Congratulations Gus!!!
The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
That's great news, Gus. Very exciting.
What's scary is picture number four? Move the Conservatory out of the way behind her, and you can see the back of our house.
That's the building where I married Emmett's mother. The Consveratory; not Deb's house.
The Consveratory; not Deb's house.
Before the humongous windstorm that trashed it and led to the renovation in the first place, I presume.
Gus! Novelising Weremonkeyman! Good on you, and what's it called?
Congratulations, Gus! I join in the chorus of "more details!"
Whohoo! Congrats, Gus!
WeremonkeynovelwriterGUS!
Rock on!
(And how do I love that you forgot you wrote it? THIIIIIIS MUCH!)
Connie actually has a perfectly good novel in good-sized chunks; I know, because I've read some of it. She avoids quite a few common traps, right out the gate, and some of the few traps she did fall into are extremely shallow and easy for anyone with an instinct to climb right out of. So yes, she should do that thing.
Hee. Do you remember which traps I did fall into?
Some more Gus-ward congratulimifications. 'scuse me while I slide on the end of the "vastly amused that you forgot about the novel you just sold" bench.
Do you remember which traps I did fall into?
Basically a question of balancing tell and show. There were spots where you needed to show - early on, I remember her getting word of a phone message from her secretary, one of those big moments, and holding back all the way too far on her reaction. Problem there was that the reader had trouble catching up with her physical reaction, which was to get the hell out of the building before he showed up. The occasional tell instead of show moment - history of the Fenris myth, you as narrator telling the reader, rather than giving it to us through the character's memory, making it part of her experience instead of a classroom fact.
But those are very shallow traps. They get easier to avoid, the more you write. The story and characters were sound.