Monthly Archives: August 2010

Edit mania!

This is Mad Editing Week. Seven days, 100,000 words. Today I’m on Day 2: Die, adjectives, die!

Just so you know why I may post irregularly.

Your questions answered VI: stand alones and series novels

Todd Hurley asks:

Q 1: Have you ever considered a stand alone novel?

Yes. I have a lot of ideas pinballing around in my head, and not all of them feature — or are suited to — Jo Beckett or Evan Delaney.

Q 2: Have you ever considered a third series? If so, who would the main character be?

I haven’t. Yet. So I don’t know who the main character would be. But I can say with confidence it would not be a wizard, a vampire, a vampire hunter/slayer/lover, a mystery-solving-cat, or a historical figure turned crimefighter (I hear Jackie Kennedy is available).

Ask me again in a few years.

Japanese editions: Jericho Point and Mission Canyon

Jericho Point comes home, and Mission Canyon hits the road.

The Japanese edition of Jericho Point has just arrived. I love the design of the Japanese covers. And the books are the perfect size to slip into a pocket, so you can easily read on a train commute or a flight.

And Dave sends a new photo of Mission Canyon from the Japanese bookstore in San Francisco’s Japantown. He notes: “Looking for your name under the Japanese alphabet is no joke,” but it “does make me feel like all those years studying Japanese paid off.”

Dave: I’m so glad I could help you put your language skills to work, even if it tested your patience.

He adds that he and his mom picked up the book for his 88-year-old grandfather, “as thrillers are his cup of tea.”

That’s what I love to hear.

Your questions answered V: Too graphic? Lousy ideas?

Grace asks:

Can a thriller ever be too graphic? If so, do you think authors who go that route are looking to fill space or take the easy way out?

“Too graphic” is in the eye — and gut — of the reader. Novels that I myself find too graphic tend to contain violence and overt bloodshed that don’t relate inherently to the plot, don’t drive the story, and are lingered over (almost salaciously, in some cases). As to why authors write extremely graphic novels — I presume it’s because they think doing so will draw readers.

Ever have a plot idea and feel it wouldn’t fly past the publishers/editors/etc?

Yes. Oh, my, yes. Some reasons I might reject an idea before it reaches an editor are:

1. It’s lousy. Coming up with ideas is easy. Coming up with good ideas is tough. I agree with Robert McKee’s assessment that 90% of ideas are crap.

2. It’s thin. It might sustain a short story, or a slim subplot, but isn’t meaty enough to power a novel. Or it might just be boring.

3. It’s a cliché. Ideas that pop easily into our heads often do so because they’re familiar. They’ve been written about a thousand times, in the same, tired way.

4. It’s too weird, stupid, ludicrous, or ingrown.

As to actual crappy, stringy, trite, wacko ideas I have personally thought up and then rejected, they’re locked in a booby-trapped safe in my writing bunker, so nobody can get to them.

Stephen King on The Liar’s Lullaby in Entertainment Weekly

Yes, I am happy that Stephen King has picked The Liar’s Lullaby as one of his 2010 Hits. Hell, yes.

In his August 27th Entertainment Weekly column, “My 2010 Hits and Misses,” he calls the book a Choklit — as in one of the sweet surprises Forrest Gump finds in the chocolate box.

The new Meg Gardiner novel featuring “deadshrinker” Jo Beckett. This rocker features not one or two but three edge-of-your-seat suspense set pieces, beginning with the death of a country singer in front of 40,000 fans (the follow-up: a helicopter collision over the baseball stadium in San Francisco).

His other picks include Inception and Eminem’s new album. The column isn’t yet online, but when it is, I’ll link. In the meantime, go buy every copy you can find and hand them out to everybody you see.

And to Mr. King: Thanks. Again.

Franz Kafka International Airport

Not all that far from reality.

The novel I’m writing for 2011

As requested, here are a few plot teasers for the novel I’m in a fight to the death with writing. Some of this information I hinted at earlier today on Twitter. So let me tease you:

  • The working title of the novel is The Nightmare Thief.
  • Today’s research reading included a Rolling Stone article on the financial bubble, and the US Air Force survival manual.
  • The story throws Jo Beckett into the wilderness.
  • While Evan Delaney is on the loose in San Francisco.

Your questions answered IV

Dan asks:

What novel would you most like to have written?

A while back, my family had the opportunity to visit Rome. While there, we got the rare chance to tour the Vatican gardens behind St. Peter’s. It was a quiet, lush, intriguing — and hidden — part of the Vatican, and I gushed, “This would be an amazing place to set a thriller.”

The Husband said: “Agreed. Do it.”

If I had sat down right then and scribbled a novel set at the Vatican, instead of wandering off in search of pizza, years later the Husband would not have hurled a copy of Angels & Demons at me, shouting, “I told you so!”

What fictional character would you most like to have been?

Meg from A Wrinkle in Time. Not only did I love her, and the story, but I couldn’t believe that my favorite character had the same name as I did.

What was your most satisfying writing moment?

At the keyboard: the moment in Jericho Point when 200 pages of set-up finally pay off, and Evan Delaney figures out what’s going on with PJ Blackburn… and does something about it.

Post keyboard: Running around the ballroom at the Edgars, waving my new buddy Mr. Poe, giddy and euphoric. That’s when I realized you can put me in lipstick and heels, but at heart I’m still only six years old.

Who knows?

Happy birthday, Ray Bradbury

Author Ray Bradbury turns 90 this week. Take the Ray Bradbury quiz.

Appallingly, I scored 2/10: “Dark Carnival. A very dim display.”

Your questions answered III

Dana Jean asks:

If you could have been involved in any infamous legal case in history, which one would you pick and why? And which side of the aisle would you have wanted to be on? Okay, make it top three.

1. Brown v. Board of Education. I would have been willing to carry Thurgood Marshall’s briefcase and hand him documents, just to be part of a historic civil rights case that changed the United States for the better.

2. The impeachment of Bill Clinton. I would have played the Chief Justice, and whacked everybody involved, hard and repeatedly, with my gavel: the president, for treating his office so shabbily (literally and symbolically); and Congress, for its insane attempt to boot the president out of power. Never in my life did I think I’d have to bar my kids from watching C-SPAN because of filthy content. Thanks, idiots.

3. The heresy trial of Joan of Arc. I’d play the bailiff, and rescue her. Of course, France would then have to come up with a new patron saint, but it would be worth it.

Your questions answered, II

Betsy asks:

“Are you claustrophobic ? If so, have you always been, or did something happen in your life to cause it? Do you think most people are if they are in a situation where they feel trapped?”

I’m not claustrophobic. Cozy spaces don’t bother me at all. However, being trapped — in a narrowing tunnel, a cave-in, or a crowd stampede — certainly would frighten me. And I think most people get the heebie-jeebies at the mere mention of the phrase buried alive.

On the other hand, I have what’s generally called a fear of heights. I say “generally called” because heights don’t actually scare me. I’m not afraid of Denver. What’s scares me is the possibility of falling. And then landing. Which, if you ask me, isn’t actually a fear — it’s simply common sense.

I’m guessing you asked this question because Jo Beckett is claustrophobic. But that’s because I deliberately set out to give her a fear I don’t have, and to make her fearless in the face of what terrifies me. Jo freaks out if an elevator stops between floors, but finds rock climbing exhilarating.

Kooky? Not if you ask her.

Duke, postscript

A heartfelt thank you to everybody who has commented about Duke. Your kind thoughts are appreciated by everybody in my family. I know he was just a dog — but it’s wonderful to receive such warm and sincere good wishes.

Thanks, friends.

Farewell, Duke

I didn’t want a dog. I thought having one would be too much trouble. That’s probably why the Husband waited until I broke my ankle: when I heard him start the car I could only hobble to the door in time to see him and Kate pull out.

“Where are you going?” I said.

Kate leaned out the window. As Paul drove off as if piloting a rocket sled, she called: “To get a puppy!”

They came home with Duke, an enthusiastic, clumsy ball of energy. That was just before Halloween 1997. I think Duke went as a pirate that year — we still have the bandanna. But at the time, I thought he might be a little demon. He was certainly possessed.

As a puppy he chased his own tail. He loved to swim in the pond in the woods, where he would try to retrieve logs bigger than himself. He chased squirrels but never figured out where they disappeared to once they reached the trees. Up never occurred to him.

Paul often said: That dog has two brain cells. Once in a while they even connect.

He once put the cat’s head in his mouth as if it were a tennis ball. The cat taught him not to try twice. Another time, he tried to exit the house through the cat door. Instead he got stuck, and we found him the next morning in his bed, with the cat door ripped off its mount and stuck around his neck. When he was a few months old he jumped up on the kitchen table and ate a cake Paul and Nate had baked for a Cub scout pack meeting — a cake shaped and decorated, honest-to-God, like a yellow Lab, and labeled “Duke.” He loved to jump; once, a neighbor looked out her kitchen window to see him bouncing on her trampoline.

Of course, he mellowed. El Perro Loco quieted down, to the point where he would maniacally greet us — like we’d just been rescued from a mine — maybe four or five times a day, instead of twenty. However, the boys never tired of dressing him in boxer shorts and crazy hats. Just last weekend, Mark tried his new glasses on him. He looked like Buddy Holly.

Duke put up with just about everything. And he never complained or got tired of it. He just wagged his tail and laid his head on your lap.

He turned 13 two weeks ago. That was wonderful, and more time than we ever expected to get with him. But at 13 every week, and every day, takes its toll. Yesterday our lovely Aussie vet, Belinda, had to tell us she couldn’t do any more for him.

Nate stayed with him all day, until it was time to say goodbye. Duke would never leave the kids’ sides, and Nate didn’t want to leave his.

Last night Paul said: “Best dog I ever had.”

I couldn’t agree more.