Regan's Books

Regan's Books
Reads From Regan Taylor

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Allison Knight - Meet my friend and fellow author!

WHAT I’VE LEARNED TRYING TO WRITE A SERIES!

When I finished polishing my first Medieval Romance, Heartsong, I realized I didn’t want to let the characters go. I fell in love! In fact two of the brothers of the heroine intrigued me. I knew I had to write a story for them as well. So, what about a series? I remember long ago, reading a series by Catherine Coulter, and Joanna Lindsey has been writing the Marlow family for years. More recently, Christina Dodd wrote the Princess series. There are many other authors who have kept their characters alive. I decided to give it a try.

And the first thing I learned, was, thank the lord, I’d taken the time to write detailed character interviews for all the main characters of Heartsong. Without them I would have had to spent hours, rereading the book and making notes. Of course, even a lot of the research, clothing, foods, living conditions, even the size of the keep and the rooms in one, had already been researched and I had notes on all of that.

However, here I found I was paging through all my notes looking for little details, the kind that bring a story to life. There had to be a better way! I thought about some of the records I kept for writing and decided – perhaps a spread sheet would work. With my first novel, years ago, I drew my characters out on butcher paper, and that made for easy reference. Why not do the same with a spread sheet?

So, I retrieved my pad of accounting paper, the twelve column kind, and begin to consider what information I needed. After all, the heroine of the new story would be visited by the heroine of the first story. She’d describe what she saw and what she thought of the other woman. The same for others who would also grace the pages of the second book.

Names became a problem as well. You don’t want the heroine of the first book to have a very similar name to a maid or servant in the second book, so I needed names. I also found that I really wished I’d kept a word or two description of each major scene in the first book. I’m doing that now with the second book. Writing the third book will be much easier. I’ve learned a valuable lesson trying to write this series. Keep track of important scenes, who, what, where and why, and descriptions. Recording them on a computer spread sheet makes review much easier.

Without my written record for that first book, I’d be spending hours rereading and recording. I don’t have to do that now. I’ve also learned recording plot devices work well if a series is in mind. Doing it after the fact means a lot more work.

So the third book should not present some of the problems the second book has presented. The second book is nearly complete. Battlesong will soon be finished and with luck my editor will like it and agree to a third. We can hope. But no matter the outcome, I’ve come away with some valuable lessons – that work for me. Some of what I learned might help you too, if you’re considering a series.

7 comments:

  1. I SO hear you about writing series.
    Flawless, the sequel to Invisible is out in February, and it was difficult keeping the characters consistent, especially since my new hero is...well... not a good man.

    I wish I had been more organized.

    Can't WAIT for Battlesong! It is going to ROCK!

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  2. Thank you Regan for sharing your blog with Allison, and Allison we certainly appreciate your sharing how to orgainize information for a series. This is one of those articles that will be printed out and saved for future reference. In reading some of your work, it is like stepping through time, you bring the reader right to the heart of the historical world, especially the dialogue. Also, we agree it it difficult to let the characters go, and not just for the writer but for readers as well. We think they respond well to series, and we are looking forward to your next release.

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  3. I love series. Thus, that is what I write, and although the methodology may differ, the result is the same; a long and satisying relationship with characters we've come to know and appreciate.

    Great Post

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  4. Thanks for the tips on series writing.

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  5. I'm very careless about doing in depth studies of my characters. However, should I ever embark on a series, I shall take your advice. Thanks for the heads up.

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  6. It's wonderful to hear about the mechanics of developing a series. It seems the moral of the story is, put in a lot of work up front and it will hopefully get easier. :)

    Good luck on the upcoming release!

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  7. Hi,

    Thank you for the useful writing hints and tips - will definitely bear these in the mind for the future.

    In exchange, I thought I'd share a 'tip' with you - I've found a brilliant website that gives out lots of reading suggestions and recommendations as well as author pages and discussion forums. I love finding new books to read and am looking forward to getting my hands on a copy of Battlesong when it's released! :-)

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