What Readers Tell Me

Rob Kelley here, and I’m reflecting on who my readers are for my debut novel Raven and what they are telling me.

I was recently challenged by someone who knows book marketing to describe my ideal reader, and I realized that’s harder than it sounds. I have an acquaintance, a white collar professional to whom I mentioned that I’d just published my first novel, and when I described it, she said she couldn’t wait to read it. Awesome, of course, but I was surprised; I didn’t see her as someone who would like the book. So I clearly didn’t know exactly who my ideal reader was.

I also wasn’t sure what readers would like. I know what I like in novels, and definitely tried to emulate my favorite writers in the characterization, pacing, setting, and voice of the novel. I know my favorite scenes in the book, the ones I spent time crafting and polishing, especially the ending. I had two readers comment on the ending recently, one saying how much she enjoyed the ending, and another saying he was afraid it wasn’t going to turn out well for my protagonist, Mev Hayes. That was a useful thing to hear, because it meant that the level of tension I’d worked to create as my main character is in mortal danger, then in significant legal danger, was at the level I’d intended and the outcome wasn’t obvious.

A number of readers said they liked Mev (which was gratifying because one of the devastating critiques I got when I first tried to shop the book was that the main character was weak and underdeveloped. Yikes!). And, yes, readers came to despise my antagonist; also good. But it was reactions to my secondary characters that have surprised me. Mev’s co-conspirator, best friend (and maybe more), Jack, was one reader’s favorite, asking if the next book could be about him. (If I write a sequel, which isn’t currently planned, I’ll probably write it from his POV).

Even more surprising was one reader’s real appreciation for the secondary FBI character Carl. Carl was fun to write and his journey allowed me to explore issues of race, privilege, and power, parallel in many ways to the challenges Mev faces as a woman in the sciences in 1990. But what came back to me from that comment was that I’d made him a fully fleshed out character, someone who encouraged the reader to want more. (Carl does show up in a short story set after Raven, tentatively titled “Binary,” that I’ll put out as a Kindle Short sometime in the future.)

Writers, what do you hope your readers find compelling in your work, and readers, what are you looking for in crime novels and thrillers?

Currently reading The Doorman by Chris Pavone, 2025, and loving it.

Next in my TBR list: Super-Cannes, by J.G. Ballard, 2000. (I just learned about this novel. I’d have sworn I read everything Ballard had ever written!)

 

 

 

 

Posted in Rob's Posts | 4 Comments

Weekend Update: March 14-15, 2026

Next week at Maine Crime Writers there will be posts by Rob Kelley (Monday), John Clark (Tuesday), Kaitlyn Dunnett/Kathy Lynn Emerson (Thursday) and Maureen Milliken (Friday), with a writing tip from Allison Keeton on Wednesday.

In the news department, here’s what’s happening with some of us who blog regularly at Maine Crime Writers:

 

Matt Cost will be at the Dance Hall in Kittery on Monday, March 16th, at 6:30 PM for a Noir at the Bar. Maine Crime Writers Gabi Stiteler, Allison Keeton,  and Brenda Buchanan will be joined by some of the finest and scariest writers in New England. Cost will be reading from the book that scarred his relationship with his wife, Mainely Wicked, when she asked what dark place he was in when he wrote it.

 

 

An invitation to readers of this blog: Do you have news relating to Maine, Crime, or Writing? We’d love to hear from you. Just comment below to share.

And a reminder: If your library, school, or organization is looking for a speaker, we are often available to talk about the writing process, research, where we get our ideas, and other mysteries of the business, along with the very popular “Making a Mystery” with audience participation, and “Casting Call: How We Staff Our Mysteries.” We also do programs on Zoom. Contact Kate Flora

AND DON’T FORGET! One lucky Maine Crime Writers reader who leaves a comment on the blog this month will win a bundle of books!

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For the Love of Layers

I’m forbidden from bringing any more rocks into the house.

It’s a difficult promise to keep. Living on the Maine coast, surrounded by 400-500 million-year-old metamorphic rock, I am constantly coming across a beautiful loose stone on the beach, at the lighthouse park, or in a preserve.

The metamorphic rock at Pemaquid Lighthouse.

My love for the landscape led me to take a geology course specific to the Pemaquid area. Mistake. My obsession with rocks has grown, and now I know that some are actually minerals, making them even more enticing.

Metamorphic rock is known for its layers formed under extreme heat or pressure. The result is a beautiful, interesting mix of colors, textures, and rock varieties.

Pemaquid Beach. Metamorphic Rock.

That is what the layers within your writing deliver to the reader.

Layers in writing come in many forms:

Character Depth. Who doesn’t love a character-driven story where both the protagonist and the antagonist have multiple sides to their personalities, showing both their strengths and their vulnerabilities? Sometimes we might even feel bad for, or root for, the antagonist. We relate emotionally to well-rounded characters by seeing ourselves in them.

Theme. Gabi Stiteler wrote a wonderful piece on Theme last year that I encourage you to re-read. Find it here: https://mainecrimewriters.com/2025/11/12/writing-tip-wednesday-its-all-about-theme/  A book’s theme, or overall meaning, is interwoven throughout the surface-level plot. Even a light-hearted cozy mystery, like the kind I love to write, explores deeper human conditions. Don’t sell your work short, believing it is too “simple” to have a theme.

Symbolism. Sometimes, a repeated symbol or motif enriches the story beyond the plot, such as a bird of prey foreshadowing a danger or a key signaling a secret. The subtle repetitions will build.

Plot Enrichments. We all started on Dick and Jane or similar simple stories. See Jane Run. Well, if Jane actually ran away, hid, or was tripped, that would have added a more interesting layer to the simple plot. Readers stay engaged when there is suspense or intrigue, as they piece together a mystery, wait for an outcome, or hold their breath in a chase scene.

Relatable Work. Layers will hit readers in different ways. You may touch a reader, or make a reader nostalgic or laugh, or cause a reader to put the book down due to a painful memory. However it affects the reader, the work will be remembered.

Re-reading. Often, layered stories are valued and re-read, and a new thought or feeling resonates. Two of my favorite books are The Great Gatsby by Fitzgerald and The Hours by Cunningham. Yes, I’ve re-read them, and yes, they stay with me.

It’s one thing to say that layering is important, and it’s another thing to do it. I’m not implying it is easy, but that is why you have first drafts, tenth drafts, writers’ groups, beta readers, and time to put the manuscript away to let it marinate.

Our dogs, Kelton and Roger, along the rocks of the Pemaquid River.

Regarding my rock promise, I’ve left many intact where they are and where they belong, now taking only a few for the edges of my herb garden. The exceptions are the heart-shaped ones. Too tempting not to bring inside. Shhh, don’t give me away.

Found Hearts, both rock and mineral.

Happy Writing!

                                                                ***

Don’t forget! Leave a comment on any March blog post to be entered into a drawing for free books!

                                                                  ***

Allison Keeton writes the Midcoast Maine Mystery series. Arctic Green, Book Two, is now available. She can be reached at http://www.akeetonbooks.com

Arctic Green, Book Two, Midcoast Maine Mystery series

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To Market To Market . . .

Kate Flora: I was digging through some old files this week, looking for information on the history of the New England Crime Bake. What I found along the way amused me and perhaps will amuse you as well.

Back in 1993, when I sold my first book, my husband Ken congratulated me and said, “Now you have two jobs. Your job as a writer and your job marketing the books.” Like many another writer, marketing is not my forte. I like the part of the writer’s life that involves being all alone, at my desk, living in my head, watching my characters and story evolve. But he was right. Since 1994, when Chosen for Death was published, I’ve been looking for creative ways to promote the books.

While I was digging, I found two very amusing attempts at promotion. First, a cardboard gun, imprinted with book information, that, when it is pulled forcefully through the air, makes a bang and a small banner pops out. That one was fun. Alas, when I went to get more for the next book, the price had gone up so much it was out of my price range. Then there was the giant red plastic paperclip, imprinted with my book information. Like the gun, it was soon too expensive for an ill-paid author to afford.

Brother John in the Educated Death tee shirt

Publishing is a very insecure business. Writers’ series are always being dropped, even when they’re earning money. Publishers are always drawn to the bright and shiny new object over the steady and reliable author. So when my Thea Kozak series looked like it was about to die, I made a bunch of tee shirts with the book title and the message: Buy This Book or Thea Dies. Thea didn’t die, but that was because another publisher, Jim Huang at The Mystery Company picked up the series. I am forever grateful.

 

 

 

Then there are the postcards. I still have postcards for many books in my files, in case someone out there collects author’s postcards. Sometimes I did postcards. Sometimes I did bookmarks. Sometimes I did both. And sometimes, according to my files, I didn’t do either of those things. But it may simply be that I have a very small office with 20+ years of  manuscripts, research files, correspondence, clippings, files from my service on local and national boards promoting mystery writers, and books. Tons and tons of books. It is a miracle that the floor hasn’t collapsed and dumped the whole mess onto the living room floor below.

Author photos? The first time my publisher asked for one of those, my cleaning man, known as The Dread Cleaner Robert, had been a professional photographer, so he snapped a bunch of photos and I sent them along to New York. Photos one and two are from Robert. Then I got a professional one. Then, too busy to get a photo taken, I headed out into the yard in our rental in Florida and our house guest took a picture. Most recently, I’m back to a professional photo and Ali Rosa, from Ali Rosa photography, make my 75-year-old self look pretty darn good.

I also used to do a newsletter, which I am about to revive. If you’d like to be on the mailing list for recipes, new publications, and general stuff about the world of publishing and promotion, send me an email from my website, http://www.kateclarkflora.com or at writingaboutcrime@gmail.com

And by the way, got any great ideas for my next promo?

Posted in Kate's Posts | 1 Comment

To Go Long or To Go Short

I have been on a run with short stories the past few years. Five sold to Ellery Queen in the past three years. Two to Alfred Hitchcock. Luck with four other collections or anthologies. A piece of flash fiction in Shotgun Honey. The last two years, I’ve been short-listed for the Best American Mystery and Suspense, nominated for the Robert L. Fish Award by the Mystery Writers of America for my first short story, and recipient of the Bodwell Fellowship for the Maine Writers and Publisher Alliance.

Lately, I’ve been working on something longer about Pittsburgh in the 1980s. I was born in Pittsburgh and grew up in northwestern PA. Erie. Pittsburgh. Waterford. Greensburg. Somerset. Windber. With dairy farms and coal mines and lake effect snow.

I’m still asking a lot of the same questions about family and loyalty and independence. Still thinking about what sorts of lines a person is willing to cross for the people they love.

The process has been very rewarding. But it’s also been tough.

Specifically, staying in a groove.

As I’ve mentioned, I have two kids. They are great. My two favorite things. Funny and fun and very active. But kids require food and water and attention. They have sporting interests and other interests not related to sports.  Which means my afternoon, evening, and weekend routines are not regular. But I’m still getting it done. I knocked out a scene sitting on the floor at my younger son’s basketball practice. I knocked out another scene at my older son’s batting practice at the Picklr in Westbrook where there is a secret batting practice in a creepy back room.

I travel a lot for my job. It’s good, hard work. But my routine is finding an hour at the end of the day and an hour in the morning and an hour on a plane. I’ve drafted scenes at hotel rooms in Storrs and Easton, Connecticut, in  Warwick, Rhode Island, or on an island in Maine. I’ve reworked them in my mother-in-law’s basement outside Bangor. At the beautiful La Quinta in Texas. At a park in Reno.

I did finish another draft. It is sitting at around 45,000 words. Which is either 40,000 words too short or 40,000 words too long.

I’m up against some issues that are pretty common with writers of short fiction. Things are compressed. Some scenes read like screen-writing – all stage directions and dialogue. I’m missing interiority in some places and world-building in others. Perhaps I’m underutilizing the secondary characters and subplots.

If you write, I’m curious about your process. Do you go long and then have to edit down? Are you a pantser? Or do you plot everything out?

A few updates:

You can catch my latest story in the March/April Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. It’s called “Generous Strike Zone” and was written at my older son’s baseball practice. The editor of AHMM said it was “haunting.” You’ve been warned.

“The Best and Sweetest Things” is my second story with Sloane, a Portland-based private investigator. She’s going to be a fun recurring character. It’s out in the May/June Ellery Queen.

And finally, I have another Annie story out in the July/August Ellery Queen called “A Well-Worn Path.” This one takes place in Portland and involves the disappearance of a comfort care companion who happens to be a refugee.  I wrote this story in November of 2024. It’s going to land a little different now.

For events:

 

 

 

 

 

  • On March 15, I’ll be at the Kittery Dancehall for a Seacoast Noir at the Bar. Doors open at 6:00.
  • On April 10, I’ll be at the Bloom & Doom event in Old Town at Kanu (283 Main Street) at 7:00pm.
  • On April 15, I wish I could be at the Murder in Mud Season event at the Rockport Public Library. It’s going to be amazing. Doors at 6:00. (I will be in Reno. You know. For work.)
  • On April 29, I’ll be in New York for the Edgars.
  • On May 29 and 30, I will be in Portland for the Maine Crime Wave. It is going to be AMAZING. If you haven’t registered yet, you can do it now. Information is HERE.

 

Posted in Gabi's Posts | 9 Comments

Weekend Update: March 7-8, 2026

Next week at Maine Crime Writers there will be posts by Joe Souza (Monday), Gabi Stiteler (Tuesday), Kate Flora (Thursday) and Allison Keeton (Friday).

In the news department, here’s what’s happening with some of us who blog regularly at Maine Crime Writers:

Kate Flora: I’m going to start a quarterly newsletter. If you’d like to be on the mailing list, send me a message using the form at www.kateclarkflora.com

Our bundle of books winner for February is Alice, whose email is asdsmiles@gmail.com Alice, can you send us your snail mail address so we can mail the books? Send to writingaboutcrime@gmail.com

Matt Cost has the beginning of calendar of book events for the year. There will be more to come, but this is a good start. Come say hi at one of these places. Or reach out to him at matthew-cost@comcast.net if you or your organization would like him to come speak or set up an author event for you.

Eager for spring? So are we. And we have a question for you. Should we revive our “Where Would You Put the Body?” photo contest?

An invitation to readers of this blog: Do you have news relating to Maine, Crime, or Writing? We’d love to hear from you. Just comment below to share.

And a reminder: If your library, school, or organization is looking for a speaker, we are often available to talk about the writing process, research, where we get our ideas, and other mysteries of the business, along with the very popular “Making a Mystery” with audience participation, and “Casting Call: How We Staff Our Mysteries.” We also do programs on Zoom. Contact Kate Flora

 

AND DON’T FORGET! One lucky Maine Crime Writers reader who leaves a comment on the blog this month will win a bundle of books!

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FLORENCE ANYONE?

Jule Selbo

This is a short post, I am out shoveling the highway.  Community service in lieu of jail time.

Seriously, more snow?

I want to share a great connection for anyone intending to spend time in FLORENCE ITALY. (I recommend it.)

Backstory:  Moons ago, I spent 4 years (one full semester a year, so let’s say almost 5 months a year for 4 years (or was it 5 years?) as a professor in Florence, teaching screenwriting and film history for my California University in its Study Abroad Program.

While there, I met a group of ex-pat writers (mostly Brits, Aussies, and Americans, there were 8 or 10 of us) and we would meet (as writer groups do) to discuss and/or read what we were working on. Not a bad thing to do in Florence, especially when a glass of Prosecco or Chianti and a plate of pasta were also part of the night. The group is still going and has grown to become a mainstay in the literary “firmament” of the city.

The Florence Literary Society. They meet at the British Embassy (Consulate), a historic (well everything is in Florence is) building that is situated on the Arno River, not far from the Ponte Vecchio and the Duomo (the pictures above, they are central to the historic part of Florence.

There is a solid number of writers who have made Florence their home and love to share work, talk about the craft, meet other writers (from anywhere) and bring in speakers etc etc. Add to that the near-constant change of participants as writers (travelers) come and go and it’s an exciting way to spend an evening or workshop afternoon.

Lori Hetherington — one of the founding members of our group way back when – is now president of Florence Literary Society. She’s an enthusiastic bringer-together of writers.  And she wants to open the group’s doors to our band of merry writers – the Maine Crime Writers.

Florence Literary Society

If you open the link, Lori is the third from the left,  the blond with the “I make things happen” smile on her face. Some of the others pictured I have spent workshop/writing group time with –

I was in Florence last month (instead of the 5 months a year, I try to do a bit more than a month every year, renting the same small apartment up the narrow stairs that the University used to rent for me, right in the heart of Florence and just keep my writing routine in place (lots of coffee shops to work at in Florence (ha!) and I never want to leave. Lori and another of the writers, Deirdre Pirro, and I got together. Lori (American ex-pat from Ohio) writes fiction and historical fiction (check her out on Amazon), but her “day job” is as a translator of books (Italian to English). Deirdre (Australian, went on a cruise when she was 22, the cruise ship’s Italian captain fell in love with her and chased her around the decks and they married and Florence became her home forty years ago) writes essays and short stories (mostly historical, check her out on Amazon)  and has a wicked sense of humor. They are so much fun to talk writing with and are at the heart of the Florence Literary Society.

The number of events (which includes speakers, readings and workshops) are extensive and Lori is opening the door to all of us  to take advantage of them when anyone is there!  There are mystery writers in the group, basically any genre is welcome.

So if you or any writer you know are heading that way  – get in touch with me and I will get you in touch! (Or you can email Lori through the Literary Society website.)

And Lori wants to know what WE are up to here too, she wants to share workshop ideas (very interested in Crime Wave set up) and more.  So we have a FLORENCE CONNECTION now!

Maybe we should do a Mystery Writers Conference in Florence????!!

PS: This is the book I wrote in Florence, back in 2018, my first novel.  It’s a romance/mystery/historical fiction about a young woman (Lynn). Her mother has recently died, and on her deathbed,  asked Lynn to “Find Me in Florence.” Lynn had always felt her mom has something in her past that had been kept secret.  The mom had been a Mud Angel in 1966 during the great flood – the waters of the Arno River nearly took over the city (including museums, libraries etc etc) and people came from all over the world to help, they were given knee-high rubber boots and were tasked to dig into the mud and muck and save Botticellis, Michelangelos, Cellini’s and more paintings, sculptures…) anyway, something happened to Lynn’s mom during that experience and Lynn goes to Florence to search for the truth….

 

 

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Dreaming A Story Into Being

I’ve been heart deep in a writing project of late, a great relief this blasted icy winter when staying positive has been a monumental challenge.

On my drive home from work I often silence the car radio, not to avoid the news, but because my brain is busy thinking about WHAT’S GOING TO HAPPEN when I get to my desk.

After shedding my work clothes for cozy home clothes and having a quick dinner, I sit down with my impatient imaginary friends and listen while they tell me WHAT’S HAPPENING in our story.

I write until it’s time to sleep, when my characters hop into bed with me and insinuate themselves into my dreams, whispering though the night about WHAT NEEDS TO HAPPEN NEXT.

Lately, my characters’ voices have been insistent enough to wake me in the middle of the night.

IF THIS HAPPENS, it’ll amp up the suspense.

IF THAT HAPPENS, you’ll open the door for new suspects.

I’m not one of those people who keeps a notepad on my bedside table for jotting down my middle-of-the-night inspirations. That feels premeditated (and my handwriting is bad enough when I’m wide awake). Having ridden this particular creative roller coaster before, I’ve learned to trust that the important stuff will still be there in the morning.

HOW DOES THAT EVEN HAPPEN?

In the shower, I pan the night’s dreams for gold, sometimes feeling as though I spent the night watching a film starring people sort of like my characters who get involved in terrifying/improbable/hilarious plots that don’t seem to have anything to do with my current project.

But dreams are, of course, not literal. Decoding them forces me to dig beneath the surface and excavate the story I’m really trying to tell.

Blogmates and other writers/creatives who read MCW, does this happen to you?

Brenda Buchanan sets her novels and short stories in Maine. Her three-book Joe Gale series features a contemporary newspaper reporter with old-school style who covers the courts and crime beat at the fictional Portland Daily Chronicle. Brenda’s short story, “Means, Motive, and Opportunity,” was in the anthology BLOODROOT: BEST NEW ENGLAND CRIME STORIES 2021 and received an honorable mention in BEST AMERICAN MYSTERY AND SUSPENSE 2022. Her story “Assumptions Can Get You Killed” appeared in WOLFSBANE: BEST NEW ENGLAND CRIME STORIES 2023 and “Cape Jewell,” was published in the 2025 edition of the same anthology, SNAKEBERRY.

This spring, Brenda’s short story “Crime of Devotion” will appear in MYSTERY MOST SENIOR, an anthology published in connection with the 2026 Malice Domestic conference.

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WRITING TIP WEDNESDAY

Best writing tip I have ever gotten?

Jule Selbo

Her words still haunt me – and I use them almost every writing day.

Where did the best writing tip I have ever gotten come from?

Back up twenty or so years. When I was working in Los Angeles as a screenwriter. I had a great friend in my book club. I admired her because she seemed to read three books a week, see every studio and independent movie that came out, raise her daughters to have a passion for art and literature, she was tall and blond and had married a short, funny guy – and she loved writing. I admired her because I found her to be warm, smart and a no-bull-shitter.

And she gave me this advice and although she’s moved to Australia and we don’t even correspond anymore – I’ll never forget her.

I was working for the networks and studios as a screenwriter and had been doing projects on assignment (meaning I had a lot of executives with their fingers in the idea/execution of the script I was getting paid to write and I, by contract, had to seriously consider their notes and thus I often felt I was writing to make someone else happy) and I was desperate to find out what was in my head. I wanted to write a story that belonged to me – with “no interference”.

So I gave myself a few months “off” to do that. Basically to write what is called a “spec” screenplay.  One that you are not getting paid to write and that, after its completion, you hope to take into the market as an example of “your own voice”.

Not to say that the screenwriting assignment jobs weren’t fun (for the most part I had a blast) and I was very happy to have them – (pay the mortgage, send the kid to school, put gas in the car and all that) but we writers – the reasons we put pen to paper or fingertips to our computer keys are often deeper than ‘it’s a job’.

Joan Didion if often quoted as saying: “I write to find out what I am thinking.” I looked up her quote and the Huffington Post actually noted that she went on a bit longer: “I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I want, what I fear, what I see and what it means to me.

So I set out to do that. I wrote the spec screenplay (it was a Western that explored personal justice and dreams of early settlers). I had a great time, creating characters with ideas and actions, conflicts and dreams and struggles to find their place in a new America.

After I completed a pretty good first draft (100 pages, screenplay format), I asked my tall, blond, no-bull-shitter friend to read it.  Overall, her response to the script was positive and she had a lot of thumbs-up on the pages. But there were two pivotal scenes that she circled in red pen and wrote in the margins:

“YOU CAN DO BETTER HERE.”

Her note threw me for a loop at first.  I stared at the screenplay pages and remembered how hard I worked to find the right words and actions to make the scenes come to life. And if she thought something needed changing, couldn’t she be more specific? What exactly did she think needed changing? Plot? Character? Action? This comment was way too general!

After I settled down from the irritation, I looked more closely at the scenes.

Hmmm.

And I realized what my friend had given to me was really amazing advice. Because she was telling me that she had confidence in me and that I should have confidence in myself that I could make these two pivotal scenes “better”. That I had the capability, the skills, the determination and discipline to do BETTER.

The first word started to get to me: You.  Not “it”.

And “better” in my own way.  Think about it, it’s your story. Your characters. Your themes.

I’ll never forget those words she wrote in thick red felt pen. So simple. But her confidence fed my confidence and it worked for me.  When I hit a bump and I’m searching for the right word or sentence or plot point and come up with one that is almost okay, I circle it and write next to it in large letters:

Jule – you can do better.

Sometimes it reads:  Hey dingbat, you can do better.

Or: YCDB

Or: Fix later –  ‘cause you can do better.

Or: You lazy sack of doubt, just remember, you can do better.

Maybe not in that exact moment at the computer, maybe not a hour later when frustration or exhaustion or hunger or laziness or aggravation at the world is sitting on my shoulder. But LATER, when I am in a space to be nicer to myself and ENJOY digging deeper into that plot point or sentence or paragraph or idea…

You can do it.

I have the confidence that I can do it.

And when I do go back and work it again,  it usually—at least in my opinion—it does get better.

**

**Joan Didion: Year of Magical Thinking, Play it As It Lays, Notes to John and more: novelist and journalist.

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How I Learned to Stop Pantsing and Get Words on the Page

You could say I’ve been at this game a long time. My first publication credits were in teen magazines in the late 1960s. My first traditionally published book was released in 2014. Since that time, I’ve published two additional books. One traditionally, one independently. Can you understand why, when I sit down to write, my brain screams AMATEUR.

The lack of production isn’t due to a lack of ideas. I have those in abundance. Nor is it because of a lack of skill, or so I’ve been told. That’s a judgment I hesitate to make on my behalf. And there have been lots of short stories, essays, and non-fiction articles over the years. So, you might wonder, what’s the problem? Time was part of it. Until 2020, I held a full-time job that often required twelve-hour days, seven days a week. But hey, this is 2026, and I’ve only published one book in all that time. Ah, therein lies the rub.

In a ‘just the facts, Ma’am’ synopsis, here’s the deal. I’m a SLOOOOOOW writer. Except I’m not. That full-time job I mentioned above was in the legal biz. Part of my role entailed writing pleadings, deeply researched documents intended to persuade a judge or mediator to see things from our client’s point of view, often written on a twenty-four-hour deadline. It was intense, and it had to be fast, detailed, and defensible. Twenty-page documents flowed effortlessly from my fingers in the space of four hours. If my attorney was driving, I often had the outline banged out before we returned from court.

Did you hear that loud screeching sound? In my creative writing life, I’m what’s known as a pantser or discovery writer. In my legal life, I was an outliner, and it made an enormous difference. Given the nature of the work, my outlines were bullet-point highlights, not a hard and fast roadmap. They told the story of what, not the how of achieving our client’s desired result. The how came in the drafting based on documents, case law, and statutes. Dry stuff? No. There’s still a lot of creativity involved. Facts are facts, but the role of the pleading is to make them compelling enough that the conclusion is inevitable. Honestly, it was a lot of fun, but it wasn’t the same as writing a novel.

My idea of writing a novel comprised of throwing my ideas into the air and watching where they landed. Then I’d write from one to the other until the story emerged. That’s a lot of work when you’re writing crime fiction. It’s like managing the reins for a ten-horse team. The writer needs to be in control, but flexible enough to avoid a crash and still arrive at the destination. Then comes the editing. A necessary step in every novel, but an essential one for a discovery writer to move from the first to the second draft.

In the back of my mind, I understood that outlining made my writing life easier. I took several classes about moving from pantser to plotter and read numerous books, too. I learned something from every one of them, but not enough to convert me to the cause. One of my writer friends writes multiple books a year. She credits her outlines for making it possible. Her forty to fifty-page outlines. I tried to emulate her. After all, she had a proven system. The outlining went swimmingly, but the writing, not so much. The story bored me by chapter two. I felt like one of those monkeys writing Shakespeare. I knew too much. Instead of taking the scenic route, I was on the interstate, and nothing much tweaked my interest.

The last book I wrote took two years to write and is currently undergoing edits at the request of a potential publisher. That’s a long time. While the book was on submission, characters from an existing series clamored for new words of their own. Another idea, another plot, another three years. Scary thought. Then my husband bought me a book by K. Stanley and L. Cooke titled Secrets to Outlining a Novel. In his defense, he was tired of hearing me complain. The book reinforced my work-life experience. Outlining matters, but it’s not about the minutiae at this stage. It’s about the main events. The what, not the how. The how comes in the creative process.

I’m still deep in the editing process of one book, but I’m taking baby steps in outlining a new book. So far, it’s going well. If my calculations are correct, I should have the book written and ready for editing by August. Still not fast, but not three years either. I’ll report back.

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