Thursday, June 19, 2014

Face-Lift 1206


Guess the Plot

The Nexus

1. Time, spirit, space, and temperature have no meaning in . . . The Nexus! Neither do characterization, voice, grammar or spelling.

2. In this multiversial scifi literary romance thriller, a man falls out of a spaceship and is sucked into . . . the Nexus.

3. Only teenager Cole can prevent the genocide of all unintelligent humans. All he has going for him is his own intelligence and a secret weapon known as . . . The Nexus!

4. All across the land, human beings of all stripes are being drawn inexorably from their dwellings to transfer points where they're shifted to other realms. Yes, it's the History of Railroad Stations, but nobody'd buy a book with that title.

5. Seemingly random online strangers find themselves on a serial killer’s potential victim list. Will they discover in time that the  killer is a Grammar Nazi trying to eliminate the biggest online offenders of the English language?

6. Mick and the other sales staff place bets on how many times the jargon-spewing Communications Manager will babble "the nexus" in her weekly seminar. After the seminar, controversy breaks out over whether her use of nexus as a verb counted, and what the hell nexus means anyway.



Original Version

Dear Evil Editor:

Seventeen-year-old Cole has a rare gift—intelligence. The Malkum, a former think tank gone rogue, jealously guards their position of power by killing those who might pose a challenge. Cole avoids detection by living among the unintelligent humans, the Indignis. [Over whom do the Malkum have power? What kind of power?]

Cole narrowly escapes death when the Malkum targets him and murders his people. [Who are his people? His family? The people he's hiding among?] He learns of a clandestine rebellion seeking to overthrow the Malkum, and discovers that his intelligence was not an accident of evolution. The rebellion bred him to lead their army against the enemy, sending him to live among the Indignis so he could learn to love those he must later fight to protect. [If the rebellion were intelligent enough to figure out how to breed one really intelligent person, why not breed thousands?]

Resolved to prevent the genocide of the Indignis, [He was originally trying to keep from being killed by hiding among the Indignis. Which makes little sense if there's a genocide of Indignis underway.] [Wait, the Malkum are trying to kill all the intelligent humans and all the unintelligent humans?

Malkum 1: Anyone smart enough to challenge our power must be killed.

Malkum 2: Yes. Then it'll be just us and all the idiots.

Malkum 1: Yes, the idiots . . . The idiots can be so annoying.] he must overcome his self-doubt, escape the crosshairs of the enemy, and convince an unwilling army [If he's counting on the Iraqi army, he's in trouble.] to follow him to the enemy’s gate. [Is only thing protecting this former think tank from the rebellion army a gate? Lucky for them the rebel army are all idiots.]

The rebellion has given Cole a secret weapon, the scope of which must remain hidden from even Cole—the Nexus, a psychological weapon that hides one’s memories from one’s self.

Complete at 95,000 words, THE NEXUS (Science Fiction) combines the empathetic leadership of Orson Scott Card’s Ender Wiggin with mind-altering weaponry reminiscent of Total Recall.


Notes

The Malkum is sort of stuck between the intelligent and the unintelligent. Maybe you should call the book Malkum in the Middle.

Have they been waiting 17 years for Cole to be ready to take down the Malkum?

What is the setting? A planet? A country? A city? One former think tank is going to have a limited area it can control, I would think. Do they have an army of their own, or secret weapons?

So this secret weapon will rob the enemy of their memories? And once they forget they're trying to kill everyone, all will be well?

Is Cole's intelligence greater than that of the Malkum? Is he like a superhero, and his superpower is intelligence? Most of the super brains choose to be criminals: Moriarty, Doctor Doom, Brainiac, Lex Luthor, Goldfinger.

Maybe we should lose the setup and start: Seventeen-year-old Cole has been bred as the savior of the Indignis, idiots ruled by the super-intelligent Malkum. That leaves plenty of room to tell us what Cole's plan is, what obstacles cause his plan to go awry, what he does about it, what will happen if he fails. In other words, we want the story, not the situation.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Face-Lift 1205


Guess the Plot

Battleground: Jet

1. The last thing Jerry expects when he books his flight to Vegas is that two different terrorist groups will have teams aboard the plane trying to bring it down. Or that the winners of the national mixed martial arts championships would also be aboard, heading home from their White House visit.

2. Klarissa thinks her jet black eyeliner is sexier than Marissa's kohl eyeliner. When Marissa shows up at the school dance with the new jet kohl eyeliner, and Klarissa's crush, the fight is on! And where did all the werewolves wearing the newest jet black kohl eyeliner come from?

3. Jason has big hopes for his new game, Battleground:Jet. Dreaming of millions and a life of leisure, he releases it to adoring fans who swoon with joy over the high-tech game. But there's just one problem: All his fans are girls. Girls playing an air combat game? Yuck! Now what will he do? And will he have to leave the basement to do it?

4. Fourteen-year-old Jet enters the BattleGround Games hoping to become champion of the solar system. If he wins, he gets fame and fortune. If he loses, billions of people die; and you don't even want to know what happens to Uranus.

5. Hades' Devilspawniest EVUH gather to argue the toss over PERSONAL EVIL. Only one will make Apocalypse Academy. And RULE. Will Yellerpants Kindasatany Lite make the grade? Or will the "Jet Black Persona" Clause precipitate foiled fiend oblivion?




Original Version

(Hi, thank you for doing this! In addition to the query, I'm concerned about whether such an anime-style plot is sellable to the Western market. Can I get away with a story like this?) [I can't tell if you're afraid Westerners are too sophisticated to buy into the plot, or too stupid to get it. Guess we're about to find out.]


Dear Agent,

The BattleGround Games are the solar system's most popular sport. Competitors use advanced technological and magical "upgrades" to fight their opponents [It's like the Olympics, except you can cheat.] on areas that vary from abandoned cities to entire planets on the edge of the system. [Is this our solar system?] [If so, the planets on the edge of the system are Neptune and Uranus. No one cares about Neptune, but I hope the technological upgrades allowed to competitors from Uranus don't include noxious gas bombs.]

Fourteen-year-old Jet dreams of competing in the Games, and after a chance encounter with a disgraced former Battler, [He was disgraced for using advanced technological upgrades that were a little too advanced. I mean it's one thing for Oscar Pistorius to wear springy blades, but this guy blew the field away in the marathon by using a motorcycle.] [It would be cool to see an Olympic high jumper come out wearing a jet pack. There may not be a rule specifically prohibiting jet packs.] [I still can't believe they let Michael Phelps get away with wearing swim fins in the London Olympics.] it seems he might just get his chance. He does well in his first few games, and befriends a cheerful mechanic named Caera, who agrees to help him [A mechanic? Wait, is Jet a robot?] [How did he do so well before he had a mechanic? A Battler without a mechanic is like a Torturer without a thumbscrew, as the old saying goes.] during what she expects to be a short Battler career.

Jet finds a rival in the mysterious Lancer, an earth-born girl who doesn't seem to care for the fame and fortune that motivates most of the players. [Is Jet earth-born?] While investigating her origins, [To confirm that she wasn't actually born on Krypton.] Jet discovers a plot to rig the games -- a plot that would destroy several planets and kill billions of people, all live on TV. [To put that on a smaller scale, it's like the Jamaican bobsled team nuking every other bobsledding country so they can win Olympic gold.] In order to save the solar system, Jet has to win the Games and expose the cheaters. ["Cheaters" is a rather mild term to use for those plotting to kill billions of people.] But that's easier said than done, especially when he realizes that everyone around him has secrets, and no one is completely trustworthy.

BATTLEGROUND: JET is a YA science fantasy novel complete at 60,000 words. It is a self-contained novel, but has potential for a series. Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,


Notes

I would label this Middle Grade rather than YA. Jet's a bit young for YA, and while you could make him 17 instead of 14, I think you'll find most people would rather the fate of the solar system were in the hands of Ender Wiggin than Ferris Bueller.

I would like a better idea of what the BattleGround Games are. If it's one sport, like the World Cup, what's it like? If it's more like the Olympics, what's Jet's event? A query for The Hunger Games would tell more about the games than that competitors can use a variety of weapons.

Are the villains willing to destroy planets and kill billions just to win the Games? Or is there an ulterior motive?

Is it normal for Battlers to investigate their opponents' origins? If so, why?

I'm not sure what makes this plot "anime-style," but I can see it appealing to kids.

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Evil Editor Classics


Guess the Plot

Wolves and Walls

1. Luna isn't rabid or dangerous, so why should she have to be quarantined with the other werewolves? She shouldn't, but even that would be better than what'll happen if the town's Civic Committee changes the law and gives wolfwomen the death penalty.

2. Terry Zygax is world-renowned for creating the worst role-playing game of all time, Wolves and Walls. Now homeless and addicted to modeling glue, Terry is faced with a chance at vindication when his small Wisconsin town is overrun by a pack of rabies-infected wolves, and only Terry knows how to stop them. Ok, it's walls. Pretty much any wall will keep them from getting at you.

3. Mazeworld Amusement Park is losing business as the extreme-sports movement spreads. Visitors aren't attracted to contemplation and puzzle-solving. But ambitious new manager Lupe has a plan to make hedge mazes more intense.

4. Tired of the deer getting into your vegetable garden? From his twenty years of experimentation and experience with wildlife, the author offers up his revolutionary method, using both natural and man-made approaches to the ungulate problem.

5. The last days of the Roman Empire. Legionnaire Hanno watches over the parapets of Hadrian's wall, where wolves and blue-daubed savages fight over the bones of Rome's civilization. Millenia later, an archaeology student discovers the potsherds his diary was scratched on, and is bored.

6. Successful game designer Brett is psyched about his new werewolf-based RPG - until he discovers he's offended the actual werewolf pack living in the local forest. Can he convince the lovely lycanthrope Leilani not to rip him to shreds? And can Brett handle a real adventure?

7. When Gemma the witch decides to open a nightclub for werewolves and vampires, everyone simply smiles. But the lichmaster who runs the zombie whorehouse isn't smiling, and soon, Gemma won't be, either. Can she save her dream?


Original Version

Dear Agent,

Luna Weaver, sixteen years old, has been hiding the fact that she is a werewolf from the age of eleven. [When once a month you become a raving lunatic, it's hard to hide it. And it's even harder to hide it when once a month you become a werewolf. Ba dum ching.] Now, the governments have decided that the rules are about to change: could the punishment for being a werewolf now be death? ["Punishment" suggests wrongdoing. Perhaps "price" or "cost" would be better.] [Better yet: "weregild."]

Werewolves have historically been considered a diseased population and a threat to public safety, [Especially when they tear the throats out of people.] but not all werewolves are rabid or dangerous. Luna Weaver certainly is not. But she has been hiding the fact that she is a werewolf [Already said.] from the people of Wall-in-the-Wood for fear of being forced to live under the strict quarantine that the town uses to prevent the spread of the werewolf population. [Okay people, there's a full moon tonight, so follow directions and no one will get hurt. All werewolves stay behind this wall. No climbing over the wall and no walking around it to our side.] No one knows, not even her friends who live inside the quarantine. [Are werewolves quarantined only when the moon is full? If so, what's their complaint? If not, how did Luna become friends with people who are always quarantined?]

When Luna is sixteen, a new Civic Committee is convened by the Civil Councils of the towns to form a ruling about werewolves. [Okay, settle down folks, and we'll start the meeting. First order of business: all these damn werewolves.] The towns have been using different methods of werewolf prevention, [I wonder if that's why they blew up the moon in that query earlier this week. Werewolf prevention. Could work.] but that is about to change. The Civic Committee could rule in favor of captivity, even death, and there is nothing Luna can do about it. Until she meets Seath Hunter, a representative from a city where being werewolf is a crime punishable by death, who has his own reasons for hating werewolves. [He lost his sheep-shearing job because werewolves were willing to do it for half the wages.] 

Seath is intrigued by the mysterious girl [How is she mysterious?] everyone knows but no one seems to know about, and he makes it his mission to uncover what Luna's hiding. [When people are making it their mission to find out what you're hiding, you're not hiding the fact that you're hiding something well enough.] When a fateful night in the woods reveals Luna's secret, the pair of unlikely friends decide to use Seath's place on the Civic Committee to attempt the impossible: ensure the freedom to feared and trapped werewolves. [What happened to Seath's reasons for hating werewolves?]

These events unfold in Wall-in-the-Wood, a town characterized by its stone walls and werewolf quarantine. [You make it sound like their tourism slogan is Visit lovely Wall-in-the-Wood, where all our werewolves are quarantined.] Wolves and Walls is 62,000 words. The full manuscript is available on request.

Thank you for your time and for your consideration,


Notes

Is this YA?

Is this an allegory for the civil rights movement? Is there a scene with werewolves marching peacefully and townspeople turning fire hoses on them?

I can understand Seath not wanting to kill Luna, as she's undoubtedly pretty hot, but why is a guy who hates werewolves now trying to give them their freedom?

Wait, is this an allegory and the werewolves are the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay?

There seem to be a lot of werewolves. Shouldn't they organize and wait for the full moon and rip everybody's throat out?

What does the quarantine consist of? Is it voluntary? Are they under guard? Are they basically in prison or just told to stay behind some wall?

For the query you might want to just refer to the town council. This convening of the civic committee of the civil councils is a lot of "c" words to digest at once. It's like eating clam chowder over chocolate cake.


Selected Comments

December/Stacia said...Sorry. Perhaps I'm just confused, or a terrible person, but I don't understand why quarantining werewolves during a full moon is such a terrible idea. Are these weres capable of regular human thought while in wolf form? Do they go about their normal business, or are they actually wolves who kill livestock and people? You say "not all" werewolves are rabid or dangerous, which implies that at least some are.

Or are they quarantined all the time, in which case I see the problem more. I guess they are all the time, since you mention her friends who live inside the quarantine, but the quarantine doesn't really sound like a quarantine if she has friends who live in it that she keeps in contact with. It sounds more like a segregation than a quarantine.

If not every town has werewolf quarantines, and the wolves hate it so much, why don't they move?

How has Luna been able to hide her condition? Wouldn't her parents notice, at least? If wolves are such a threat, wouldn't people be on the lookout for them during the full moon?

Why is the Civic Committee being formed now? What happened to make this suddenly a bigger issue? How long have there been weres? You mentioned that they've "historically" been considered a diseased population, which implies they've been around for a considerable amount of time, so why are the councils only now getting around to thinking maybe they should standardize their treatment of them?

What world is this? Because the idea that a bunch of town leaders could order the deaths of thousands of people who lead normal lives outside of three nights a month seems a bit much, at least in our society. And how big is the world, how populous?

Why don't the weres go form their own town?

All these questions may be answered in the ms, but as it is the query only makes it sound like there may not be answers to it. I think even a simple sentence or two explaining the world itself would help quite a bit. Along with explaining why Seath would suddenly decide his previous reasons for hating wolves don't work for him anymore, and why there seems to be no one at all willing to say "Hey, maybe we shouldn't just slaughter people for being weres, when segregating them seems to work just fine."

Also, I'd consider changing the heroine's name. "Luna" is pretty common for werewolf MCs.

Just my thoughts. Good luck!


150 said...If there are werewolves everywhere, I assume Seath Hunter has met a fair few, so I can't picture how one night with Luna would change his mind. Surely a few of the other werewolves must be hot sixteen-year-old girls. If she saves his life or something, you'd better say so.

How does Luna have friends inside the quarantine zone?


Hebe said...I like your voice. When the voice is good you get a free pass on some content issues but why risk it.

Why can Luna hide her werewolfiness ? A brilliant talent with depilatories? What hidden reason does Seath have to hate werewolves? -- is it the fabulously unusual hidden plot twist I am longing to see in print -- His brother was a werewolf that turned into a kitten, a poached egg or some inappropriate higher power so his parents disowned him leaving Seath with survivor guilt? Inquiring minds want to know.

BTW - Name suggestions -- Beamer Weave ? -- Like moonbeam, denotes a kinder werewolf.

Seath doesn’t sound very wolfy. How about: Voll der Mond (full moon) = Sol Dermond. Sol = sun, Luna = moon

“Their love eclipsed the qualities of light and dark and saved”......well, you know, whatever needs saving.

Or maybe Latin - Clarence (clear luminous), with a last name denoting a dark unhappy childhood -- or whatever his big secret is.

You’ve got some good stuff, with a few changes, (you've got some great comments to work with,) it could be compelling. Good luck with the pitching.


Sarah from Hawthorne said...I agree with pretty much everything December/Stacia said. If you're doing a variation on werewolves where some are dangerous and some are not, a sentence or two up front to explain the rules would be helpful.

The mind boggles as to how a child can possibly hide werewolfishness without the aid of friends or family. At 16, maybe. At 11, no. Perhaps it makes sense in the book, but for the query you may want to leave out the age that all this started at.

Speaking of age, how old is Seath and what exactly is it about Luna that makes him change his mind about werewolves?


Dave F. said...How many children have hidden their sexual orientation, love affairs and pregnancies, alcohol and drug abuse from parents?

I find it completely plausible for Luna to hide being a werewolf for years and leave her parents and the others clueless.


Phoenix said...I agree with Stacia. I'm afraid I'm not getting a clear understanding of what werewolves are and how the human population regards them from the query.

They're considered diseased and a threat in your second 'graph, but in P3, some towns call being a werewolf a crime. And if the Committee may rule in favor of captivity or death, does that mean the town that kills them would have to stop killing them if the ruling is to just keep them in captivity? And if they are already being quarantined, how is that different from captivity?

And others have ably pointed out there is no motivation in the query for Seath to 1) befriend Luna if he thinks she's hiding something or 2) suddenly decide werewolves are not a danger. So his motivations need to be elaborated on.

And since you leave open the issue of just how many werewolves may be rabid and dangerous, a little more background on the biology or philosophy of your werewolf population would be in order, I think. If 95% of the were population is rabid/dangerous, then the battle to tolerate the ones who aren't is going to be even greater.

(And if the ruling is in favor of giving werewolves freedom to be what they are without persecution, will the towns have to pay restitution to those werewolves who were incarcerated or to the families of weres who were killed? That could color their thinking as well...)


Hebe said...If Luna is the kind of werewolf that changes every night and bites the heads off the family pets, then Yes, I do think this might be a difficult thing to keep from the folks. But, if there is something going on like a once a month small mustache episode or "gee I forgot the shave my legs" kind of thing" then OK she's home free. I was kind of hoping it was a full blown howling at the moon transformation so that she decided to pretend to become a young republican and go to training sessions once a month,(really going to a nearby town to harass the pets of strangers). I just want to know how it happens... because it sounds like it could be an unusual plot twist that could sell the book.


chelsea said...I don't think we need to know that Luna has been hiding her identity since age eleven in the query. The fact that she's hiding it is information enough. And thank you Dave for pointing out how easy it is for teens to hide things. A clever teen could easily find a way to hide her werewolf nature, even if it meant chaining herself down for one day a month.

I think the first two paragraphs can be shortened a bit. Maybe something like:

"Sixteen year old werewolf Luna Weaver has always managed to keep her identity a secret, but when the government expands their anti-werewolf legislation, Luna's life is suddenly at stake."

Are you using the word "rabid" figuratively or literally? If figuratively, consider a different word, because using the word rabid when talking about wolves makes me think of actual rabies.

I think a lot of the confusion people are having comes from not knowing which kind of werewolf Luna is. Some werewolves are humans who turn into actual wolves and some werewolves are humans who turn into weird wolf-human hybrids. The latter is often the dangerous kind, due to the fact that actual wolves really don't go around attacking humans unless directly challenged. Human misconceptions about actual wolves are really astounding.

"The idea that a bunch of town leaders could order the deaths of thousands of people who lead normal lives outside of three nights a month seems a bit much, at least in our society. "

Really? I would think a look at human history and current events would disprove that theory.


talpianna said...Isn't being a werewolf hereditary if it isn't caused by being bitten by one? In that case, wouldn't at least one of Luna's parents (or a grandparent if it's the kind of mutation that skips a generation) be a werewolf, so she would not need to keep it a secret within the family?



BuffySquirrel said...Take away the dangerousness from werewolves and you're left with an animal wandering around looking for its pack. Don't Luna's family wonder why a wolf turns up every month and tries to snuggle?


December/Stacia said...Really? I would think a look at human history and current events would disprove that theory.

Which current events are those, Chelsea? Have I missed a mass genocide of this nature taking place in the US? Or in any democratic nation?

Because last time I checked, a police shooting is cause for controvery and criminal trials, much less something along the lines we're discussing here.

I certainly haven't seen any news about [insert minority here] being lined up against walls on the edges of towns and shot by firing squads while onlookers cheered all over the US (I did say "in our society," remember). Or England. Or Canada. Or even France. Or any other democratic country I can think of. And Germany gave that one a try sixty years or so ago and is still trying to make up for it.

But you know, I'm stuck in rural England at the moment, so I could just not be up on my current events.


chelsea said...I was speaking primarily of war. And torture camps. I think we probably just see them differently.


BuffySquirrel said...Perhaps you need to extend your list of democratic countries to include Serbia.


December/Stacia said...Perhaps you need to extend your list of democratic countries to include Serbia.

My point was NOT that such things never ever happen. I am aware of war and torture camps and all of the ugliness of which human beings are capable and I am not disputing any of it.

My point was that these things do not happen without any controversy, without anyone in the world saying it's wrong. Hence my repeatedly mentioning cheering onlookers. Seems to me bloody battles were fought in Serbia and Kosovo to stop events like those from happening; that hardly implies an entire nation, acting as one, smiling fondly at its leaders while they murder innocent people.

I would also argue whether or not Serbia is actually "a society like ours," which again was my entire point. Do such things happen, yes, of course they do. But if they do in your book, you need to clarify how and what kind of society and world you're dealing with.

Would I believe hundreds/thousands of innocent people being rounded up and killed just for being different in Serbia (which was NOT a democracy until recently), and everybody knows about it and nobody has a single problem with it? Yes, I suppose so, though I'd still find it far-fetched that nobody even thought perhaps it was wrong. Would I believe the same thing happening in Wisconsin or Nevada or New York? No. Not unless you have built the world properly, and this query doesn't, which is why the question came up in the first place.


BuffySquirrel said...If the Serbs didn't approve of what their leader was doing, why did they keep re-electing him?

But of course if you narrow the definition of the kind of society you think won't do such things to the kind of society that hasn't, at least in recent years, then yeah, you'll win the argument!


Author said...Luna Weaver, sixteen years old, has been hiding the fact that she is a werewolf from the age of eleven. Now, the governments have decided that the rules are about to change: could the punishment for being a werewolf now be death?

Luna Weaver never met a werewolf who dreamed of hurting human beings, and Luna knows many werewolves – not surprising, as she is one. Luna has never hurt anyone. But she, with the help of her mother, has been hiding the fact that she is a werewolf from the people of Wall-in-the-Wood for fear of being required to live under the strict, involuntary quarantine that the town uses to prevent the spread of the werewolf population. No one else knows, not even her friends who dutifully live segregated behind the wall.

Wall-in-the-Wood isn’t the only town with a werewolf problem, but the towns have been using different methods of prevention since the last Civic Committee failed to create a universal plan a decade ago. However, a new Committee has been formed, which could rule in favor of captivity, even death, and there is nothing Luna can do about it. Until she meets Connor Hunter, a representative from a city where being werewolf is a crime punished by death, who has his own reasons for hating werewolves.

Connor is intrigued by the mysterious girl everyone knows but no one seems to know about, and he makes it his mission to uncover what Luna’s hiding. Their mutual respect and little bit of trust is put to the test when a fateful night in the woods reveals Luna’s secret. Connor is forced to confront the conflict between his new friend and his hatred for the werewolf who killed his best friend years ago.

As Connor faces internal conflict between his new friend and the memory of an old one, Luna must deal with a new choice in her personal life. She’s developed feelings for Toby, a werewolf friend in the Quarantine, and he likes her back. However, he persists in reminding her that she is a non-werewolf who deserves a happy life outside the Quarter’s walls.

While Luna remains troubled about her relationship with Toby, Connor joins in hiding Luna’s secret, and the pair decides to use Connor’s place on the Civic Committee to ensure the freedom to feared and trapped werewolves.

Wolves in Walls is a 62,000 word young adult novel. A partial or the full manuscript is available on request.

Thank you for your time and for your consideration,


 _*Rachel*_ said...
paragraph 2: cut from “, and Luna knows” to “never hurt anyone;” it’s redundant. Then make the two parts of the paragraph connect. And no need for “involuntary;” it’s implied. Delete “dutifully.”

Phrase the town thing more clearly. “Soon Wall-in-the-Wood and its neighboring towns will meet to determine once and for all what to do with the werewolves: imprisonment or death?” Give or take. Change “until” to “then.” And I’m assuming that the convention is either in W-in the-W or Luna is her town’s rep, probably the former. You might want to say it, and you could spice it up by saying that all the extra people in town make it dangerous or something.

Her name’s Luna. What does he think she’s hiding? That was sarcasm, not a query suggestion.

If Toby’s in quarantine, how does Luna see him? I thought quarantine meant that about the only person who came/left was the doctor, if that.

I have no idea what you mean Toby’s trying to tell her. Is she guilt-tripping because he’s behind bars and she isn’t? That’s a bit more lucid.

Maybe you could wrap up with something like: “But even though Luna really does like Toby, Connor just promised to ensure that the werewolves are set free.

Would the Committee really go from considering death to considering freedom? And aren’t the names “Luna” and “Hunter” VERY obvious? Maybe I’m just a nerd, but luna is always moon, and that’s too easy when you’ve got werewolves in your book.

Still, it’s got potential!


Aimee K. Maher said...I guess the thorn in my eye here is this...fantasy is great, but it usually has an anchor in reality somewhere. We put dogs to sleep for biting the neighbor. Werewolves would be screwed. I'm having a hard time picturing a werewolf pound.


writtenwyrdd said...The revised version is waaaaaay too wordy and there's too much backstory. I'd suggest you start along the lines of "Luna has a choice. A or B." Give us the stakes, make us feel the emotional cost and worry for either choice.

And I have to say that Luna as the name for a werewolf? Wouldn't the neighbors be a bit suspicious? In fact, wouldn't a name like Luna make them think, hmmm, with a name like that, perhaps we should cut her hand off to see if there is fur inside her skin? (A traditional way of revealing a were.)


vkw said...It's a bit wordy but it sounds like you have a good story. I would make changes as follows:

Luna Weaver, sixteen years old, has been hiding the fact that she is a werewolf (since she was eleven, avoiding having to be quarantined like other werewolves in her town. There is now a push to change the law from segregation to death”)

(I don’t think this paragraph is necessary at all)

Luna Weaver never met a werewolf who dreamed of hurting human beings, and Luna knows many werewolves – not surprising, as she is one. Luna has never hurt anyone. But she, with the help of her mother, has been hiding the fact that she is a werewolf from the people of Wall-in-the-Wood for fear of being required to live under the strict, involuntary quarantine that the town uses to prevent the spread of the werewolf population. No one else knows, not even her friends who dutifully live segregated behind the wall.

Wall-in-the-Wood isn’t the only town with a werewolf problem, but (different) towns have been using different methods of controlling the problem for the last decade). A new Committee is formed, which is leaning for a universal plan of execution rather than imprisonment. Luna believes there is nothing she can do to help her friends who are werewolves until she meets Connor Hunter, a representative from a town where being a werewolf is a capital offense).

Connor is intrigued by the mysterious girl everyone knows but no one seems to know about, and he makes it his mission to uncover what Luna’s hiding. (Their respect and friendship is tested when Connor is forced to confront his feelings for Luna and his hatred the werewolf that killed his best friend years ago when her secret is accidentally revealed one night.)

(Meanwhile, Luna is developing strong feelings for Toby, a werewolf in Quarantine. He persists in reminding her that she is a non-werewolf who deserves a life of freedom (now here I am confused is she struggling to want to join him? Is that the conflict?, if so) while she considers revealing her secret so that they can be together.)

(Meanwhile, Connor decides to help Luna hide her secret and the pair conspire together to change the laws by using Connor’s position on the Committee.)

Wolves in Walls is a 62,000 word young adult novel. A partial or the full manuscript is available on request.

Thank you for your time and for your consideration,

(I would add what genre and audience and put it toward the top. So editors and agents know right off the bat if this is a story they represent)


Unrepentant Escapist said...You're using a lot of repetition. Now twice in one sentence, has been hiding, etc. Also, a lot of to be verbs (is, was). Try to use more aggressive verbs and cutting out excess (he persists in reminding her...how bout he just reminds her?) "And he likes her back" sounds a little juvenile. I'd shorten the query by sticking to the main character's plot arc. You're bouncing around a little.

For me, this isn't standing out amongst the sea of other werewolf fantasies begging me to read them. Werewolves everywhere are fighting for acceptance--How is yours different or special? The community council angle has potential. I think you need to start out with something a little more rambunctious and shorten things up.


Anonymous said...There's too much information. Trim it down, a lot, and get to the heart of it. You can bring in Connor and Toby but focus on Luna instead of trying to give attention to all three. What's her story. Why should I care about her? What choices will she have to make?

Also, the first two paragraphs kind of repeat each other. Streamline those. And in the second paragraph, don't use "never" so much. It makes me not believe you. It also makes me think "never say never," all of these "never"s won't stay that way for long.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Face-Lift 1204



Guess the Plot

The Downwinders' Secret

1. Seth Thomas Bulova's life-long fascination with horology led to his creation of a watch movement that could control time itself, simply by winding it backwards! Unfortunately, his discovery remained known but to him because no one knew what "winding a watch" meant anymore.

2. Everyone in town knows where Bleu is, at any given moment. You have to, if you want to live. Bleu’s renowned for his ability to cut one loose, to let her rip, to cut the cheese; and if you’re in the flight path, your life isn’t worth a toot. So they rigged the whole town to revolve, at a moments notice. Naturally, it was gas powered. Then the machinery broke. Also, fans. Lots of really big ones. And miles of extension cords.

3. Val owns a strip club that features windup women instead of real ones, and none of his patrons can tell the difference. When Marta, the only woman who knows how to wind the women down, is murdered, can Val figure out her secret to save his growing business?

4. Josh and Janet Downwinder buy the Barnett Funeral Home. They offer full services including headstones, burial service, and cremation. One day the police exhume a body previously declared as a suicide. The coffin contains bones but not human bones. They check cremated remains and find those, too, are not human. What happened to the human remains?

5. Suppose your great grandfather lived downwind from a nuclear test site in the 50s. Suppose he was later experimented on by a scientist using alien genetic material from Roswell, which gave him interesting powers. Suppose those powers were passed down to you on your 16th birthday. Could you bring down a secret military installation and save all the children in town? Okay, but what if you had a ghost helping you? 

6. When Johnny's dad decides his son is ready to hunt--it's time to load up the pickup with camo, shotguns and shells. It's killing time! The trick to a successful hunt is a sensitive nose and never walk upwind of the bean eaters. Bush's beans is excellent bait and a downwinder's secret for a good kill.

7. Aedan was a handsome enough lad, if a little thick. But he did have talent. He could cause the bearings on a self-winding wristwatch to freeze up, just by looking at it. Fishing reels were known to explode into an infinity of snarls, whenever he walked by. And every time he went to a game, baseball pitchers collapsed into quivering blobs of emotion before they could even release the ball towards the plate. Now if he could only figure a way to cash in on his power.

8. A lad from County Down wanted to throw a Frisbee around with his dad. His dad threw the Frisbee with the wind, and way too far. By the time the lad had returned, his dad was gone. The only things he’d left behind were a weather vane, and some moth-eaten sweaters. What was the Downwinders Secret? (And could it possibly be any more boring?)

9. In occupied France, a small band of resistance fighters, the Downwinders, using a device to intercept Nazi communications, discover that the Furher himself will be traveling through Alsace. An assassination mission will surely be a suicide mission, but Marcel is willing to take that risk. But when some of their band are captured, can he trust that they'll keep their secret?


Original Version


Dear Evil Agent:

I am currently seeking representation for my 80,000 word YA supernatural thriller, The Downwinders' Secret. The minute Charlie Pierce turns sixteen, strange things begin to happen. [How strange?] Really strange. [Such as?] A grueling run that normally takes her ten minutes only takes her two. [That's what happened to the Flash. Except there was a perfectly logical reason the Flash gained the ability to run impossibly fast. Turning sixteen doesn't do it for me.] She pulls an unconscious boy out of the local reservoir and revives him only to find out he drowned there over a hundred years ago. [At last his parents can get closure.] A Basque Goddess no one even remembers anymore shows up to warn her that the children of her town are in grave danger. [How does that go?

Charlie: What the--? Who are you?

Goddess: I'm a Basque Goddess.

Charlie: Which Basque Goddess?

Goddess: One of the more obscure ones. You wouldn't remember me. I came to tell you the children of your town are in grave danger. 

Charlie: As it happens, I'm one of the children of this town. Luckily I recently developed the ability to run a marathon in five minutes. See ya.]

And the man she's thought was her father her whole life commits suicide and tells her [--in his suicide note--that] she's part of some freaky government experiment – in a note. [Does Charlie have the power to bring the dead back to life? If not, does she have any power besides fleeing really fast?]

Above ground nuclear testing was a real threat to the lives of and well being of those living in Utah, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico in the '40s and '50s. The wind blew radioactive fallout for hundreds of miles. Those unlucky enough to be in its path were called “Downwinders”. The government first denied conducting tests, then denied the possibility that the tests could be causing health problems, for decades. After years of court battles, they finally were forced to take responsibility. [What's going on? You need to focus on Charlie.] In Williams, Arizona, the setting for this story, there are still flyers in the local clinic offering free testing and medical care for Downwinder families.

It turns out that at [the] same time the nuclear testing was going on a renegade scientist stole genetic material he obtained from the investigation at Roswell New Mexico and used it to experiment on a bunch of hapless privates at the local army base. Charlie's great-grandfather, among others. It made him immune to the effects of the nuclear testing, [The whole second paragraph was an info-dump about the nuclear testing, and now you tell us the great grandfather was immune? Skip the fallout and jump to the aliens.] and also gave him some interesting abilities. Which he passed down. Turns out, there were five other local young men who were also experimented on. They formed a secret society. The Downwinders. It's been under Charlie's nose all along, just waiting for her to see. [Odd that they would call themselves the Downwinders when, of the thousands of actual downwinders, these six are the ones who were immune to the effects of being downwind.]

Now it's up to Charlie, her friends, a hundred year old ghost, and their great grandparents to defeat a secret military installation, a heartless doctor and figure out their own powers in time to save the town's children. All without letting anyone know they're part alien, of course.

Thanks for your time and consideration. I would be happy to send you sample chapters or the full manuscript at your request.


Notes

I expect some backstory in a query, but I expect it to be backstory about the main character, not her great grandfather.

You suggest that the man Charlie thought was her father wasn't really her father. Where's her father? If you're gonna pass "abilities" on to your daughter, you might at least stick around to help her learn to control them. If he's dead, why isn't Charlie in the care of her mother or her grandparents or her great grandparents or a foster family instead of this imposter?

Who is this guy who's been posing as Charlie's father all these years? Seems like after volunteering to raise the real father's kid, he could wait till she's gone off to college before killing himself. Or at least inform Charlie's living relatives that he's checking out.

It seems kind of odd that you put so much effort into providing a scientific basis for Charlie's powers in a world that includes ghosts and goddesses. Does this goddess do anything besides warn Charlie about the grave danger? Does she elaborate on what the danger is? Why can't the goddess save the children? Do we really need a long-forgotten Basque Goddess in this story?

You waste two paragraphs explaining how Charlie got her powers. You could have told us in the first sentence: Thanks to a government experiment involving alien genetic material, Charlie Pierce's great grandfather developed interesting powers, powers which have now been passed down to Charlie. That leaves plenty of room to tell us what Charlie's powers are, what's threatening the children, why Charlie and company need to take down this modern-day secret military installation, how they plan to do this, what happens if they fail...

Strange that I'm willing to buy the idea that having alien genetic material passed on to you can give you amazing powers, but not that those powers would remain dormant sixteen years and then appear on your birthday.

Monday, June 09, 2014

Evil Editor Classics


Guess the Plot

Of the Dark

1. Dark Meat goes on a road tour that blows through Ogden and changes it forever when the members of the band answer a desperate call for sperm donors. The bank is replenished but ten years down the road the next generation of Ogdenians turn out to be mutant classical cellists.

2. Mike has always had a fear of the dark. A new therapy- one night spent in total darkness with a counselor- looks promising, mainly because the counselor is smoking hot. Then the woman is mysteriously murdered during the night, and Mike suddenly has a real reason to be afraid . . . Of the Dark.

3. Country lass Adastea has a tough decision: should she marry Mor-Lath, God of the Dark, and help him destroy the Gods of the Light? Or should she decline his proposal and risk never getting married? Spoiler alert. Wedding bells are gonna chime.

4. Lumia is a Spirit of the Light, representing all that is good and pure. It is her duty to protect the world of Alagera from evil, not an easy job, especially when she winds up between the sheets with Domar, a Spirit of the Dark. Can she overcome her attraction and fulfill her destiny to destroy Domar and his kind?

5. Vampires! They don't turn into bats, sparkle or have fangs, and they do have reflections, but they will drink your blood! Oh, hang on, they're just highly organized, deranged serial killers! And they're after the protagonists, who are smoking hot and scantily clad!

6. It was the worst blind date ever. After the hurricane blew the roof off Bud's Cafe, they took off running. It was too dark to see the bridge to the mainland was gone and the water was full of vampires. WTF? Talk about a bad swim! Plus, zombie alligators and a boatload of haunted pirates in pursuit of fabled diamonds.



Original Version

Dear Evil Editor,

Country lass Adrastea has received a proposal of marriage from Mor-Lath, God of the Dark. That is not the sort of news she wishes to share with the whole village ere they condemn her as a witch. [If I'm engaged to Mor-Lath, God of the Dark, villagers condemn me as a witch at their own peril.] [Also, I'd go with "lest" rather than "ere" there.] Those few she’s confided in­--her family and the village priestess­--advise her to turn down his proposal. [If you need to consult other people about whether to marry Mor-Lath, God of the Dark, you are beyond salvation.]

But he won’t take no for an answer and steadily increases the pressure for her to accept. Only in the end does she agree in order to save her village from destruction. [Threatening to destroy your beloved's village almost always gets an engagement off to a rocky start.]

For all his godly wisdom and millennia of life-experience, the one thing Mor-Lath does not know is how to be a good husband. [If you marry Mor-Lath, God of the Dark expecting him to do his share of the housework and watch The Bachelor instead of Monday Night Football, you deserve what you get.] Their marriage starts to fail from day one: infidelity, secrets and abandonment. [If you can't get through one day of your marriage without being unfaithful and abandoning your spouse, you, too, are beyond salvation. Although I suppose if your name is Mor-Lath, God of the Dark, that goes without saying.]

Adrastea [Now that they're married, shouldn't that be Adrastea-Lath?] learns from the Gods of the Light the true reason behind Mor-Lath’s desire to marry; he is only a demigod. [So he was actually Mor-Lath, Demigod of the Dark.] [Every guy has a few secrets he keeps from his wife, but failing to reveal that you're only a demigod is sure to come back to haunt you.] Only together--male and female--can they become full gods, thus making him strong enough to defeat the Light in the final battle. [But they're already married. How much more together can they get?] [I find it hard to believe one God of the Dark can defeat all the Gods of the Light just because he married a country lass.]

Armed with this knowledge and power, she is faced with a dilemma: does she side with the God of the Dark or does she choose to defeat her husband even though it could mean her own destruction? [Good or evil. That's always a dilemma.]

“Of The Dark” is a fantasy trilogy of three books, “Troth of the Dark,” “Bride of the Dark” and “House of the Dark”, each novel being 120,000 words. [Amazing coincidence.] [Based on these titles, they get married in book 2? 120,000 words of her deciding whether to marry Mor-Lath, God of the Dark, followed by 120,000 words of her being married to Mor-Lath, God of the Dark, followed by 120,000 words of fighting over who gets to keep the house?] The manuscripts are complete and ready to send to you should you wish to see more.

I’m a published writer of moderate repute. I’ve has [had] several short stories published in Somewhat Famous SF magazine and Kinda Famous magazine and have a career in freelance nonfiction.

Thank you for your consideration; I look forward to your reply.

Regards,


Notes

I get the impression you're querying for the entire trilogy. This doesn't allow you to say much about any one part of it. No one's likely to ask you to send them a 360,000-word trilogy, so query the first novel, and tell them it's book 1 of a trilogy. Then you can work in more of the book 1 plot.


Selected Comments

eth said...Surely there has to be more to book one than whether or not she says "yes."


arhooley said...Mor-Lath, God of the Dark? Note to writers of fantasy: Beware unintentional parody.

Anonymous said...The big suspense here is all about whether she'll marry him or not, and then she does. But the book doesn't end there, it goes on for who knows how many hundred pages while we read about the details of their housekeeping routine or whatever, plus 2 more volumes of ??? The demigod / god thing seems like an afterthought and we don't know the difference, so it doesn't seem to matter much.


Joseph said...I couldn't decide if this query was insane because it was hilarious, or if it was hilarious because it was insane (whatever that means).


no-bull-steve said...Yeah it seems the inciting incident of this story is when she learns Darth-Mol or whatever isn't a full god, only a demi-god. This query also suffers from the non protagonizing protagonist--lots of stuff being done to her. Getting advice and "discovering secrets (unless it's a mystery)" aren't protagonistic.
The way this is presented it's highly unlikely to keep readers' attention spans for 360,000 words.


Xenith said...3 x 120,000 words with little obvious plot sounds like a slush reader's nightmare.

OTOH dealing with the day-to-day problems of being with a (demi)gof dark, against the background of an actual story, could be fun.


batgirl said...Don't know if this is fair to say, but I've read part of this (not sure which volume, probably the first) years ago on OWW.
There's a bunch more plot - local wars and a noble who wants to wipe out Adrastea's whole village, and she becomes indebted to Mor-Lath by asking his help to save her people - which would also get her outcast even if she saved them. Etc.

I wonder if the author was overwhelmed by the prospect of summarising the plot or picking the main threads out, and decided just to leave most of it out? I can understand the impulse.


BuffySquirrel said...It strikes me that there ought to be something special about Adrastea if marrying her puts Mor-Lath in a position to become a full god and lose his demi-. Otherwise, presumably, he could scour the villages until he finds a woman who doesn't need to be coerced. But we're never told what is so special about her. Maybe she knows exactly what's wrong with books she's never read!


150 said...Maybe she knows exactly what's wrong with books she's never read!

Hey, that's MY power! Where's MY demigod suitor, huh?


BuffySquirrel said...150 dear, I think EE is your demi-god suitor. Ahem.

Sunday, June 08, 2014

Evil Editor Classics


Guess the Plot

Heart of Desire

1. The love child of the American president and a journalist has the ability to transcend time and space. And the oil companies want her.

2. Two archeologists fall in love while searching for the legendary heart-shaped Ming vase known as the Heart of Desire.

3. Desiré Plum and Harry Hart are engaged. Then one day Harry meets Sally. Can Desiré tear her Harry from a blockbuster movie script?

4. A retired nun explores the facets of love on the back of a Harley. On the front: Cardinal O'Malley.

5. Desiré was just another organ donor, but her heart can change the fate of mankind...if only they can find it.

6. A thirty-something heart transplant patient falls in love with his donor’s wife. With a chapel in the hospital, they waste no time tying the knot.



Original Version

Dear Agent,

It's my understanding from reading your listing in the 2006 Guide to Literary Agents that you're interested in representing thrillers and literary/mainstream fiction. My 91,000-word literary thriller manuscript, Heart of Desire, may be of interest to you.

Set against the backdrop of Washington D.C., several colorful Arizona locations, and, at the story's culmination, Tibet, Heart of Desire has speculative fiction elements, romance, mystery, action, and a multi-ethnic cast of characters. Its themes examine contemporary corporate politics, hardship created by emotional attachment, the power of the human mind, and the quest to understand life's true nature. [In short, it is all genres, all styles, and all things to all people, and should appeal to those who read books, and to those who don't.] My writing style is reminiscent of Barbara Kingsolver meets Dan Brown with some Ray Bradbury thrown in. [Yes, Evil Editor can already see the influence of all of them, and not only them--I'm surprised you didn't also include Philip K. Dick, Emily Dickinson, and Dick Vitale.]

Written in rotating first person POV with a third-person prologue and epilogue, the story takes an intimate look at the lives of six primary characters: Tess Shearer, a reclusive counterculture journalist and single mother of Mikka, an "Indigo" child, Tess's former lover and Mikka's father, U.S. President Harrison Cantrell Henry, a politician with an unusual agenda, Paul Shearer, Tess's clueless, gay brother, [You can't make the gay guy clueless; gay people will protest until all the major chains pull your books from the shelves.] the Reverends Marshall and Savannah Updike, New Age ministers specializing in conspiracy theory, [They preach the doctrine of The Da Vinci Code.] and Carson Hodges, Native seer and spiritual friend. [Carson the friendly ghost.] [You shouldn't be spending an entire paragraph on your characters. You can tell us who they are when you mention them in the plot summary.] The Synopsis:

~~A chance meeting in Phoenix, Arizona between Clintonesque President Harrison Cantrell Henry and reclusive counterculture journalist Tess Shearer [Are you going to describe her as a reclusive counterculture journalist every time you mention her?] [Also, presidents aren't allowed to have chance meetings.] leads to a steamy, unpublicized love affair. [The president has an affair with a journalist, and doesn't suspect her tell-all book will be on shelves three hours after he breaks it off?] Henry ends the relationship after increasing pressure from the tenacious Moral Right [If the affair was unpublicized, how does the Moral Right know about it?] and the ubiquitous Company in a repressive political backlash. Tess disappears into her quiet Arizona life and secretly gives birth to Mikka, a precocious child able to transcend time and space. [She's the new nexus of time travel itself.] The powerful controllers pulling the strings of Earth's petroleum politics soon seek the toddler for a clandestine study. [How do they know Mikka exists, if Tess disappeared and secretly gave birth?] [And even if they know she exists, why would they even suspect she has the power to transcend time and space?] [Why does she have this power?] [Isn't she a little young to be transcending time and space?] [What exactly does it mean to transcend time and space?]

Constitutionally bankrupt after implementation of Patriot Acts I-V, laundered drug profits grease the palms of American political schemers, [How can laundered drug profits be constitutionally bankrupt? Presumably you meant to say the American political schemers were constitutionally bankrupt, although that goes without saying.] bent on control of world oil and mineral supplies. While many Americans are still blind to their nation's dilemma, the world understands the United States is run by a shadow government of financial and military elites. What many inside and outside the U.S. don't realize is that alien masters manipulate the American imperial conquest. [Oh, I think we all know that alien manipulation is the only possible explanation for the state of our government.]

President Henry disappears in a coup disguised as an assassination during the final year of his term, near the anniversary of the JFK murder, [Coincidence? Or predicted by astrology?] just as he tries to act on his unusual political agenda—putting people and the environment before profit [How did this guy get elected?] and giving the American public full disclosure about the UFO enigma. Tess is teased out of retirement to cover the assassination story in Washington, [When the president is giving full disclosure about UFOs and aliens, no one's gonna care about any other stories, including his assassination.] aware of the mortal danger that she and her daughter face.

Frightened by what she learns, Tess flees the federal district for her mountain home, more interested in keeping Mikka's identity and talents a secret [If they're still a secret, why were the oil companies after her?] than in confronting the system that harasses her. Assisted by New Age minister friends versed in the undercurrent of American history, a Native spiritual seer, as well as her hapless gay brother, the unwitting dupe of a Company agent, Tess manages to stay one step ahead of her nefarious pursuers. The lovers' lives collide again in the back country of Yavapai County, Arizona, where they grapple with their personal desires and chances for survival, as their small daughter makes a mysterious, transcendental Tibetan journey. [If transcending time and space means suddenly finding yourself stuck in Tibet in 1948, Mikka can have the power.] [The president disappears, then turns up in Arizona, and doesn't immediately come forward?] ~~

The sequel to Heart of Desire will be The Fifth Revolution. The sequel's premise concerns the failure of the current petroleum-based world economy and the patriarchal paradigm that supports it - an earth doomed to chaos until a movement supported by a variety of brave bodhisattvas [Vinegar comes in varieties; brave Bodhisattvas come in bands, for alliterative purposes.] restore the earth's balance, thus initiating the dawn of an enlightened era.

[Lengthy paragraphs of credits deleted by EE because this is already way too long.]

Thank you for opportunity to share my work. This is a simultaneous query. I'd be happy to supply a chapter synopsis and/or a partial manuscript if you're interested.


Notes

It isn't clear whether the focus is on government conspiracy or on Tess and her daughter. If it's both, the query should probably focus on Tess, as that seems more interesting.

In an attempt to reduce the length, consider that there isn't much in paragraphs 2, 3, 5, or 8 that we can't do without.

I was going to say that the title sounds more like a romance novel than a thriller, but a check with Amazon reveals that other books with this title are in the self-help genre.

What does Mikka do that reveals her ability to transcend time and space? 


Selected Comments

S. W. Vaughn said...This may well be an interesting story, author. You certainly have a lot happening -- but I'm with EE on the focus thing.

As a reader I find it amazing that you were able to pack this much story into 91,000 words! :-)


corydon said...How can a journalist be reclusive?


Novelust said...*Deep breath* Take out the politics.

It's obviously near and dear to the author's heart, but the weight given to those elements undermines the query. You don't need to take the time out to explain what an evil shadow government does, or how the evil oil tycoons are paying them off, or that evil alien overlords are controlling them. Oil men, aliens, shadow government = bad. We got it. You can explain in your book.

The gay brother. He's clueless and gay, then he's hapless and gay? Is that really the length and breadth of his character? Meet Paul, the homosexual blockhead! Um. I'd think about changing that in your query. You might treat him like an absolute peach in your novel, but this makes it look like he's been borrowed from the Big Book of Stereotypes.

Also, the plot seemed like it began with the Presidential coup/assassination. Big event, sets things in motion - if your novel does begin with this event, I'd suggest starting your query with it. (If not... can the Moral Right drive apart Tess and the President with a car chase or two? The hapless, gay Paul can accidentally drive a squad car through a barn full of chickens -Oh, that wacky Paul! What will he think of next?)


Me said...How is this a "Literary thriller"? This sounds like a dystopian sci-fi. Aliens, the time traveling kid, futuristic setting, think about it.

As for the politics, subtlety is not your strong suit that's for sure.


kis said...After the ubiquitous Company that secretly runs America puts an end to her affair with President Harrison Cantrell Henry, journalist Tess Shearer disappears into a quiet Arizona life. There she gives birth to Harrison's daughter, Mikka, born with the unexpected ability to transcend time and space. But the corporate forces that pull the strings in government want Mikka for their own ends, and Tess must enlist the help of blahbiddy blah and blah, as well as her naive gay brother, to escape.

And now--just as he is about to reveal to an ignorant public the manipulation of aliens on American foreign policy--the president vanishes in a staged assassination. When he and Tess meet again in the wilds of Arizona, Tess must choose between her duty as a human being, and her responsibility to protect her daughter from those who would use her power for evil.

Can she keep her daughter safe long enough to save the world?

There ya go. Best I could do in five minutes.


Kirsten said...I see bestseller written all over this one . . . I also agree that the politics part has to be toned down tho.


WM said...Why is it the more lunatic the idea the more people think it will succeed? Is it just, "This is so crazy people will have to read it just to see how nuts it gets!"


Mad Scientist Matt said...WM, I believe you've described Clive Cussler's formula for his success perfectly.


Watercolorz said...Why is it the more lunatic the idea the more people think it will succeed?
Personally I like off center plots, with wacky characters. But then I was weaned on John Irving so you probably got to blame my mom for that one, rest her soul.

I sympathize with the struggles in this query because I think that it is difficult for an author to condense the ideas of their work when the plot isn’t traditional or straightforward.

And then kis comes along and pulls an Amadeus move… now I understand why Salieri was so bitter.


Anonymous said...So seriously, a baby with the unexpected ability to transend space and time? How is that written in a revolving 1st person perspective? From Tess? "Oh, DAMN! Where did I put that baby again? Was it in my reclusive den or was it in pre WW II Nazi Germany?" or the baby? "Goooooooo gaaaaahhhhh oh yummy caveman turds!"


The hapless gay brother as an unwitting dupe? I picture Harvey Fierstein reviving Jackie Gleason's "The Poor Soul." (And how's that for an obscure, old-skewing reference?)

I think you have to refrain in your query from comparing your style to anyone else's, least of all the author of the biggest-selling novel in years and one of the most revered science fiction writers of all time. You'll be attaching sample pages, right? Let the agents come up with their own comparisons.

President Harrison Cantrell Henry... Wasn't William Henry Harrison the real U.S. president who died four weeks after taking office? Speaking only for myself, it would be great if you turned out to be the world's foremost scholar on President Harrison, and sprinkled in all manner of William Henry Harrison tidbits. Otherwise, I found the name distracting. How about just Harrison Cantrell?

Good luck with your book.


katwrite said...Very helpful, all. I thank you, Evil Editor and your faithful commenting minions. I appreciate the time you've taken to critique and counsel. I see the error of my ways. . . hopefully the novel is better written than the synopis - eight years on the novel and just weeks on the query and synopsis.

Hmm, in addition to serious revision, perhaps I should also fire my crit group! :} Just joshing, they don't know what to do with me, either.

Clueless author


Anonymous said...This thing has more plot holes than you can shake a stick at and it's far from focused. Try to choose one genre (the one which most of the book can be categorized with) --I'd say it's a thriller and cut the name dropping. It's better to let the writing do the talking instead of telling us your writing is like that of X, Y, and Z. That takes precious space on your paper.


Anonymous said..."Man, I have so much to say about the environment and how very, very evil and wrong the US government is. How can I get my message out there, because nobody's ever heard such a message before?

"I know, I'll write a novel! I can create a bunch of characters and make them do whatever I want, and I'll Stick It To The Man! And just so nobody suggests my overcrowded, plotless mishmash of a million different things I read in Fortean Times is just a dummy story for me to trick people into believing what I want them to believe, I'll throw in a gay guy who's dumb as a post so people won't know my secret ultra-leftist agenda!


Anonymous said...Actually, dear watercolorz, I deeply appreciate the empathy, but think the sloppiness of my query was not due so much to trying to condense the idea of a plot, for I had a coherent logline for my story, but in reading voluminous agent and publisher listings, forgetting the forest in the sea of trees. Rather unminionly of me, especially since I've written dozens of succint queries for my other published work. I worried about conveying enough information in the initial query - the story is different in its approach and I felt insecure about it, not wanting agents to envision a more genre-like thriller. Among other insecurities . . .

Yesterday at dawn I whipped out my dastardly revision sword and thrust it through the undeserving swine of untightened query prose, inspired by Sir/Lady Kis and his/her 5-minute recap (do you tremble, oh Evil at the apprentice's skill?) Armed with a leaner, meaner letter, I electronically cast it upon the waters to a group of agents hungry for action. One out of seven replied by the setting sun, asking for fifty pages of my dully titled tale (the first working title was worse, but I haven't been struck by the bolt of the title muse lately.)

Better than the one request in twenty I'd received before - I dare not think of the raucous laughter my other letter must have engendered at the inbox of suffering agents. Snark! Did the one who asked for three chapters have all her wits, seeing a diamond in the lump of coal or did she wish to amuse herself with writerly incompetence?

Oh Evil One, in a previous face-lift you told a writer you'd hold fast and take a second look at revised queries. My new, more humble, and already successful query looks like this:

Dear Agent in Shining Armor:

Because you're looking for new talent in mainstream and literary fiction, including thrillers, you may be interested in my 92,000-word speculative thriller manuscript, Heart of Desire:

Retired counterculture journalist Tess Shearer returns to her quiet life in Arizona bearing a secret after her steamy, unpublicized love affair with Clintonesque President Harrison Cantrell Henry. She gives birth to Mikka, an "Indigo" child with the mysterious ability to transcend time and space. When Henry disappears in a staged assassination as he attempts to act on his unusual political agenda - full disclosure of the UFO enigma - Shearer flees her mountain home, pursued by the powerful shadow government who wants Mikka for their own ends. The lovers' lives collide again in the Arizona wilderness, where they grapple with their personal desires and chances for survival.

I've written the story in rotating first person POV, delving into the lives of six primary characters. It is set against the backdrop of Washington D.C., several colorful Arizona locations, and at the story's culmination, Tibet.

Two paragraphs of tightened credits appear here.

Thank you for opportunity to share my work. I'd be happy to mail a synopsis and partial if you're interested.

What think ye, Evil One? Is this parchment one that might allow a glimmer of kindness into your heart?

Clueless Author


Evil Editor said...This is much better. You could get by with one short paragraph of credits (at most), and I still don't see how the shadow government and Exxon know the baby exists and is special, but I'm confident this is explained fully in the book.

kis said...yeah, much better. Hook them with the plot right away, then explain the rotating pov.

I wrote a big story, too, with several plot threads, all vital to the way it turns out. But my query had to focus mainly on the one thread that was most important. I mentioned the others in passing, but designated one sentence--or even half of a sentence--to each one. That gives a feel for the hugeness of the story, without bogging the query reader down in loads and loads of info. Because no matter how well you write a query, no one's reading it for pleasure. Hopefully that's what the book's for! ;)


Anonymous said...Thanks for the rebound assistance.

Yikes - missed the errors in my previous post. Still combing through the first ten pages of my manuscript - a NY agent of my queried seven requested those by e-mail this morning. Have I fooled them into thinking they're getting something grand? Yow!

Clueless Author

Thursday, June 05, 2014

Face-Lift 1203


Guess the Plot

The Art of Blending In

1. A Vita-Mix cookbook for the serial killer in us all. Hilarity ensues.

2. Misfit Leland just doesn't fit in with the popular crowd. Adam tries to help him blend in, but Leland likes his individuality. Somehow these opposites develop a friendship that lasts long after they both want want it to end.

3. Angeleno Aliby Jackson had no idea that the man who ran in front of her Prius was a major player in a Mexican drug cartel. She's had to ditch the Prius, the place near Malibu, cut her hair and go--to Marion, Iowa. Can her hunky police protector Jay make up for going from assistant stylist's aide to coordinator of the 'Swamp Fox Festival'?

4. Fake up a bodysuit, dye it red, add horns and tail; steal a pitchfork and a bottle of eau de rotten egg; and next time TAKE THE LEFT TURN AT ALBUQUERQUE. Also, Satan.

5. Julia had a spatula… and she knew how to use it. Taking a page from a certain brutish barber, she chopped up her rivals on the food network and turned them into light and fluffy confectionery treats. The trick was all in how you added the ingredients. There was a knack, or rather, an…ART OF BLENDING IN.

6. I'm a private eye. I make my living tailing cheating spouses and white-collar criminals. You think it's easy not getting made when the person you're following is paranoid about being followed? You gotta blend into the crowd. It's an art. This is my story.

7. Art had been a line chef for six years to the pompous, credit hogging Master Chef Kral Ramset. Stir, stir, stir. That's all he ever did. And beat. If Kral asked him to beat one more piece of Kral's rubbery old meat, Art had half a mind to beat him, instead. That is, until Kral turned up dead one night in the kitchen, his head bashed in with Art's knobby wooden steak mallet. Now it was up to Art to blend in and avoid the cops until he could find out who the real killer was -- or get sent to the stir for good.



Original Version

Dear Evil Editor,

Leland Blakely is a loner, an outcast, and a complete misfit. Everyone at school knows that. After all, if he wants friends, why doesn't he try to get to know people? [That makes more sense if you just call him a loner; outcasts and misfits may well want friends.]

When Adam Fargis reads Leland's journal, [Without permission, I assume?] he expects to find pages of rants against the popular kids. Instead, he finds accounts of how Leland actually did try to make friends and get involved in something -- anything. But each plan is labeled a failure, with reasons such as "shyness" or "I blew it [," or "I never shoulda told them about my aspirations to be a suicide bomber]."

Now that he knows Leland isn't the bitter crybaby everyone thinks he is, [Where did anyone get the idea he's a bitter crybaby? What has he been crying about?] Adam is determined to help him out. He and his childhood friend Katrina befriend Leland, and the three of them try "normal people" things: an afternoon at a coffee shop, [That's normal for school kids? I'd go with the mall.] a video game tournament, even tryouts for their school football team. [Katrina tries out for the football team?]

Adam's goal is just to find a place where Leland can fit in. [Preferably a place Adam never goes so he can be rid of this loser.] Leland, on the other hand, seems very comfortable where he is now. Adam must decide whether to continue this friendship as it is, or reveal his ulterior motives [His motive is to help Leland fit in. What are his ulterior motives? The term suggests that Adam wants something out of this relationship that he's kept hidden from Leland so far. Like a date with Leland's hot sister.] just to get Leland off his back. [To get Leland off Adam's back? We need a stronger clue that Leland is an annoyance to Adam. If anything, it's been suggested that Leland would be happier with Adam off his back.]

THE ART OF BLENDING IN is a contemporary young adult novel complete at 60,000 words. The full manuscript is available for request. Thank you for your consideration. [I would consider changing it from blending in to fitting in. Fitting in means being accepted as part of the gang. Blending in suggests not wanting to be noticed, which may be true of some of those who fit in, but not most of them.]

Sincerely,

(Not part of the query: the title comes from a conversation Adam and Leland have, where Adam is arguing that it is possible to blend in without losing your individuality. Leland replies that anyone who could do that is a natural con artist.)



Notes

This works if Leland is a werewolf, but you should probably mention that in the query.

Choose a main character and focus on his problem and what he does about it. If the MC is Leland, the problem is either that he has no friends and wants some or that he is happy where he is now but Adam keeps butting into his life. If the MC is Adam, the problem is either that he feels sorry for Leland and wants to help, or that he can't get rid of Leland now that he's befriended him.

You can probably set up the conflict in three or four sentences. Then you need to tell us what happens. Does something bad happen to someone? Is there a villain? We have the characters, now we need a story to go with them.




Wednesday, June 04, 2014

Face-Lift 1202


Guess the Plot

Pretty Bird

1. His basketball playing career over, Larry Bird returns home to Indiana where he philosophizes on love, life, and what to do about Lance Stephenson.

2. When two twelve-year-old boys break into a pet store at night and release all the dogs from their cages, they think no one will suspect them. But they didn't count on Chester the parrot repeating everything they said in the store. To the cops.

3. Carmen the toucan pines for her home and family in the Amazon rainforest from her cage in the suburbs, shedding her feathers with stress. Ruby the Siamese has no ambition other than to open the cage and get a snack. Timmy doesn't care what happens as long as he can harass Ruby. Can Carmen manipulate the four-legged ones and secure her release before the human on-sells her to the taxidermist?

4. A parrot is loose in Elsa's luxury apartment building. It flies into the ritzy steak house next door, lands on someone's shoulder, and poops on the floor. Everyone watches the parrot get stabbed to death by a masked man in black. It's the Pretty Bird killer again!

5. When Pretty Bird shows up in the village, Hungry Crow is entranced. But before he even has one date with her, she's murdered. With no detective skills, Hungry Crow's only hope of solving the crime is to get a shaman to bring Pretty Bird back to life so he can ask her who murdered her.

6. She was a pretty bird; most birds were. But there was more to life than just being pretty. What about fulfillment, and romance? What about that studly cock next door? With him at her side she’d be the top biddy in the barnyard. And that ain’t chicken feed…




Original Version

When Pretty Bird came to the village, all the people loved her. The young men tried to woo her with gifts of game, corn, [Pretty Bird, I brought you this dead moose and 3 ears of corn. Now will you date me?] jewelry or moccassins, [moccasins] but she ignored them. Instead she remained a modest, quiet [boring] young woman who seemed to keep to herself. ["Seemed" meaning she wasn't really keeping to herself?]

Black Elk, a hunter, and Hungry Crow, a young man, both have eyes for her. [I suspect everyone in the tribe does some hunting, and "a young man" tells us nothing new, as you've already said it was the young men who were wooing her, so drop the descriptors.] One night Black Elk meets with her and an affair starts. But while he is off hunting, someone murders Pretty Bird. [I see no reason the first paragraph needs to be in past tense. For that matter, I see no reason we can't dump the first paragraph and open: Black Elk and Hungry Crow both have eyes for Pretty Bird, the modest, quiet woman who just moved into their village.]

Hungry Crow wants to find out who killed the beautiful young woman, so he follows eagles, visions and the Road to see a cacique, a shaman-chief, who can help. He is given the things [A less-vague word like "spells" or "talismans" would be better than "things." Or you could be truly specific and say The cacique gives him a buffalo ear, an eagle feather and some corn, along with instructions on how to restore....] necessary to restore Pretty Bird to life. Will this bring him love--or will he unleash a great horror? [If our goal is to sell books, I recommend unleashing the great horror.]

Drawing from archeology, Puebloean folklore, and my own experiences in the Southwest, "Pretty Bird: A Tale of Mesa Verde" is a novella. It will appeal to those with an interest in our Southwestern heritage.

Sample chapters are attached. Thank you!

Note--the people of Mesa Verde were the ancestors of the people living in various Pueblos today. They do not call themselves 'Anasazi', because that means 'ancient enemy'. The Navaho who drove them from their lands call them that, and unfortunately archeology does, too. Modern Pueblo Indians find the word insulting. [Whether that's a note to EE or part of the query, it feels weird insofar as the term "Anasazi" hasn't been mentioned.] [Also, there must be a reason spellcheck has twice let you get away with spelling archaeology without the second "a," but I'd go with the more common (in the US, at least) spelling.]


Notes

Where did Pretty Bird come from? She just shows up alone one day, moves in, and ignores everyone? Did such things happen in this culture?

If it were Black Elk trying to find out who killed Pretty Bird, then we would have a potential suspect in Hungry Crow. But with Hungry Crow investigating the murder that was committed while Black Elk was off hunting, we have nothing. Why isn't Black Elk the one trying to solve the murder? He's the one who finally won Pretty Bird's heart. Or was it just a one-night stand?

"Hungry Crow" sounds like an insulting name. Not as insulting as "Anasazi," but still...

On the other hand, Hungry Crow sounds like the main character. Do we even need Black Elk in the query? We could just open: When Hungry Crow's latest crush Pretty Bird is murdered, he consults a shaman, who shows him how to bring his true love back to life but also warns him that she could come back as a fire-breathing wolverine.

If you don't want to go the horror route, you could make this the start of a mystery series with Hungry Crow as your detective. He solves crimes with his amazing tracking skills. And he has a French sidekick named Hercule Pueblo.

What we need is more plot details. Does Hungry Crow try the shaman's method? What goes wrong? What does he do about it? Is someone trying to obstruct the "investigation"? Did anyone have a motive for murdering Pretty Bird?


Monday, June 02, 2014

Confession 3


Public Confessor
I'm a serial killer.

Okay, I know that sounds bad, but that's because we get a lot of bad press. Plus, there are so many TV shows trying to make their serial killers more creatively insane than the serial killers on other TV shows (You've got Criminal Minds, Those Who Kill, Hannibal, Dexter, and I could go on and on) that you could get the impression all serial killers are geniuses.

Anyway, I'm like Dexter in that I try to only kill other serial killers, so you could say I'm one of the good guys. True, unlike Dexter, I don't have access to police records to help me determine who's truly bad, so I have to go on instinct. If someone strikes me as a possible serial killer, I don't ask questions. I take him out. If I've been right even a third of the time, I figure I've saved more innocent lives than I've taken.

By the way, this "Public Confessor" blog feature is like going to confession in a church, right? Not that I've ever gone to confession, but the rule is you can't reveal anything I say to anyone, right? It's just between you and me and God? Can I trust you? Actually, those muttonchops are rather disturbing. A serial killer would probably grow muttonchops like those.


Penance: You need a vacation somewhere far away, like North Korea. My treat.


Send your true confession as a comment or to evledtr@gmail.com