by Jason Joyner | Apr 16, 2009 | Blog, blogging, giveaway, reading, reviews
OK gang, the next week should see a flurry of posts. This weekend is the blog tour for BoneMan’s Daughters, the latest book from Ted Dekker. On Friday, 4/17 I’ll start my giveaway, and I’ve got 3 of this book available for the lucky winners.
April 20 starts the next CSFF tour, so we’ll have some special features then, if this blog doesn’t get pirated…
The end of next week will require more “boning” up, as I’ll bring you a blog tour for new author Don Hoesel’s first book, Elisha’s Bones.
Sheesh, what’s up with all the bones?
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by Jason Joyner | Mar 25, 2009 | Blog, Don Hoesel, Elisha's Bones, reading, writing craft
Yesterday I started talking about the book I’m currently reading, Elisha’s Bones. There were two comments from yesterday.
Robert- There is plenty of suspense and the reader is left hanging at the end of chapters a lot, but that wasn’t what I was looking for.
Mark- Ding, ding, we have a winner!
We get so used to patterns and techniques that we may not always notice a difference. It took me a few pages to realize why I was a little unsettled by Elisha – it was written in the present tense.
Think about it. Most fiction writing is done in the past tense. Other tenses come into play with conversations or other situations, but it is rare to see a book in a first person point of view (POV to all the writers out there) moving along in present tense. First person POV gives more intimacy to that character’s thoughts, but I’m finding in Elisha that using the present tense gives even more immediate reaction. The past tense gives the impression that the character is relating something that’s already happened back to the reader. Present tense puts the action right now, and offers up opportunity for surprises (like when the main character gets whapped in the nose).
I mentioned yesterday that we are creatures of habit. It took a few chapters to fully get comfortable reading this book. Sometimes I think it creates some awkward sentence structure, or isn’t fully true to how life works. When the POV character gets hit in the nose, he has a couple of thoughts before the impact. I don’t think we’d really be cognizant of all that was happening before such an impact.
Overall, I’m really enjoying this book. The different tense is comfortable now, and the writer is doing a good job of using it to his advantage. It was hard yesterday to write my one paragraph in present tense, so I can’t imagine writing a whole book that way!
For another example of risk-taking in Christian fiction, I can also recommend Travis Thrasher’s novel Blinded. It doesn’t involve tense, but POV. He writes it totally in second person POV (“You saw the beautiful blonde approach the table. You manage to not lose the contents of your drink as your hand shakes.”) This is generally considered a huge no-no, but according to novelist Brandilyn Collins, he pulls it off. I haven’t read it yet, but it is on my list of “when I get caught up enough I’m going to get it” books.
It’s great to see different tactics that pay off. I hope people don’t stumble over different techniques, because so far Elisha is a winner. I’ll have more on it in the blog tour for it in April.
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by Jason Joyner | Mar 25, 2009 | Blog, Don Hoesel, Elisha's Bones, reading, writing craft
Yesterday I started talking about the book I’m currently reading, Elisha’s Bones. There were two comments from yesterday.
Robert- There is plenty of suspense and the reader is left hanging at the end of chapters a lot, but that wasn’t what I was looking for.
Mark- Ding, ding, we have a winner!
We get so used to patterns and techniques that we may not always notice a difference. It took me a few pages to realize why I was a little unsettled by Elisha – it was written in the present tense.
Think about it. Most fiction writing is done in the past tense. Other tenses come into play with conversations or other situations, but it is rare to see a book in a first person point of view (POV to all the writers out there) moving along in present tense. First person POV gives more intimacy to that character’s thoughts, but I’m finding in Elisha that using the present tense gives even more immediate reaction. The past tense gives the impression that the character is relating something that’s already happened back to the reader. Present tense puts the action right now, and offers up opportunity for surprises (like when the main character gets whapped in the nose).
I mentioned yesterday that we are creatures of habit. It took a few chapters to fully get comfortable reading this book. Sometimes I think it creates some awkward sentence structure, or isn’t fully true to how life works. When the POV character gets hit in the nose, he has a couple of thoughts before the impact. I don’t think we’d really be cognizant of all that was happening before such an impact.
Overall, I’m really enjoying this book. The different tense is comfortable now, and the writer is doing a good job of using it to his advantage. It was hard yesterday to write my one paragraph in present tense, so I can’t imagine writing a whole book that way!
For another example of risk-taking in Christian fiction, I can also recommend Travis Thrasher’s novel Blinded. It doesn’t involve tense, but POV. He writes it totally in second person POV (“You saw the beautiful blonde approach the table. You manage to not lose the contents of your drink as your hand shakes.”) This is generally considered a huge no-no, but according to novelist Brandilyn Collins, he pulls it off. I haven’t read it yet, but it is on my list of “when I get caught up enough I’m going to get it” books.
It’s great to see different tactics that pay off. I hope people don’t stumble over different techniques, because so far Elisha is a winner. I’ll have more on it in the blog tour for it in April.
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by Jason Joyner | Mar 24, 2009 | Blog, Don Hoesel, Elisha's Bones, reading, writing craft
We are creatures of habit.
This comes as no surprise. We like what we like, and we’re not always willing to be flexible or try something different (eating something green won’t kill you Mark!). Sometimes it is subtle.
I started reading a book for an upcoming blog tour, Elisha’s Bones by Don Hoesel. I was drawn in by the archeological mystery a la Indiana Jones, but there was something disconcerting, but I couldn’t put my finger on it initially.
I read further. The bumpy bus ride jars my hand, but the shaking book isn’t confusing me. There is something in the way the book is written. My seat partner snorts and turns the other way, allowing me to dive back into the intriguing story.
I’ve just left a clue on what was different about this book. I was going to write a post just explaining it, but I think it will be interesting to see if someone can figure out the difference by what I just wrote. Check back tomorrow for the answer…
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by Jason Joyner | Mar 24, 2009 | Blog, Don Hoesel, Elisha's Bones, reading, writing craft
We are creatures of habit.
This comes as no surprise. We like what we like, and we’re not always willing to be flexible or try something different (eating something green won’t kill you Mark!). Sometimes it is subtle.
I started reading a book for an upcoming blog tour, Elisha’s Bones by Don Hoesel. I was drawn in by the archeological mystery a la Indiana Jones, but there was something disconcerting, but I couldn’t put my finger on it initially.
I read further. The bumpy bus ride jars my hand, but the shaking book isn’t confusing me. There is something in the way the book is written. My seat partner snorts and turns the other way, allowing me to dive back into the intriguing story.
I’ve just left a clue on what was different about this book. I was going to write a post just explaining it, but I think it will be interesting to see if someone can figure out the difference by what I just wrote. Check back tomorrow for the answer…
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by Jason Joyner | Feb 23, 2009 | Blog, fiction, links, reading
All you writer/literary types need to check out this link:
The 100 Funniest Words in English
This will make for some excellent fiction in the next few years, I predict!
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