Writing Thrillers: Two More Principles That Guide Jeffrey Deaver

At the 1 May SkillBuild in High Point, NC, bestselling author Jeffrey Deaver cited three principles that guide his writing. Last week, I discussed his first principle: Don’t write something that readers don’t want to read. Remember the liver-flavored toothpaste … Continue reading

The Ins and Outs of Paranormal Forensic Investigations

About fifteen years ago, I wrote three manuscripts in a mystery series with a psychic detective and a contemporary setting. The sentiment I heard from editors and agents at conferences was, “People aren’t reading about psychic detectives. What publisher would … Continue reading

Writing to Sell: Chris Roerden Says Get an Attitude!

A fiction writer can improve his or her craft by studying books like Eats, Shoots & Leaves, taking courses that teach elements such as plotting and characterization, and hiring an editor. Just as important as craft is a writer’s voice. … Continue reading

Writing About Crime Scenes: Lee Lofland Laughs at “CSI”

Here’s another installment from that marvelous SkillBuild that I attended on Saturday 1 May at the High Point Public Library in High Point, NC.  Former police detective Lee Lofland updates his blog “The Graveyard Shift” regularly to expose errors in … Continue reading

Writing Thrillers: Jeffrey Deaver Says Quit Offering Liver-Flavored Toothpaste!

On Saturday 1 May, I attended a SkillBuild in High Point, NC. This event, co-sponsored by the High Point Public Library and the Murder We Write chapter of Sisters in Crime, showcased excellent workshops by Lee Lofland, Chris Roerden, and headliner Jeffrey Deaver. To do justice to the power of these workshops, I won’t attempt to squeeze accounts of them into a single blog entry. So stay tuned to my blog for scoop on this SkillBuild.

Jeffrey Deaver“People Don’t Read to Get to the Middle: Writing a Page-Turning Thriller” was the title of the workshop by Jeffrey Deaver. This bestselling, award-winning author discussed the principles that guide him when he writes, and he shed light on the process by which he produces his thrillers.

“Who brushed their teeth this morning?” Deaver asked the audience. Following a show of hands, he produced a series of questions. “Who used mint-flavored toothpaste? Who used cinnamon-flavored toothpaste?” He drilled down to make his point about Guiding Principle One by asking a final question: “Who used liver-flavored toothpaste?” Of course, no one uses liver-flavored toothpaste. The manufacturers of major toothpaste brands are smart enough to not produce a product that no customer wants to use.

Writers are also manufacturers of a product. They should be smart enough to not write stories that readers don’t want to read.

Writers should continually perform market research and ask themselves, “What do my readers want?” then write clear, coherent stories for their readers. Easy for Jeffrey Deaver to say. He isn’t caught up in the angst of finding an agent or publisher

Here’s what Deaver means with his first guiding principle. If you’re a writer, and you want to create fiction that’s saleable, throw your ego out the door. This business isn’t about you. It’s about writing to your audience. Deaver counts himself very lucky to be making a living off his writing. He achieves that by understanding what his readers want, then giving it to them. He cannot afford to cave to his ego.

Literary agents and publishers often cite the fact that few first manuscripts are saleable. There’s a reason why they aren’t. Most of the time, that first novel isn’t for readers. It’s for the writer. It’s autobiographical and strokes his or her ego by bringing out all the personal baggage.

What is this baggage? Misery over being unpopular in high school, misery over being raised by parents who failed to meet your expectations, and so on. To deliver a story about baggage, your first novel becomes a plotting and characterization debacle that undermines delivery of a story with appeal to a broader audience.

In other words, your personal baggage on the page is liver-flavored toothpaste. Nobody wants to buy your liver-flavored toothpaste. Deal with it.

Understand that there’s nothing wrong with writing an autobiographical first novel. You’ve heard the saying that there’s a novel in everyone? That’s the autobiographical manuscript, and it’s great therapy to write it. Furthermore, actually completing a first draft is a major achievement! Most writers never get that far. Congratulations if you’ve finished a first draft.

However, if you’ve completed that first manuscript, and you have your cap set on this writing business, your next step toward making a living as a professional author of fiction will almost always be to put that first manuscript away on a shelf or in a drawer and start writing your next manuscript. With each successive manuscript, you leave more autobiographical baggage behind, and you acquire more of the craft of writing.

Almost every published author has a bunch of unpublished manuscripts stashed away. I shoved away two unpublished partial manuscripts and nine unpublished completed manuscripts prior to finishing my tenth manuscript, my award-winning first novel, Paper Woman. I ditched the autobiographical baggage in my partials and first finished manuscript. The subsequent completed, unpublished manuscripts are where I developed my craft, learned the business of understanding my audience, and became publishable.

Heck, yes, this takes time. Decades in my case. Maybe you won’t take decades to create a publishable manuscript. But you must still invest in that time-consuming learning process if you want to be published. Painters, composers, and sculptors don’t expect their first creations to sell.

People often ask me whether I plan to return to my unpublished manuscripts and fix them, make them saleable. No. Like many authors, I’ve cannibalized pieces of some of them. But each one is, as a whole, a tube of liver-flavored toothpaste. They’re bombs that I wouldn’t inflict upon my readers, kind people who have so many options for how they spend their leisure time, and they choose to spend it in my fictional universe. I’m grateful for them.

How many tubes of liver-flavored toothpaste do you have shoved away in a drawer?

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“Body Language on the Page”

In February, I participated in Mary Buckham’s online course and discussion, “Body Language on the Page,” with the Guppies. The last online class I’d taken with Mary was “Plotting with the Mythic Structure: Creating Surefire Plots that Sell”, in January … Continue reading

Author Elizabeth Zelvin on Editing, Critique, and Craft

 Elizabeth Zelvin, author of Death Will Get You Sober and Death Will Help You Leave Him, capped a two-week tour through North Carolina yesterday at the Sternberger Center in Greensboro with her presentation “The End is Just the Beginning: Editing, … Continue reading

Poisoned Pen’s WebCon 2009

Much will undoubtedly be written in the coming weeks of PPWebCon, the first entirely virtual conference for mystery readers and writers, held in cyberspace 24 October 2009. Poisoned Pen Press took advantage of the full range of existing technologies available … Continue reading

Deadly Divas in Raleigh

“Tea with the Divas” features mystery authors (l to r) Sara Rosett, Laura Bradford, Marcia Talley (president of Sisters in Crime), Heather Webber, and Denise Swanson. Molly Weston organized the tour of these ladies through the Raleigh area. I caught … Continue reading