Novel eight!

This entry is part 9 of 13 in the series All my novels

The other day I was reading an interview with Chris Baty, the founder of NaNoWriMo, with some frequently asked questions about everyone’s favorite writing month. One of them was “I’ve already done NaNoWriMo. Why do I need another unfinished manuscript in my drawer?” He responded, basically, that you never know when your next novel will constitute a major breakthrough in your life or your craft. His breakthroughs, I believe he said, were novels six and twelve.

That answer resonated with me, because I knew right away which were my breakthroughs: novels three and eight.

The book stats

I, Spy coverTitle: I, Spy
Genre: Romantic suspense
Inspiration: A song on the Dollar Tree sound system. You can find some pretty cool stuff amid the junk at the Dollar Tree, but this is easily the best thing I’ve found.
Writing dates: Idea: 13 Feb 2012. Writing: 10 March – 31 March 2012.
Length: First draft—70,000 words. Final version—84,000 words.
Back cover copy: Canada is probably the last place you’d expect to find an American spy. But even idyllic Ottawa has its deadly secrets—and so does CIA operative Talia Reynolds. She can climb through ventilation shafts, blend in at the occasional diplomatic function, even scale buildings (small ones). But there’s one thing she can’t do: tell her aerospace engineer boyfriend Danny about her Top Secret occupation.

It worked for a year, keeping Danny in the dark, keeping him away from danger, keeping her secrets. And then Talia finally catches a hot case: Fyodor Timofeyev. Russian. Aerospace executive. Possible spy?

She can make this work, too—until Danny needs her at the same time her country does. And when Fyodor targets Danny? Suddenly her schedule isn’t the only thing suffering. Now to save her secrets and her country, Talia must sacrifice the man she loves.

What I learned from this book

A few quick facts: this book was the second book I fast drafted. Coincidentally, it was also the second book I took the time to not only revise and edit, but to polish to the point of publication. This was the first book I’d set somewhere I’d actually been (Thanks, Dad!), which helped in coming up with the locations they visited. Though this was my third novel in first person, and it was my first in present tense. Once upon a time, I was not a fan of either, but as I was working on the first chapter, parts of the narrative would just flow better in first person.

But really, the thing that dictated both the person and tense of the book—the reason this book was a breakthrough for me—was the character’s voice. This voice was one of the strongest I’d ever contended with written. Before I started writing, I knew I wanted the book to be funny and . . . “loose,” but I hadn’t figured out exactly how to do it. Frankly, it just kind of popped into my head with the first sentence of the book. I was so excited to latch on to it, I had to get it down right away. BUT I was saving this idea for a NaNo-like challenge that started the next day, so I wouldn’t allow myself to write it down. So I grabbed my phone and recorded it.

I won’t keep you in suspense: the fabulous first line is “I don’t do catsuits.” (Go ahead, read some more from the first chapter.)

The voice was sometimes so strong that I had to reel it in a bit, because the interior monologue interrupted the flow of the action or dialogue. And other times, while reading it aloud in critique group, I’d start rambling on in Talia’s voice, and my CPs would tell me what I’d said was so funny I had to include it.

This book was also what I used in an advanced deep editing course from Margie Lawson. I’ve loved her previous classes, and I still apply the EDITS system to everything I send to critique partners. But this time, I went through every. single. page. of my novel hunting for ways to tighten, power up, refine and beautify. I think it shows 🙂 .

And of course, since this became my first published novel, I learned a whole lot about the publishing process! I learned how to make an ebook. I learned how to make a print book. I learned how to get ISBNs, a business license, an awesome cover designer, editors, blurbs . . . everything.

The publishing side is a lot of work, but I do love that I can have everything in my book exactly how I want it. Or so I keep trying to tell myself as I haul myself through the publication process on two more books. AAAGGGGGGGHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!

Which novels were your “breakthroughs”?

The novel I (might?) let go

This entry is part 10 of 13 in the series All my novels

I still have a few slots left on my blog tour for Spy for a Spy, running 7-12 November 2013! Come sign up!

I am surrounded by young adult authors. That is, authors writing for young adults. Like, surrounded. Where I live, on the Internet—to find another author writing to an adult audience is actually a challenge most of the time. Plus, I know (ish) a lot of very, very successful YA authors—awesome agents, big book deals, best sellers. So I get lots and lots of chances to think about whether YA is for me.

The answer is usually no, not really.

Except for this one time.

The book stats

Title: Slash and Burn. Maybe Scorched Earth. Maybe that will be the sequel.
Genre: YA post-apocalyptic (Not dystopian. There is a difference.)
Inspiration: A very vivid dream, inspired by the TV show Falling Skies, shortly before Nano 2012. As in, like, weeks.
Writing dates: November 1 – 20, 2012.
Length: 69,265 words.
Back cover copy: The war for Earth is over. But the battle’s just begun.

In a depopulated post-apocalyptic California, 17-year-old Adrienne Lucas has finally found some semblance of normalcy in a collective farm led by her father. Then newcomers arrive, promising a return to the comforts from Before. Adrienne’s father represents the voice of reason against the newcomers’ siren song—until they silence him forever.

Adrienne’s devastating loss is compounded when she discovers the man she’s loved for years, the man who saw her father as practically his own, the man who lives in her home as part of her family is also the man who betrayed her father and sentenced him to death.

Now Adrienne will destroy them all. Starting with him.

Or, in video form:

Don’t see anything? Click through to view the trailer!

What I learned from this book

Well, obviously, I learned that I can write YA. It was nice to take a “break” from the strong voice of I, Spy, with a different voice. Interestingly, it was still in first person, present tense, and still had plenty of humor, but it was a very different tone. I hadn’t written anything remotely speculative in over a decade, so it was kind of fun to go back to that. And of course my husband is big on emergency preparedness, so it was fun to use him as a consultant.

But probably the most important/interesting thing I learned from this book was letting go. A week or two after I finished it, I opened it up again to export from my trial version of Scrivener, and . . . I just didn’t really “feel” my novel. It was a rough first draft, of course, but something was (and still is) missing for me, especially the passion and the drive to go back to it.

Funnily enough, I’d kind of forgotten about that over the last year and just came across my posts about that as I was trying to track down my final word count. I slotted the book into my production schedule down the road, but . . . we’ll see. It’s a cool story, but as I realized (quoting Natalie Whipple): “this business is too hard to waste effort on something you don’t 150% love.

What do you think? How do you rekindle passion for an old project?

COVER IMAGES: Girl: Self-portrait by Kelsey; Fire by Marion Doss;
Blood drips: Pooling Blood by Joleene Naylor; all via CC

The time my critique partners made me cry

This entry is part 11 of 13 in the series All my novels

After nine novels, you’d think you know what you’re doing. Well, sometimes you’re wrong. And not just a little wrong. Wrong on every level. Fractal wrongness.

Fractal wrongness

Oh, book. Book, book, book.

The book stats

SpyForSpy_CVR_LRGTitle: Spy for a Spy.
Genre: Romantic suspense
Inspiration: I don’t . . . really know. I think I was brainstorming ideas for what I’d like to see Talia take on next, and playing the what-if game, figuring out who the worst, messiest antagonist would be, and how I could make it worse from there.
Writing dates: January? to July 2013.
Length: 70,000 words in the first draft; 88,000-ish in the final version.
Back cover copy:

Canada is probably the last place you’d expect to find an American spy. And it was the last place CIA operative Talia Reynolds expected to run into fellow operative Brand Copley. AKA her new boss. AKA her ex-boyfriend.

Just the guy every woman wants to face in the middle of planning her wedding. Once again, Talia’s lying to the man she loves, but this time, to protect his heart.

After Brand takes over Talia’s latest case and steals her newest agent, he assigns her to spy on her old boss—who’s suddenly giving her every reason not to trust him. With only weeks until the big day, planning falls by the wayside as she goes into damage control mode. But when Talia discovers Brand’s real motives, fighting him is the only option, no matter what the personal and professional cost.

What I learned from this book

For a long time, I had no idea what to put here, except for this story:

From the beginning, I knew where I wanted this story to go. I knew why the bad guy was bad, I knew what I wanted to do with the main characters, I knew how I wanted the romance to play out. But then, somehow, it just . . . didn’t. It didn’t quite come together.

Naturally, it didn’t help that I had to interrupt the writing of this novel to have a baby, launch I, Spy, move, and recover. It also didn’t help that because of time constraints, I had to start this novel through my critique group when it was only about 2/3s done. I finally finished the last third not long before I had to send it off, and by then I was starting to get a handle on it, but still. When we started working with my book, it became obvious there were problems that ran deeper than repeating the same paragraph practically word-for-word in six place in the book. (What the heck, brain?!)

Finally, in one meeting, one of my critique partners flat-out told me: “[Bad guy]’s motivation needs to be X.”

And I nearly cried. I don’t think Emily and Julie noticed, but I really did tear up at that moment. Not because my CP was hurting my feelings—but because that was the exact motivation I’d hoped to use, hoped to get across, hoped to convey. Somewhere along the way, I’d lost hope of being able to do that effectively. But to have her point it out not only restored my faith that I might actually be able to do this whole writing thing, but also showed me that I must have done something right in setting it up, and all I needed to do was go back to where the story got off track.

And add another 10,000 words. And edit the whole thing to death. Then send it out to my editor. And edit it again. And again. And then format the ebook. And then typeset the print book.

Kinda hated the book at that point.

As hard as this whole experience was, and as fresh as it is, somehow, I’m already starting to see the good. In just the last few weeks, I’ve managed to stop hating it. Seriously, there were moments as recently as last week where I considered pulling the plug on publishing this novel—or on publishing in general.

But I figured I owed it to the six people who cared (kidding), and I’d already put in all the work (sunk cost is a logical fallacy, self—well, sort of . . . I mean, if I didn’t hit publish, I’d definitely never recoup my investment, right?). The reviews on my blog tour have been so wonderful & so kind, it’s really changed my perspective on what ended up being a somewhat bitter experience to something that I’ve come through a stronger writer and a better person—and a book I might even like.

Speaking of the blog tour! I’ve got some catching up to do on sharing the stops!

Today’s stops!
Lindzee Armstrong + My top 10 ways to FAIL as a spy
I Love to Read and Review Books + a wonderful review!

Saturday’s stops!
Getting Your Read On + an amazing review!
Read a lot Rhonda with a great review!

Friday’s stops!
Westhoff Family Using your spy skills for . . . awesome.
Colorimetry Interview: find out what my favorite scenes in this book were . . . sort of 😉
Ranee` S. Clark Interview: I spill the truth about my past as a spy + Spy tips for . . . potty training? + a fantastic review. Ranee`’s got it going ON!
Lisa Swinton Spy tips for your next RenFaire. I’m totally not kidding.

Promoting my books has never been so fun! PLUS we haven’t even gotten to tomorrow’s Facebook/Twitter launch party!! Come join us!

Photo credits: fractal wrongness—the mad LOLscientist

Finishing the series

This entry is part 12 of 13 in the series All my novels

When I first started writing I, Spy, it was supposed to be a standalone. I never envisioned it as part of a series. But by the time I made it to critique group, I had ideas for two sequels: one where Talia faced off with an bad ex within the Agency (Spy for a Spy) and one where Talia and Danny had to work together.

Spy for a Spy was a difficult book—and I’d had a baby in the middle of writing it. Between writing struggles and the demands of motherhood, tackling another book in the series was a bit daunting. Combine that with taking time off NaNoWriMo to launch Spy for a Spy and run a big promotion, and I was worried.

However, I did have some positives coming into this: I’d just drafted Spy Noon just a few weeks before, and it was so much fun to write! I was hoping to be able to replicate that experience.

SAMSUNG
My plotting brain dump. It’s actually still hanging there.

Once I had Spy for a Spy launched, however, I was ready to buckle down and write—with just over half of November left. Amazingly, I pulled it out to get 50,000 words by the end of the month. I was a little burned out, so it took me a few weeks to come back to it and finish in December, but at least it was done.

Huh. I just realized this will be my first (of three) Nano novels to be published. Cool!

The book stats

Title: Tomorrow We Spy
Genre: Romantic suspense
Inspiration: another dream
Writing dates: November – December 2013. Editing through July 2014. Published November 2014.
Length: First draft: ~70,000 words. Currently sitting at: 84,000 words
Elevator pitch: CIA operative Talia Reynolds is off the clock, off the continent and off on her honeymoon—but when the Agency calls her new husband in for a special mission, there’s a lot more at stake than the stolen plans for the spy drone he designed. (See the full description & read the first chapter here!)

What I learned from writing this book

While I didn’t recapture the pure fun of Spy Noon, this book wasn’t quite as challenging as Spy for a Spy. For one, the writing process didn’t drag out as much. But for another, I’d learned that I can fix even a very broken, off-track novel, so I had the confidence I could fix this one..

FinishNow, with the novel getting close to “finished,” I’ve forgotten how dreck-y it felt at first. But back in January, after I finished writing it, I described it as a “less-than-perfect-and-perhaps-not-quite-coherent manuscript, where the character arc wasn’t where I needed it to be and . . . maybe the entire main plot is sketchy at best and completely missing at worst.”

And, as I’d anticipated, my critique partners helped me whip those character arcs into shape—not the shape I’d anticipated at first, but the right one, and helped me develop better motivations for my characters’ actions, and put in a missing save-the-cat moment. I still have some perfecting to do, but I’m really excited about how it’s turned out so far!

Another really important lesson from this book: as I did my gesture crutches and deep edit, they weren’t easy (they never are)—but they weren’t as hard as with my first book in the series. Part of me worried that I’d lost my edge. While it’s important not to go too easy on yourself, I think another thing to keep in mind is that the more we edit focusing on a particular technique, the more we internalize those techniques, and the more we can (and do!) use them on a first draft. So editing probably does get easier over time, not because we’re getting worse at editing, but because we’re getting better at writing!

Editing is always necessary, but it’s nice to know you can still improve!

What do you think? What editing techniques have you seen popping up in first drafts (or at least earlier drafts than that used to)?

Photo credit: finish line by Philo Nordlund

The accidental novel

This entry is part 13 of 13 in the series All my novels

Did you ever accidentally write a novel? Just me?

So I, Spy starts off with Talia already dating her boyfriend Danny. When I started writing prequel novellas, I really felt like I would have to tell the story of how they got together. Also, just for the characters’ general backstory, I wanted to know how it all played out. And to get a better feel for Danny before I, Spy came out, I started writing the story of how they started dating from his POV.

This would come back to bite me.

My research trip:

The book stats

Title: True Spy? Subject to change Spy by Night
Genre: Romantic suspense
Inspiration: figuring out the backstory and rounding out a trilogy
Writing dates: November 2013 – June 2014, with a few scenes written in fall 2012. Editing in progress through November 2014. Published November 2014.
Length: First draft: ~62,000 words. Published form: 84,000 words
Elevator pitch: CIA operative Talia Reynolds does not do romance. With her job—and her life—it’s just too many secrets. But can she let down her guard to let in a friend who needs her without losing her heart? (Check out how the published novel is described here!)

What I learned from writing this book

I’m still in the process of learning from this book!

I really need to fix the big picture problems before I start working on the scene-level problems. I stopped doing this in previous two books and it made prepping them for my critique group so much harder. This time around (so far!), I’ve two fast rounds to get those bigger problems that I’d found in the course of drafting, then to get more into the nitty-gritty of the text (instead of tackling both at once). Oh my goodness it’s so much easier!

Okay, but the real question here is . . . HOW DO YOU ACCIDENTALLY WRITE A NOVEL??? I know. I’m crazy.

After stewing over this story for nearly two years, I had a lot of details about how the plot would go. I knew all the fun twists, all the cool stuff, a lot of the characters’ arcs (well, as much as you know in the first draft!). But at the same time, I wanted to keep this to a novella. My other novellas were about 20,000 words, so this one could be 30,000, I decided. Then I could have them all printed together in a single volume, about the same printing cost as my other books, or a little cheaper (since they’d probably have to be priced a little lower).

Spaghetti....Oops!

You ever have a perfect plan? Yeah, me neither.

So first, my ideas for the opening spy scene fell into place—but I was trying to write Tomorrow We Spy. That scene wouldn’t leave me alone, so I wrote it just to get it out of my head. I actually thought I’d have to switch to do the novella for Nano, but once I got that scene out, I was ready to go back to TWS.

That initial scene waited until early this year when I could get back to it. I finished the scene and added two more, then came to the scene where Danny and Talia actually meet. I started writing it from Talia’s POV but it just wasn’t . . . cute. And the first meeting is supposed to be cute!

I’d already written the scene from Danny’s POV, and I was using that as a guide, but the more I looked at it, the sadder I was to lose his thoughts here. I turned to a trusted, insightful friend and showed her both versions of the scene.

She liked Danny’s better. And she was right: his voice added a new dimension to Talia’s story (and she’s already gotten 3 novels of her own!). But this made things even more complicated. I only had about 7000 words in his story, but I was projecting it at around 30,000 as well. I’d have to be careful to give his character arc enough attention and screen time, and somehow balance it with Talia’s more exciting external plot.

And how did it go? Well, it’s still a work-in-progress, but I think I can do it (with help from my amazing CPs of course!).

whooshingSo I decided to let the story take its course. 30,000 words came and went. (Whoosh it said as it went by.) But I knew I could keep it less than 50,000. Right? Nope. Whoosh. 60,000? Whoosh. I finally finished a little over 62,000 words—and I kept telling myself I could get it under 50,000. Except that I add 20-30% in revisions, and I knew some of the scenes I’d need to add. So….

Finally, I had to admit it. My rebellious novella (rebelliovella?) wasn’t a novella at all. It was a novel. And that was okay—except that I didn’t have time to edit another novel in my production schedule, and I didn’t want the prequel that started it all to be the last installment released. I want the end of the series to “have the last word.”

So what will I do? I don’t know! I’m dancing as fast as I can! But I hope to have some decisions/announcements next month!

UPDATE: Spy by Night is available now! (I ended up delaying TWS to put Spy by Night out first, but only just.)

Did you ever accidentally write a novel?

Oops photo by Neal Fowler via Flickr/CC