | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Noir Fiction: How is it unique?

Posted by Joy York Over the years, I have read many books and seen many films referred to a “noir.” They have always been a bit of a mystery to me. I…

Noir Fiction: How is it unique?
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Revisit- Conflict: Fancy Way of ‘Good vs Evil’

Looks like I first talked about conflict on April 17, 2013.  I’m surprised I had a thought list since it looks like I was all over the place back then.  Some posts only had one line and I assume a picture that has long since disappeared.  Anyway, this was a nice first attempt by me to broach this subject.  I would go on to make many more posts about various types of conflict and other aspects of the story ingredient.

Good Vs Evil (Homer Simpson)

This topic has been sitting on my ‘thought post’ list for a long time.  I believe I had a genius post for it in January and figured it was so great that it would stay with me as I built up to it.  Then, I wandered off to other topics and forgot what I was going to say.  Still, I think this is an important topic for writers.

We say ‘good vs. evil’ to make the idea of conflict simplistic, but it is rarely that easy.  Yes, the hero is going to save the damsel while the villain is going to lock her in the tower.  Hero equals good, villain equals bad.  It is the basis of almost every story ever written even if the ‘villain’ is nothing more than self-doubt or other crippling emotions.  The ‘evil’ side of the equation is really the obstacle, which is not always as obvious as a roaring dragon or an alien squadron in their death ships.  It gets stranger with the good side because this is typically more cut-and-dry as the protagonist.  Rarely is there an incident where good is an emotion such as a sudden act of heroism.  Villains that do a sudden change of heart fall into this category because the ‘good’ is the positive emotion that transforms them.  Best example here is The Grinch and I apologize for anyone that just had Jim Carrey flashbacks.

As an author, you have to design your characters carefully with the conflict in mind.  The idea of good vs. evil worked back in the day when stories were used almost exclusively to teach people about morals.  Now, there’s more to it than Bad-guy McBad will be defeated by Good-guy Goodstein. (How in the world did Goodstein not set off my spellchecker?)  You have various levels of good and evil now.  Villains that believe they are doing good and heroes that are one parking ticket away from villainy.  You have to figure out how far you are going on both sides with your character and stories.  Too far to either side and you could find yourself back to the designing board with a character.  For example, say you have a perfect, infallible hero going up against a villain that has a soft spot for children.  That perfect hero could be less appealing to the reader because the villain shows depth and draws the reader in.  You have to make sure that you keep the moral and emotional investment on the hero if you want to retain the classic ‘good conquers evil, no questions asked’ ending.

On the other side of the equation, it’s easier to get away with a villain that goes around kicking puppies and beating the elderly with live chickens.  Total evil seems to always have a place in literature because people are supposed to hate the villain.  Yet, you do run into a problem by going all the way to the dark side.  A horrible, unredeemable villain can get tiring rather quickly and lose the reader’s interest.  This becomes the ‘will you two just fight already?’ scenario.  You can’t spend every 3rd chapter section reminding the audience why this guy is evil without it losing its novelty.  I offered to read a classmates ‘book’ in college, which was 10 chapters long and the hero was traveling to the villain’s lair.  At the beginning of every chapter, the villain did something horrible to an innocent prisoner.  It started with a simple stabbing and went up to the point where the villain gut and ate his own daughter.  By that point, my dislike of the villain was more of a ‘not this schmuck again’.  My time with the hero was less enjoyable because I felt like the guy’s snail pace was costing people their lives.  It was a fantasy setting and your enemy just ate his daughter for no given reason.  He could wrangle a Pegasus, find a wizard with flight magic, steal a flying carpet, or buy a damn horse.  My point here is that if you’re going to drive home the evil side of conflict then spread it out and make it count.

I’ve been very straightforward with good and evil, but they can be non-physical entities.  A romance book may have the ‘evil’ side of the conflict be the main character’s lack of self-esteem, which is defeated by the realization that he or she deserves whatever it is that makes them happy.  I’ve only dabbled in romance, so I could be wrong here.  Any of my romance writing friends can feel free to correct me.  I think the trick with this conflict is to focus on the journey through the conflict than the actual emotions.  Not so much to ignore them, but they will come through to the reader by using dialogue and specific actions.  I have a feeling that’s an entirely different post.  I also think I no longer know what I’m talking about and should stop before I make a fool of myself.

Posted in Thoughts | Tagged , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Happy World Lion Day

Now, I did a post on the Lion on April 23, 2023.  So, I thought it would be silly to do that all over again.  You can click the date to read it though.  Instead, I’m going to post some pictures of animals that appear to be named after the lion.  Please let me know if I missed any and keep it to real ones.  I know mythology and fantasy authors love to have lion parts added to our monsters.

Antlion

Lion Lizard (Curly-Tailed Lizard)

Lion Tamarin

Lionfish

Sealion

Posted in Animal Posts | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 13 Comments

Goal Post: Progress, Fear Ahead, and Health Yo-Yo

Let’s start at the writing side of things:

I finished typing in the edits for Darwin & the Beast Collector.  Got it done earlier last weekend than I expected, so I was able to put in some extra Pokemon time.  Then, I tried to do some notebook work and . . . feel asleep due to exhaustion.  Thankfully, I didn’t land on the notebook and smear the words like I’ve done in the past.  I did make the names for the characters I need in ‘Phi Beta Files’ and will work on a bit this week.  I might even finish that while my son and I are away, which means I should be tackling Darwin & the Joy Path around August 23rd.

Needless to say, I’m still nervous about trying to write a new book for the first time in about 2.5 years.  This doesn’t feel like a bicycle where things will fall back into place within minutes.  I’m going to have to take it slow by maybe trying for one chapter section a day until I get back into the flow.  I’ll be happy if I have the prologue and chapter 1 done by the time school fully starts on September 2nd.  There’s exactly 5 days without work (Superintendent Conferences) or my son, which is just what I need.  Maybe I’ll get lucky and Darwin will come back naturally.

I mentioned that I fell asleep when I tried to use my notebook.  Well, this ended up being a running gag.  Knocked out by accident when I laid down to watch TV and another time when I was working on a new puzzle. Part of this was because I’m still having 3 am panic attacks and not getting back to bed easily.  Another issue is that work and life were pretty crazy at points.  Two field trips and preparing for a farmers’ market at work while dealing with personal issues can be draining.  A final nail in my energy’s coffin was the terrible air quality due to Canadian wildfires.  I was still going outside for Pokemon Go, so it was hitting me harder than expected.

Probably didn’t help that I started drinking these:

Poppi prebiotic soda

I only really like the Doc Pop, Cherry Cola, and regular Cola.  These are prebiotic sodas, which I tried before and liked.  Figured I would get a few and have one each day until I got a better idea of what was going on.  As someone with a lifetime of stomach issues, I was hoping it would help.  Well, I ended up dealing with a lot of weirdness all week.  Felt bloated then hungry then acidic and back to bloated.  Not sure if this was the soda, but it was the only thing I changed.  Things finally did a rather rough guttural reset that I usually describe as angry eels squirming in my lower abdomen.  Muscled through work and things felt great by the time I got home.  Some prebiotic/probiotic gummies arrived today, so I’m hoping to start those tomorrow night.  This could be another solution to a life-long health issue.

Today, I’m going to be seeing the new ‘Naked Gun’ movie with my son and then we’ll be spending the afternoon catching Pokemon.  Tomorrow is Pokemon for a bit as well, but we’re aiming to finish the new episodes of ‘Wednesday’ before Sunday night.  He got his first Kindle and wants to keep reading, so I’ll be finishing the October blog posts when he takes time with it.  For a kid who has openly hated reading, he’s really diving into the new activity.  It’s a color one too, so I might be able to buy a few manga that my old, long dead Kindle could never handle.  Have to make a deal to use it when he’s with his mom though, so we’ll see how that goes.

This coming week is the last one for summer school and camp.  I won’t predict if it will be smooth sailing or not.  Just need to reach the end of the week with enough time to pack and then we’re heading out Saturday morning.  A few days away for some father/son time will do us some good.  My son asked that we simply relax and only requested one outing to a video game-oriented activity nearby.  Weather looks like it will be nice for walks too.  I picked a hotel that sits between a big park and a small ice cream parlor while also being a 5 minute walk from a bunch of restaurants.  Think we both desperately need this time after a rough year so far.

Goals of the week?

  1. Spend time with son.
  2. Pack!
  3. Finish summer school.
  4. Finish October blog posts.
  5. Work on ‘Phi Beta Files’.
  6. Catch Pokemon.
  7. Finish puzzle.
  8. Buy more prebiotic soda?
  9. Enjoy movie today.
Posted in Goal Posts | Tagged , , , , , , , | 13 Comments

Revisit: Because Good is Dumb

Posted on March 25, 2013, I do have more to say on this.  Now, the topic is how my heroes are unaware of what the villains are doing.  I’m sure it was meant as an insult now, but I do make good points as to why it works for my first series.  I also think having heroes immediately know exactly what the villain is planning without being told doesn’t feel natural.  It reduces their chances of mistakes, but that also means the story will be a lot more linear and straightforward.  There aren’t any red herrings or misunderstandings that will lead to character building events.  Instead, a hero knowing exactly what is going on will head straight from point to point with no interest in waiting.  I mean, why give the villain more time to prepare if you know exactly what they are doing and even where they are hiding?  Not much of a story to me.

Saitama

This is part of my most recent book review:  “The bad guys are really bad and the good guys are unaware.”

At first, I didn’t know what to make of the statement and I’m not much closer to figuring it out.  It makes me smile, so I know it isn’t an insult.  That being said, I’m not sure my heroes are taking it in stride.  Though, the truth is that they are rather unaware throughout the book.  It isn’t that they’re stupid or oblivious, but they really stepped into the villains’ plans at the eleventh hour.  They’re scrambling to get some type of advantage before the big ending.  Yes, Luke is an untested hero who truly has no idea what he’s doing and not much of a mind for strategy.  I guess this comes off as stupid at times, but we all have stupid moments.

This quote got me thinking about heroes and how there are so many that appear to know exactly what is going on.  The villain stole a magic item?  The hero or an ally knows what ritual they are going to do at what time and in which city.  I guess this is an aspect of heroes with more experience than mine, but I have to admit that it does get a little tiring when the heroes never a ‘what is that evil bastard up to’ moment.  I definitely couldn’t let Luke, Nimby, Fritz, or Aedyn know what is going on.  Nimby, Fritz, and Aedyn aren’t adventurers and rather specific in their knowledge.  Luke is fresh-faced and working off young bravado, so having him discern the Lich’s plans feels rather stretched.  It’d make it hard to believe he was inexperienced.

So, what do people think of heroes that seem to be blindly reacting to the villain for most of a book instead of being proactive?  For that matter, is there such a thing as too perfect a hero?

Posted in Thoughts | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

Poetry Day: Gluttony Rondelet

Yahoo Image Search

(A rondelet is a 7-line poem where the first line is repeated on line 3 and 7.  The refrain lines are usually 4 syllables and the other 4 lines are 8.  These were tough, so I hope I got them right.)

Live Gluttony?

Do you devour all you see?

Live Gluttony?

You indulge until you are sick.

You never think that you should stop.

The world is your endless buffet.

Live Gluttony?

Posted in Poems | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments