Ready to “Run For It?” Book Three is Out!

After a lot of hard work, an actual editor’s polishing, and a professional cover design, Book Three of The Bucks County series is here!  This is Joni and Graham’s story.  Even if you haven’t read the first two books of the series, you will recognize Graham from the prequel short stories: Lips Like Sugar and Dear Mr. Fantasy that appeared in Sunday’s Song Lyric in the last couple months. Run For It is available in print and e-book on Amazon.  You can find it here.  I hope you all will enjoy:

image

Joni Cooper is in the best shape of her life. In fact, she’s training for the Boston Marathon. So why does she feel like the last kid picked for the team? Mostly because her two best friends have fallen in love with a pair of handsome brothers. It looks like she’s stuck with the third and final brother, Graham, as an escort for both weddings. Even though Graham is gorgeous and successful, he’s also irritating as sin. Will the two of them manage to call a truce until the two couples are married? Or will the sparks these two generate erupt into a five alarm fire?

Internal Chatter: I’m not crazy, I’m a writer.

Picture this:  you’re at a party, standing with a group of your friends and a lively conversation is flowing around you.  You’re staring off into the middle distance and you smile to yourself.  The talk turns serious as your friends begin to discuss the war in Syria, the refugee crisis and the ongoing political turmoil.  They look at you in horror as you burst into laughter.

“What the hell is wrong with you?” one of them asks.  “You think this is funny?”

“Er… sorry, what?”  you ask, bewildered.

enhanced-4595-1396268585-13.jpg
The Big Bang Theory, CBS Television

Welcome to the life of a writer.  In your world, characters talk to you and to each other.  It often keeps you awake at night.  It makes your mind wander in the middle of a family gathering, a business meeting or during a class.  Your family, friends, coworkers and teachers are not amused.

The thing is, that internal chatter is essential to good writing.  “Hearing” the voices talking, listening to an invisible narrator spin a tale, visualizing the scene, debating the sides of an issue during conflict;  that is writing, writing without committing the words to paper.  Let me digress for a minute, then we’ll get back to the writing bit.

Any of these sound familiar?

  • You talk out loud to yourself.
  • You ask and answer your own questions.
  • You will be having a conversation inside your own head, then continue it out loud to whomever is with you, totally confusing them.
  • When you are concentrating on something, the house could burn down around you and you wouldn’t notice.
  • You LIKE being alone, not that you don’t ever want company, but you relish your quiet time without distractions (this is also an introvert characteristic*)
  • You are rarely bored.

Not everyone with these … um … qualities is going to become a writer, obviously.  Nevertheless, possessing these ‘quirks’ has helped me muddle along this writing path.  And yet, I find I’ve become a worse companion!

It’s sometimes annoying a challenge to live with a writer.  Your spouse or partner can feel a little cheated when you’re not paying attention to them.  (Take notice the next time you read an author’s bio or their blog ‘about’ page.  A spouse/partner is so often described as ‘long suffering’, it’s almost cliche.)  It can be weird when you talk about your characters as if they were real people.  We went to the Philadelphia Auto Show last year and I kept pointing out the different cars my characters drive. Eventually, I found myself abandoned amidst the Porsches.  And yet, *sigh* I find myself doing things like that all the time.  “Hey, that’s where Tommy’s Law Office is.”  “Doesn’t that look like the kind of house Leo would buy to fix up?”  “I bet Graham’s band would play at this bar!” 

On second thought, that does sound kinda crazy …

Anyway, the point is, if you are not having internal conversations with your characters, chances are they will be boring and one dimensional.  They have to have vivid personalities (that’s not to say they all have to be outrageous, just memorable.)  You have to know them intimately, their strengths, their weaknesses, their passions and their faults. Write short biographies on each of them.  Create a character database in a computer file or assemble it on index cards.  Even if you don’t address these traits within your narrative, their backgrounds and peculiarities will influence the way they act/react in your story.  And THAT makes for good writing!

So writers, what do you talk to your characters about?  

*Many people think introversion is a disorder like social phobia.  However, this couldn’t be further from the truth.  I asked my friend Josh Gross, who studies psychology, to explain the difference.  These are his comments:

The way I’ve heard introversion/extroversion described by hard-core Jungian personality theorists is that it all comes down to where we get our energy. Extroverts get most of their energy from outside themselves; be they ideas or other people. This means they need to spend time with other people to be at their best. They may also need some time alone, but they feel the negative effects of isolation faster than introverts.

On the other hand, introverts derive most of their energy from inside themselves. They may have excellent social skills and enjoy the company of others, but being intensely social wears them out faster than extroverts. Sooner or later they need to take some time by themselves to recenter and recharge.

So introversion and social phobia are quite different. Social phobia involves a fear of social situations that is so pronounced that it interferes with one’s ability to function. Introversion simply refers to the need to spend time alone in order to be at one’s best. Introverts can be surprisingly social, as long as they are able to take breaks when they need to. They also are not immune to the damaging effects of loneliness.

Thanks Josh!