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Messages - Lumpy

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Author Craft / Re: Lurker 'Fesses Up
« on: May 03, 2014, 02:01:28 AM »
Oh, but I did post, in your topic this morning, about characters.  So prodding unnecessary, although if you enjoy it, help yourself. ;)

If there was BBCode that worked here for embedding a video, I'd put the book trailer here to make it easier to visit me.  Alas, the links in my sig will have to do.

And no, that wasn't me at the workshop.  I'm an anti-social shut-in, as a rule.  Though you might see me at the grocery store.  Or the bondsman.

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Author Craft / Re: Character Development - Chicken or Egg Approach
« on: May 02, 2014, 04:07:19 PM »
I'm one of those guys where everything flows from character.  Same plot and/or MacGuffin with different characters gives you completely different stories.  If it doesn't, your plot is pushing your characters, not the other way around. 

A runaway train is a plot.  Watching someone run away from a runaway train is a story.  (Or try to stop it, drive it, eat it, turn it into a poodle.)  So when I'm stuck writing a scene, or can't figure out how to move the plot forward, I tie someone's shoelaces together (figuratively).  Watching them figure it out while the train keeps coming usually provides what the story needs, or what they needed.

Not that plot's not important, clearly.  But people relate to other people, and that's characters.

That said, I know I'm ready to write when a) I know the final scene/reveal; and b) I've walked around with my characters long enough that I can hold conversations with them, out loud.  (My family's quite used to it, bless them.)  Literally acting out scenes in character while I walk around the house or whatever, and the characters say something that reveals something to me I hadn't considered that most always drives the plot forward in a way I hadn't imagined, that's better than what I'd planned.  That's when I know the coffee's ready. ;)

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Author Craft / Re: Lurker 'Fesses Up
« on: April 22, 2014, 12:08:05 PM »
Meg: Mmm.  Community flatulence.  Or as I like to call them: air biscuits.  (I knew there was a reason I was drawn here.)  Thanks for the welcome.

Oz: Splendid, my friend!  Anytime someone spends their own cash to take a risk on a stranger's claim, it's a big deal.  So thanks very much.  Please leave a review on Amazon.com as well, if you would.  The usual excessively hyperbolic praise will be fine.  Or a picture of a kitty.  Kitties are nice, too.

Chris

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Author Craft / Re: Lurker 'Fesses Up
« on: April 21, 2014, 06:20:02 PM »
Thanks, Oz!  Much appreciated!

Chris

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Author Craft / Lurker 'Fesses Up
« on: April 20, 2014, 11:05:52 PM »
Hi everyone.  My name's Chris, and I'm a lurker.  ("Hi, Chris!")

Been visiting the website, and this forum, for many years, and registered nearly two years ago.  Coming out into the light to tout my own wares.  The estimable Mr. Mickey Finn tells me this is the forum, so please don't shoot me.  I swear I'm a Butcher/Dresden fan and not at all an opportunistic, spammy hack.  (Okay, maybe opportunistic and a hack.  But in a nice way.)

I've written The Handyman.  It's a supernatural murder mystery set in Charleston, SC, about a redneck construction worker who, after losing his family in a terrible accident, discovers he a) has severe PTSD and b) is a psychic who can communicate with the dead -- one of whom is a young woman who wants him to prove that her supposed suicide was actually murder.

Naturally, it's a comedy.  Ish.  If you like your comedy on the darker side, with grits, pickup trucks and tattoos. 

I don't want to wear out my welcome, so I'll leave it at that.  I do invite y'all to check out the book trailer (I didn't even know there was such a thing until a few months ago).  You can check out sample chapters on Amazon and iTunes as well.

Dashing back into the shadows now.  Thanks, all…

Chris

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