Showing posts with label Spark of Magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spark of Magic. Show all posts

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Writing Memorable Characters

Diane Craver, author of Whitney in Charge, who's joining us today, has agreed to share her insights on writing characters. She obviously has had a lot of experience with that because she's a multi-published author. Here's a bit about her latest release:

TV producer Whitney Benson is tired of her older sisters’ attempts to fix her up with every single male they meet. Shannon and Regan cross the line when they arrange for her to go skydiving with the simple excuse that more guys like to float in the air than women.

Whitney meets two eligible bachelors, Jack and Ben, who constantly battle for her affection. Which one will she choose? Both men make Whitney realize, even a heart shattered by her husband’s death, can once again be made whole.

But did she have to fall off a cliff to learn that?

Intriguing, right? So let's take a sneak peek at two of Diane's characters:

When the fireworks went off to celebrate a Reds homerun above the Ohio River, the crowd roared and clapped. Whitney let herself be caught up in the enthusiasm, jumping up from her seat to clap and whoop, cupping her palms around her mouth. She sat down, laughing, enjoying herself more than she had in a long time. When Jack had invited Whitney to go to a baseball game on Wednesday, she’d hesitated even though she loved going to the stadium. They’d just gone out Saturday night. She wanted to take things slow and easy. But, in the end, she’d said yes.

And she was so glad she did.

Who was she kidding? She wanted to wrap her arms around him and kiss him until neither one of them could think or breathe. But she couldn’t smother his lips with hers during a baseball game. She took a quick glance at Jack. Regan was right – he did look a lot like Matthew McConaughey. She wondered if McConaughey also loved baseball.

Jack tugged on her visor. “Hey, you look pretty cute in this cap.”

She took a bite of her nachos and cheese. “I like the eating part a lot at games.”

Jack glanced at the boy sitting a couple rows in front of them munching on a box of popcorn. The delicious aroma of popcorn and butter drifted up to them. “I might have to buy popcorn, too.”

“Please help me eat the nachos first.”

He dipped a chip in the cheese, popping it in his mouth. He smacked his fingertips between his lips, licking off the melted cheese and salt. “I wish you hadn’t paid for the beer.”

“You bought the tickets. I wanted to pay for something.” She licked warm cheese off her finger. “So did you rescue any cliff climbers today?”

“Nope. I only rescue beautiful women on Mondays.”

“I’ll have to remember that. Since the pool’s open now and if it’s not too cold, we can go swimming after the game.” Why did she blurt that invitation out to him? Could she handle him if he got too intimate? She hated taking a step forward, then a step back again, but she was just confused about what she wanted from Jack.

“I’ll have to go home to get my trunks first.”

“I have several suits in different sizes.”

Jack smiled at her. “Do you collect trunks from your guests?”

She laughed. “No. Unless my mom did. People used to drop in a lot, and she’d invite them to go swimming with us. They didn’t have their suits. Mom bought a few girls’ suits and women’s and men’s in different sizes.”

“Bases are loaded. Bring them home.” Jack patted her knee. “Isn’t this fun? I love the Reds.”

“You’re right. This is fun. I’m glad you─”

“Hey, the kissing cam’s on us.” Jack wrapped his arm around her shoulder and pulled her close, covering her mouth with his.

She’d forgotten how they had a kissing camera to zero in on couples and when it happened, the pair usually waved or kissed each other.

She enjoyed kissing Jack back and hated it when he stopped. “You didn’t need to stop because the camera’s no longer on us.”

“I don’t want to spoil you.”

It occurred to her why he wanted her to switch T-shirts before the game. “You gave me a Reds’ t-shirt to wear to increase our chances of getting on the kissing cam.”

He shrugged. “Ben already got you on TV when you fell. I had to get you on TV again. I didn’t want you to think I’m a slacker here. And I managed it without you falling out of your seat.”

“We can’t have you being a slacker.” She glanced down at her red shirt. “Do I get to keep this shirt?”

“Only if you get me a baseball cap like yours?”

“This one was my dad’s, but it’s a deal.”


So let's find out some of her secrets about how to write characters:

One of the hardest things to do in writing is to create characters that readers will care about, and will want to read on. You can have a well-written novel but if the editors, agents or readers don’t care that much about your characters, you won’t get very far.

A Memorable Character should have the following attributes:

1. A strong, independent personality.
2. Believable motivation.
3. Consistent behavior.
4. Imagination.
5. Courage to take the initiative.
6. A bigger-than-life image.
7. Human traits - good and bad.

The above traits will develop over the character’s life. In other words, a character usually doesn’t begin her or his novel life having all 7 attributes.

Each writer has their own system in creating their characters. I jot down as much information about each main character as possible - eye color, hair color, and write down a goal for each one. Some authors are more detailed in their approach and use a chart method, filling in vital information. Mine is more a narrative approach. You need to know your characters very well so that you can make them real to the readers.

Character description shouldn’t stop the action. The writer needs to convey description without stopping the flow. I try not to convey description by saying the character stopped and looked in the mirror at his or her appearance. Boring!

A pet peeve of mine is when a writer tries too hard to be different in naming their characters. If the names are hard to remember or I can’t pronounce them, I will become annoyed. But you don’t want to use Mary Doe or John Smith either. Poor usage of character names may signal an amateur writer. Switching between first and last names makes it hard for a reader to learn a new character. For example, referring to a character as “Mary Doe” in the first sentence, then “Mrs. Doe” in the second, then “Mary” in the third will confuse the reader, especially if there are many characters in the scene.

There are drives, strong feelings, and motivations that are common to all of us. We all need to be loved, to get recognition, and to know who we are. When any one of these basic drives is blocked, there is conflict. When you have conflict, whether it is physical, psychological, or spiritual, you have one of the fundamental elements of all fiction. Conflict is what drives fiction. Without conflict, there is no action or reaction.

I love to research occupations for my characters because it’s fun to write about jobs I have never had. Although I was a teacher before starting our family, Mallory is the only teacher I have for a main character. I’ve used teaching careers for secondary characters. I’ve gone to the library to get books on occupations used for characters, but I also have used the internet for a lot of my background information. I did buy a used book from Amazon on broadcasting for my Whitney in Charge book. I enjoyed reading how a TV program is produced.

It’s not good to launch into the story without stopping to establish any of the characters. In many “high concept” novels, a heated scene occurs immediately without the readers knowing anything about the characters. Readers have to know something about the characters to care what happens to them before the exciting scene happens. The characters are the plot - their needs, wishes, developments. Their introduction and establishment should be the most important. Introducing too many characters in the beginning pages will confuse the reader.

I pay close attention to those around me in my daily life. I remember any interesting or unusual traits or habits that I can use for my characters. Observation is important for a writer. Also what might be interesting to me may not be to someone else. I consider what makes a character intriguing to others. I try to avoid cliché traits and to create unique characters.

While reading or writing, what kind of characters do you enjoy the most?

Readers, answer Diane's question or just leave a comment about her book or this blog and you'll be in the running for a free copy of the book. And a bonus: All this week, I'm picking one commenter to win an e-copy of my book, Spark of Magic. Will YOU be one of the lucky winners? Leave a comment and see...

Thursday, May 7, 2009

ONLY 99 CENTS!

Check out The Wild Rose Press store for bargain books. Rosettes are on sale for only 99 cents. Pick up a copy of Spark of Magic and follow the instructions to be entered in the drawing for a free Sony e-reader.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

And the winner is...

Martha E.

I promised to draw another name on April 30 for A Tisket, A Tasket. And the lucky recipient of an e-copy of Spark of Magic is the lovely and, I am sure, talented Martha E.

Martha, if you email me at with your email address, I'll send you Spark of Magic. Congratulations! Thanks for participating, and good luck getting DH & DS to pick up after themselves.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

And the Winner Is...

JUDY! Congratulations, Judy. You win your choice of hand-molded soaps or an e-copy of Spark of Magic. You can email me at lily.stone1@gmail.com, and let me know which you prefer. Sorry for the late announcement... I've been traveling for the holidays. Happy searching for the eggs.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Three-Second Tip for a Clutter-Free House

Hate to Houseclean? Me too! I’d rather spend my time writing. Because we’re following a spring theme for these posts, I thought I’d share one of my secrets for keeping clutter to a minimum and reducing the amount of time I need to spend cleaning.

THE SECRET OF THREE

The hardest part of cleaning usually isn’t the vacuuming or dusting, it’s fighting your way through the mountains of clutter that accumulate during the week(s) (or months?) between cleaning bouts. I can sympathize. With five children, a full time job, and many hobbies and activities; I never had enough hours in the day. Housecleaning came lowest on my list of priorities. But, people were always amazed when they dropped by my house unexpectedly.
If I heard it once, I heard it a hundred times: How do you manage to keep your house so clean with this many children? In the midst of our chaotic schedule, our house almost always looked neat (even if dust bunnies resided under the furniture and the carpet hadn’t been vacuumed recently), because of my SECRET OF THREE.

I started training our children to clean as soon as they could walk. Even toddlers aren’t too young to learn. Make it a game, and they’ll soon be doing their share to minimize clutter. And our kids reminded each other. If someone walked out of a room without following the rule, a sibling would ask, “Where are your 3?”

Here’s the simple rule: 3 items in 3 seconds

Never leave a room without grabbing 3 things to put away. Every room you walk through, pick up 3 things and return them to where they belong. It’s amazing how fast your rooms get clean by making that a habit. It only takes 3 seconds of your time. Challenge yourself to try it.

Here’s a typical day. I get up. 1) Pick up the pillow that fell on the floor & pop it on the bed. Toss 2 dirty socks in the hamper as I head to the bathroom. 2) Bathroom: Put cap back on toothpaste & put it away. Pick up dirty tissue someone left behind & toss it in trash. Throw towel on floor in hamper. 3) Kitchen—breakfast bowl into dishwasher; toss banana peel and used tea bag into trash 4) Into mud room to let out dog—pick up pair of boots & an umbrella left out to dry last night, stick them in closet; 5) Back to bedroom to dress—hang up yesterday’s outfit (2 pieces) and as I leave room, grab youngest daughter’s teddy bear to return to her room 6) Daughter’s bedroom—throw three toys into bin before leaving room; 7) Into bathroom to turn off water someone left running—put away shampoo bottle, teen’s acne cream & hairbrush 8) Pass through living room on way to car—stick 3 bills into secretary desk in corner of room. Youngest son is with me—he grabs 3 pieces of junk mail to put in shredder (his favorite job—but we have to make sure he only shreds stuff we want shredded). Middle daughter takes stack of library books to car.

How long did it take me to do all that? 3 seconds per room at most. And although I picked up some of the kids’ stuff, they also picked up some of mine. Teen daughter came in to use our mirror while her brother was in shower. She hung my bathrobe on its hook, put away the wrinkle cream I’d left on my dresser, and took her hairbrush with her when she left. Younger daughter had dropped her teddy bear in our room when she came in to snuggle in our bed early in the morning, but she put away the sneakers her dad left out after his morning run and returned her brother’s matchbox car when she passed his room.

It may be a simple habit, but it’s one that’ll pay great benefits. Try it for a week. I guarantee you’ll be hooked. Keep up the practice, and it won’t be long until your house is a clutter-free zone.

3 items in 3 seconds = 3 times less clutter

[And here’s a bonus tip: If you can’t find anything to put away in a room, do a quick 3-second chore—make a bed, swish the brush around inside the toilet, swipe a sponge across the kitchen counter, run a feather duster across a dresser. Come cleaning day, you’ll have trouble finding much to clean.]

Have a quick and simple spring cleaning tip to share? Leave a comment with a cleaning suggestion (or even your reaction to this post) to have your name entered in drawing. The winner has the choice of handmade molded soaps or a free copy of Spark of Magic. One SECRET OF THREE commenter will be chosen tomorrow and one on the last day of April, so check back both times to see who that lucky person is. If you have more than one tip, or you’d like to respond to additional posts, that’s fine too. Each comment will get you an entry in the drawing.

To hunt for those hidden eggs (hope you checked around my site for one), be sure to check out Teri Wilson’s site tomorrow at http://www.freewebs.com/teriwilson/terisblog.htm.

And when you’ve found all the hidden eggs, remember to sign onto Skhye Moncrief's blog at http://blog.skhyemoncrief.com for the winner of the huge grand prize drawing. Who knows? Maybe you’ll win both! Contest details are posted below.

And if you’d like a chance to win a Sony e-reader, check out the details about Spark of Magic below “A Tisket, A Tasket.”

A TISKET A TISKET, PUT ROMANCE IN YOUR BASKET Grand Prize:
To enter to win prizes from the authors donating treasures to the grand prize (see each day's post for what an author is donating to the grand prize), find the four Easter eggs in the A TISKET A TISKET, PUT ROMANCE IN YOUR BASKET blog event.



You will be searching for an egg like this one. Just visit all of the authors' websites, locate the 4 eggs, make a list of their locations by pasting the urls to the website pages in an e-mail, then send the entry to happyendings2007@aol.com by midnight CST on May 1st, 2009. The winner will be randomly drawn and announced May 2nd at http://blog.skhyemoncrief.com. Tip #1, subscribe to http://blog.skhyemoncrief.com to learn if you're the winner! And don't worry. If you start on the blog event late, just head back to Silver James' blog on or after April 1st at http://www.silverjames.com/ to begin your website search for the Easter eggs. Don't miss the fun! See you next to the burgundy tulips.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Win a Sony eReader !

Buy Spark of Magic for only $1.50, and your name will be entered the drawing for the giveaway. The link for the contest is below. In addition to my book, there are many other wonderful novels/stories to choose from--the list of authors is posted at the site. Buy more than one. Each time you enter, you get another chance to win.


You can find it here:
http://www.thewildrosepress.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=804

As the reviewers say, it's short & sweet. A quick read. And at a price that won't break the bank.





ENJOY!!



Wednesday, March 11, 2009

A TISKET A TISKET, PUT ROMANCE IN YOUR BASKET

Spring is in the air! Bees are buzzing. Children eagerly await the big morning where they can graze on candy all day. What about mom? We have a treat for you! Come join a group of romance authors in celebration of spring. Enter to win a prize a day as well as enter to win the grand prize. All you need do is begin at Silver James' blog on April 1st at http://www.silverjames.com/. Silver will host the day's contest and provide the link to the next day's location. Don't forget to enter to win the grand prize! Here's the dirt...

A TISKET A TISKET, PUT ROMANCE IN YOUR BASKET Grand Prize:
To enter to win prizes from the authors donating treasures to the grand prize (see each day's post for what an author is donating to the grand prize), find the four Easter eggs in the A TISKET A TISKET, PUT ROMANCE IN YOUR BASKET blog event.

You will be searching for an egg like the one above (see April 9). Just visit all of the authors' websites, locate the 4 eggs, make a list of their locations by pasting the urls to the website pages in an e-mail, then send the entry to happyendings2007@aol.com by midnight CST on May 1st, 2009. The winner will be randomly drawn and announced May 2nd at http://blog.skhyemoncrief.com. Tip #1, subscribe to http://blog.skhyemoncrief.com to learn if you're the winner! And don't worry. If you start on the blog event late, just head back to Silver James' blog on or after April 1st at http://www.silverjames.com/ to begin your website search for the Easter eggs. Don't miss the fun! See you next to the burgundy tulips.

Don't worry! I'll post more closer to the date of the hunt. But I'll also be drawing a name from those who post comments my blog for a free copy of Spark of Magic or handmade molded soaps, so you'll have three chances to win. Happy hunting!!

Monday, November 3, 2008

Knitting Together Plots

Today I'm guest blogging at Anna Kathyrn's blog. Stop by and learn how I plot my books at:

http://annakathrynlanier.blogspot.com/2008/11/knitting-plot-together.html



There's also an interview with me:

http://annakathrynlanier.blogspot.com/2008/11/meet-lily-stone.html


And if you post a comment, you have a chance to win a copy of Spark of Magic. I'll be drawing a name at 11 pm tonight, so be sure to stop by for a chance to win.

Friday, August 22, 2008

LAST WEEK TO WIN!

Only one more week to go in the Wild Rose Press eReader contest. If you buy Spark of Magic for only $1.50, your name will be entered the drawing for the giveaway on Sept. 2. Deadline is the end of the month. The link for the contest is in the post below. In addition to my book, there are many other wonderful novels/stories to choose from--the list of authors is posted at the site. Buy more than one. Each time you enter, you'll get another chance to win.

I've spent this past week taking a terrific writing course--Write 50 Books a Year! This class taught by multi-published romance authors Elle James and Delilah Devlin offered lots of insight into ways to schedule writing into your day no matter how busy you are.

When I used their idea of counting the number of words you need to write to finish a book and divide it by the number of days until the due date (either the publisher's deadline or your own imposed deadline), I was shocked. I'd been psyching myself out, picturing the 60,000 words I needed to write. If I want to finish it in 2 months, all I have to do is write 1000 words a day. Why was I so scared? Because 60,000 sounded too hard. So I kept procrastinating.

That may sound like a simple tip, but it was eye-opening for me. And has helped jumpstart my writing. I won't give away all their secrets--if you want to find them out, take the workshop next time it's offered. Check it out along with the other workshops they offer at Rose Colored Glasses: http://www.rosescoloredglasses.com/.

Just heard that I made it into an October workshop with a Newbery-award-winning author. More about that later....

Thursday, June 5, 2008

New Review & Free E-Reader


Romance Reviews Today has given SPARK OF MAGIC a 4 Rating. Reviewer Marilyn Heyman says, "A very cute short story, humorous and sexy, and a fun read. All romance readers will enjoy this one."

And in even more exciting news, Wild Rose Press is getting ready to roll out a new contest for readers. Every few months a groups of authors will be featured. Buy one of their books and your name will be entered in drawing for: A SONY E-READER!

So if the reviews have enticed you to read Spark of Magic, you're in luck. Lily Stone is one of the featured authors for the first contest. Check out my book for a chance to win.

Watch the blog for details about contest starting date.


Wednesday, May 7, 2008

SPARK OF MAGIC is out! I'm officially a published author with The Wild Rose Press.

So now that I've done it...What's next? Hollywood? The big time?

My husband's already dreaming big--he hopes my royalty checks will cover the 20 cents a day I spend on electricity when I write on my computer. I say, Dream on...

You can find it here:
http://www.thewildrosepress.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=804

As the reviewers say, it's short & sweet. A quick read. And at a price that won't break the bank.

ENJOY!!



Saturday, May 3, 2008

Coming Soon!! Spark of Magic




Only a few more days and my first romance SPARK OF MAGIC will be released by The Wild Rose Press. Pre-pub reviews are coming in:

"This is a really cute and funny, short but sweet story!" ~Manic Readers 4.5 Stars


"...a fun read. With a hottie like Marc you don't have to be a cat for a man like that to make you purr." ~Simply Romance Reviews


And here are a few comments from authors who have read it:


"I love this story!" ~Mallary Mitchell, author of The Widow’s Ransom and Cissy, Cain and Abel

"Wow, you’ve done it again. Your creativity and imagination are something to behold." ~Don Helin, author of Thy Kingdom Come


"Around 5 am this morning I realized I was in the twilight zone of your story. It really stayed with me. That’s the sign of a great tale!" ~Bonnie Doerr, author of Kenzie’s Key


If you like cats, hot heroes, and magic, look for it on 5/7/2008 at http://www.thewildrosepress.com/


While you're waiting, you may want to check out this read if you like humor: The Subject of Polka Dots by Giulietta Jones. Also from The Wild Rose Press. Guaranteed fun!!