Category: Books I’m Reading


Favorite Books on the Craft

No one can teach you to write a really fine novel. I take that back. They can teach it, but your novel may still flounder. It’s all in the gestalt of your finished story. It’s up to you to make the artistic choices.

However,  the tools of the novelist are fairly basic. You should master them, and one way is to read (and take classes on) different approaches. Each teacher will come at things like plot and character and subplots a little differently. But they all talk about the same set of tools. That being the case, it’s time to start building your library!

Here are a few of my faves, sort of in order of complexity:

  • How to Tell a Story, Peter Rubie & Gary Provost
  • How to Write a Damn Good Novel, James N. Frey
  • The Writer’s Journey, Christopher Vogler Read More »

Story Structure Demystified

Like most of you, I’ve read a dozen books on writing the novel. Most of them try to tell you how to write something dramatic, memorable, believable, engaging . . . all important qualities. (And ones I’d like my books to have! Thus Kay reads lots of these things.)

Now comes along something a little different: Larry Brooks has written a book on novel structure. Story Structure Demystified. And oh boy, are you in for a ride. Read More »


Great Books and What I Learned From Them

Sure, I read for pleasure. But as a professional writer, I find myself gleaning lessons from great books. If you write, I’m sure you do the same. Just for fun, I thought I’d share with you thirteen of my favorite books (mostly in science/fiction and fantasy) and what I learned from them.

FANTASY

Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell

(Susanna Clarke) Here is a book that totally blew away all the usual writing advice and did something completely–well, strange. Incoherent plot, dense, slow scenes, hard-to-discern story problem. What I learned? That if you do one thing supremely well, you can break all the rules. I think what kept my rapt attention here was her unfailing knack for intriguing situations.

A Game of Thrones

(George R. R. Martin) How fantasy can be merely lit by magic at the edges and still feel like the full monty. Martin does so many things well in this series that it’s hard to pick out just one. His characters come to life (how does he Do it?) and his milieu seems palpably real. The kind of book you’re dying to get back to.

Fortress in the Eye of Time

(C.J. Cherryh) The enduring trope of rags-to-riches and how even a slow-paced story can keep us hoping for the underdog’s success.

The Fox Woman

(Kij Johnson) How to write a sex scene. And how to write a literary fantasy novel. This book just knocked me out.

The Iron Dragon’s Daughter

(Michael Swanwick) How to make world-building wonderful, startling and true. One of my favorite books in the world.

The Horsemistress Saga

(Toby Bishop) How to write a marvelous YA novel with a cross-over adult market.

Thomas the Rhymer

(Ellen Kushner) How to bring the weird into fantasy. Doing the traditional with a unique brush stroke.

The Blade Itself

(Joe Abercrombie) How a bad plot doesn’t matter if you have a characters like he does. How an uninteresting protagonist doesn’t matter if you have Other characters who are beyond wonderful. Like the amazing Glokta.

Science Fiction

Brasyl

(Ian McDonald) Very dense and intellectual, yet this book sizzles because of, in part, his absolutely brilliant dialogue.

Pushing Ice

(Alastair Reynolds) How it’s possible to pull off in a wildly successful manner, a hard science story with deep characterization.

Mainstream

Shogun

(James Clavell) The glorious depths of multi-viewpoint storytelling and why it can be just fine to switch POV within a scene.

The Far Pavilions

(M.M. Kaye) How to write an emotional, epic tale. (Major influence for The Entire and the Rose.)

I’ll stop at thirteen. If you like, I can try this again in a future post. I don’t know about you, but I’m Always looking for “favorite novels.” I don’t have time for weak ones!


Empire of Ivory

I believe I will keep buying these Temeraire books. Each book supplies a satisfying dose of Naomi Novik’s intriguing and even brilliant premise: an alternate history fantasy of dragons helping out in the Napoleonic Wars. But oh, the skittering plot!

Read More »


Characters With Appeal

I have three stories in mind today, mulling over why two of them fail for me, and one succeeds. Bottom line, character appeal.

One of the books is an aspiring writer’s manuscript, the other two were written by well-known authors. On the manuscript, a surprising reaction I had to an otherwise well-written book was that I just flat-out didn’t believe the character. Read More »


The Fire in Fiction

Just finished this outstanding book by Donald Maass on the novel.

The Fire in Fiction is Maass’s clearest enunciation yet of what separates the competent but disappointing novel from those that “effortlessly lift off.” Read More »