Showing posts with label The Secret Language of Leah Sinclair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Secret Language of Leah Sinclair. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Plotting Mechanics

by Robin Weaver
The automobile actually can be a writing instrument. Stuck in traffic? Plot out your next chapter. Driving a hundred miles before dawn? Outline your entire book. The availability of Bluetooth devices and mini recorders make it easy to record these ideas that might have otherwise flitted away.


For most of us (especially those who still have day jobs), driving is frequently a solitary activity. Why not take advantage of this rare alone-time for the non-writing part of your writing? As I’ve already mentioned, you can plot, but you can also use this time to create by doing nothing. You’re saying “huh?”


Hold on. There is scientific evidence that most conscious perception goes on without self-consciousness. According to psychologist Shelley H. Carson, author of Your Creative Brain, “A distraction may provide the break you need to disengage from a fixation on the ineffective solution.” In short, a distraction isn’t always a bad thing. Sometimes, letting your brain play hooky can prohibit fixations, thus freeing up the creative process. And what creates more of a distraction than driving down a lonely highway? Mind wandering is often associated with high creativity, so put your foot on the pedal and let your brain do its thing.

There are also other creative exercises you can tackle behind the steering wheel. Need to develop a new character? Take a glance at the drivers of the next three vehicles you encounter (preferably at a stop light—safety first). Try to give these drivers unique backstories: Who does he love? What crime did she commit? How much money did he spend on lottery tickets? Then, take characteristics from each and formulate one awesome character.

Need new story ideas? Play the license plate game—with a twist. Take the letters from the plates and define a character. For example, HJK-216 can become Harold Johnson, Kinetic Engineer who has 216 cats. Or Holy Juggling Kingpin who has two wives and sixteen kids.  Can you use either in your book? Even if you don’t get any useful ideas, participation in this kind of activity stimulates your gray matter.

Another thing you can do with license plates is use the states as settings. Nothing novel about picking a state, but what if you see three states, say: Indiana, Tennessee, and Florida.  Try to imagine a plot that will take your character to these seemingly unrelated places.

SOME CAVEATS. Have you ever gotten home and not remembered any of the drive? That may happen. So if you’re on a long trip, be careful that you don’t miss an exit (or two). And always, always, always adhere to the “safety first” rule. If the conditions are even mildly hazardous, watch the road. Your book will be there when conditions improve.        

Try these techniques the next time you’re “on the road again.” If nothing else, it will seem like you get where you’re going quicker.
 

Friday, May 23, 2014

Beach Reads—Sunny, Funny and Surfside

By Linda Lovely
When I head to the beach, I want love and laughs, not tears. I’m on vacation. Time to forget the real world, the tragedies in the news, the weeds in my garden, the deadlines that loom.

So how do I select what books to pack? A promise of laughs is my number one criteria. No tear-jerker endings. No torture scenes. No unresolved issues.

If possible, the books are set somewhere waves can lap at my heroine’s feet. All the better to imagine myself in her flip flops with shared sand between our toes.

If you have similar preferences for your vacation reads, I highly recommend two books: The Secret Language of Leah Sinclair, written by Robin Weaver, a fellow Romancing the Genres blogger, and Dying for a Daiquiri, written by humorous romance author Cindy Sample.

I don’t pay a lot of heed to classifications, but I guess The Secret Language of Leah Sinclair falls into the YA (young adult) paranormal category, since one of its main characters is a talking dolphin and the heroine is a sixteen-year-old.

Am I a young adult? Uh, hardly. Am I going to attempt a conversation with a dolphin? No. But I thoroughly enjoyed this seaside romp. It made me recall both the angst and joy of being a teenage girl with a world full of possibilities and potential. Plus, Rocket, Leah’s dolphin companion, is a snarky delight, who mangles the English language in wonderfully perverse ways.

Here’s a synopsis minus any spoiler: Leah’s secret best friend, Rocket—a dolphin— confides that criminal activity threatens his pod. He wants Leah’s help. But she fears she’ll end up a CIA test subject if her secret ability slips. So what can she do? She risks telling Chase, her teen heartthrob, who joins her in battling dangerous thugs. Too bad Chase has the hots for another girl. Worse, if he reveals Leah’s secret, she may end up swimming with the fishes—permanently. Here's a link to the ebook on Amazon: amazon.com/dp/B00I5P3VZ8   

My second book choice, Dying for a Daiquiri, is a romantic laugh-laced who-done-it set in Hawaii, an exotic locale that author Sample fully exploits for atmosphere and hijinks. This is the third book in Sample’s “Dying” series, featuring single soccer mom Lauren McKay.  

The plot? A best friend’s destination wedding lures Lauren, her mom, and more of our heroine’s zany friends
to the Big Island where Lauren’s brother owns a restaurant/club. Soon, however, the death of a dancer makes Lauren’s brother a murder suspect. Naturally, it’s not long before the killer wants to put the skids to Lauren’s snooping.

Dying for a Daiquiri will make you hanker to visit Hawaii, where spectacular sunsets accompany those daiquiris. You’ll also want to order life-size posters of the two hunks vying for Laurel’s kisses. Best of all, you’ll laugh out loud at this single mom’s humor and pluck—even when her life’s hanging by a thread.

Sample serves up a cocktail of vacation adventure, sexy interludes, raucous laughs, and mystery. A perfect vacation from reality in any season. Here's a link to the ebook on Amazon: amazon.com/dp/B00FK5UW4Y 


Of course, I also would love you to check out Dead Line, the first book in my Smart Women, Touch Luck series of romantic thrillers. Here's a link to the ebook on Amazon:  amazon.com/dp/B00K6T429U

There's a tropical setting (Jamaica) in this one, too, but more suspense (and heat) than laughs.