Blog

How To: Focus on a Writing Project

There have been, at different times in my life, three or four or even five different novel ideas competing for attention–all out of focus. In March 2006, I tried to analyze how to deal with this mess. The following is a post I made on my original blog (with some tense changes here and there). …
Read more

Personalize Your Fiction (whether you want to or not)

Personalized fiction. Hmm. I think most authors have heard the adage “write what you know,” but how many really apply that to themselves if they’re not writing a memoir? I decided long ago to just “write what I know,” and if I don’t know something, then it’s time to be educated. Sketches from the Spanish…
Read more

A Novel Outline (not to be confused with a novel outline)

The outline of a novel is a personal thing. When I was in school, I clearly recall being forced to develop outlines for papers, to include Roman numerals and all. Many of you probably did this, as well. You know the drill: I. Introduction II. First Important Thing A. First point of the important thing…
Read more

What is Literary Fiction Really?

When I was wee lad (well, thirty-something), I had this idea I would be the next great horror writer. I did all things horror: wrote short stories, worked on novels, edited a horror magazine, read works by other horror authors, attempted to buy my way into horror conventions, collected horror action figures (they’re not dolls!),…
Read more

A Writer’s Quandary: Should Theme Come First?

Theme. In contemporary literary studies, a theme is the central topic, subject, or concept the author is trying to point out, not to be confused with whatever message, moral, or commentary it may send or be interpreted as sending regarding said concept (i.e., its inferred “thesis”). Blah, blah, blah. When I wrote my first few…
Read more

Creation: How an Art Piece Can Explain a Writing Thing

I wrote a version of this piece back in 2012, when I first began painting. The original idea was not only to chronicle a piece of work, but tie it to a larger theme… that is, creation is often blind to outcome. I didn’t quite get to the second part in my first attempt, so…
Read more

Write, Rinse, Repeat (Or: the Drunk Ex-CIA Agent Finds the Treasure and Saves the World!)

Write, rinse, repeat….Once upon a time I read a Facebook comment on David Morrell’s page which made me think about what I read more than I normally think about what I read. For reference (I save things), the comment was this: “The Tor editor and I discussed a number of situations in thrillers that are looking…
Read more

A Primer on Death Poetry for Writers

I have been looking through various works-in-progress, those novels that–for whatever reason–were abandoned on the side of the road while the mind went looking for a gas station down the street. One of them, Driving the Spike, made me think of two of my favorite reads: Stephen Crane and Japanese Death Poems, as presented in a…
Read more

Pentimento: a Fancy Word for “That’s Better”

In the world of art (and I’m speaking specifically of painting), the word pentimento (derived from the Italian pentirsi, which means to repent or change your mind) is a change made by the artist during the process of painting. As a painter, I’ve done this many times, although the discovering of the change or changes…
Read more

Insert Song Title About “Change”

This is an old blog post, written in 2005 or 2006. I’m only reposting it here because I think the message is clear: it’s possible to change your habits when you’re ready to change your habits. It’s also interesting to see where I was in my writing career at various points in time. I’ve been…
Read more