30Dec/13

Eyes Of The Predator, 4 Stars

I must have pickeEyesofthePredator_GlennTrust-789822d this up as a free read sometime on Amazon, because it isn’t my usual style, but I really enjoyed it. I love Criminal Minds, but never really get into crime novels. I think I liked this so much because being in the mind of a killer fascinates me. Trust did a good job taking you into the mind of the killer here. I’m fairly certain Trust must be from Georgia, but if he doesn’t have a background in police work, then good for him for doing the research that made all of the cop stuff in this seem very real.

It was written quite well, the characters all felt very filled out and real. I had no problem imagining Georgia as Trust described. Some of the descriptions were near poetical and I read them a few times just to enjoy them. There are a lot of characters here, risking the chance of them all blending together, but that didn’t happen here. Each character section was easy to tell apart with their own voice and feeling. I’m always impressed by authors who can weave a few different story arcs into one. Here you could easily see where all the arcs were going to come together, but it was still fun to follow them along.

Overall a great, thrilling read. The only reason I’m giving it four stars is because it was longer than I like, but there really wasn’t anything that I felt could be cut out.

15Dec/13

Reality Boy by AS King, 4 Stars

17332968A second awesome read from King. It always makes me happy to find that the one book I loved wasn’t a fluke.

As with the first book I read by her (Please Ignore Vera Dietz) Reality Boy is full of flawed characters whose humanity practically bursts off the page. Think John Green, but without most of humor. Both books follow the delicate bonds of families when the people in them are all struggling with their own problems.

Reality Boy follows Gerald, former child reality star. While he was only in a few episodes of Network Nanny, he made an impression. The book flashes back and forth between what happened on those episodes and what is going on in Gerald’s life now. Needless to say, things aren’t exactly peachy for him.

At first, Gerald isn’t a very sympathetic character, he has a lot of rage and social problems, but as the book goes along he begins to work through those things and the reader learns more about what went on in his past to make him the way he is. By the end of the book you are cheering him on.

Great evolution of a character, complicated realistic relationships. Highly recommend!

31Oct/13

Lessons From A Forgotten Manuscript

computer_keys_keyboard_282093_hSo I’m editing a book I wrote years ago and it’s a little painful. I mean if you want to see if you’ve grown as a writer, I recommend you pick up an older book you haven’t looked at in a while and see how much it makes you cringe. I still love the story in this book and have faith in it, but geez! I made such obvious mistakes! First thing I had to do when I opened the file was change all of the quotes from straight quotes to curly quotes. The issues were that basic at times!

So here are the top 5 things I’ve gotten better at since I wrote this:

1. Messing up words

I’ve found an embarrassing amount of times where I have ‘you’re’ instead of ‘your’ and ‘to’ instead of ‘too’. Seriously? I really thought I was at least passed this hurtle when I wrote this. I’m going to blame this on the fact that this book hasn’t been near as edited as some of my others. Yeah that’s it. That makes me feel better.

2. Improper punctuation

Now this is one I knew I would find. I remember learning more about how you punctuate at the end of a quote so I’m not surprised that this book has it wrong, but it seems so obvious and is such second nature to me now that it’s painful to have to correct it over and over again.

3. Useless ‘she said’ moments

Almost every single time one of my characters speaks it’s followed by ‘he said’ or ‘she said’. I see how stilted it sounds now and am cutting many of them out.

4. Too much detail

This book has far too many moments of “Alyssa walked upstairs and turned on the hallway light before heading to her bedroom where she walked to her dresser. There she opened the top drawer and dug through until she found a pair of pajamas. Then she went to the bathroom and changed before brushing her teeth and washing her face. After that she walked back to her room and climbed into bed.’ Wow? Really? What was I thinking? No one cares about all that. That is easily cut to ‘After getting changing into pajamas, Alyssa climbed into bed and reached for her book.’ Much better.

5. The words I overuse

I’ve become aware of these words over the years and can catch them as I’m writing sometimes. I still end up finding them when I edit, but not as much as in this book. My personal list of overused words includes: a bit, just, wide, only, it’s (when it should be its), was, enough, and way more I can’t think of right now. My characters also sigh and smile like it’s their job. They smile widely a lot. Way too much.

Overall, I still love this story and there are parts that I read and I’m shocked at how wonderfully I worded something. That makes all the stupid little mistakes worthwhile. I don’t know if I’ll ever do anything with this book, but it deserves to be cleaned up just in case.

Have you ever picked up something you wrote a while ago? Has your writing changed a lot?

20Sep/13

Coming Soon: Prime

Prime2 copyI’m finally getting around to releasing my novel Prime. It was the winner of the 2010 Textnovel.com novel contest, but it’s just been sitting on my hard drive since then. I’ve spruced it up a bit and designed what I think is an awesome cover for it. Here’s the blurb:

Thirteen-year-old Simon doesn’t remember his older sister, Alice, but she remembers him even if she doesn’t know he is alive. When the Prime virus hit, they had already been separated. Simon stayed at home on Haven Medical Base with their neglectful and verbally abusive father while Alice was away working a political internship out of town. Now they both face a world where the few survivors hide inside buildings and behind tall walls as the victims of the virus, known as hostiles, stalk the night hungry for the flesh of the living. Within their seemingly safe walls, the survivors must contend with the best and worst of human nature.

Sound good? Want to win a free copy? Check out the giveaway below!

 

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