On Writing & Publishing by Robin D. Owens

Personal notes on writing techniques, writing a novel, my writing career and threading your way through publishing a book.

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Location: Denver, United States

RITA Award Winning Author -- that's like the Oscar, folks! Futuristic/Fantasy Romance and Fantasy with Romantic Subplots.

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Monday, August 15, 2005

Fantasy -- Reading and Writing 1 - World Building

In my multitudinous spare time over the last couple of weeks, I've been reading fantasy. And I've been bothered. In the last three books, there was something I "didn't get." I'm beginning to think I'm stupid, or that I can't extrapolate. As a matter of fact, I think that I've been tired enough that the author should have been more explicit for me to "get it." Reading fantasy, fantasy romance, futuristic fantasy can be a challenge. You have to know that you might be hit with strange names, concepts and a whole new world up front. You have to be able to accept that, love it, revel in it...and not be too tired. There are several things about my own books I know: first, I jump into HeartMate and the strange society too quickly -- a regret that I'd change now, somehow, if I could. The other heart books, which are supposed to stand alone, have some reviewer's saying, "make sure you read the others." I am now so immersed in the world, I can't see how to make it simpler, unless I find a brand new reader. And when I talk about my books to regular people, I always ask them if they like sf/f, because otherwise, I think that I might lose them.

Now, for my reading. I didn't "get" some of the rules or some of the danger, so I am thinking that, in my case, I would have liked the authors to have slowed the action a little to explain more. For a reader like me, it's more satisfying to have everything make sense than for me to go "huh?" I think one author DID try to explain, but the language they used or the concepts they used were still murky (or phiosophical/deep) that I didn't get what they were saying.

So in looking at my own work, I'll see how I might be able to clarify without losing pace. And you all KNOW I hate loose ends, right?

Love to all,
Robin

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The beginning of Heart Mate is the best of all your books! It gets the attention from the first line; other more timid approach would not have been so much fun. Was original but not gimmicky - trust yourself and give us more of Celta. Thanks

7:01 PM  
Blogger FantasyAuthor RobinDOwens said...

Thanks! I appreciate the comment. It WAS a good first line, and I tried to take it a little slowly, but by page 5-6 (after Zath saunters onto the stage) I start talking about Downwind and GreatHouses...and I know I lost some folks.

Robin

10:11 PM  

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