Posts Tagged ‘sentence’

Posted by XanderRichards at 15 March 2012

Category: News

Today—which is, by the way, the Ides of March—I had news from a friend in the United Kingdom from whom I sought advice when writing the action for the finale of my spy novel.  I needed to know what would be a good rifle to feature in the book and Guy Wood was incredibly helpful.  He also kindly made sure that I knew how to delineate between what is a bullet, a cartridge and so forth, commenting to me at the time that a book he’d read was somewhat spoiled by the author’s lack of knowledge in this area.  So no worries, we got it sorted and one of Guy’s favorite rifles makes a brief but definitely significant appearance in the finale.

Now, Guy’s website is a brilliant tech resource for firearm enthusiasts, target shooters, hunters and the like.  But upon visiting it recently I discovered that he now does book reviews.  I therefore asked if he would be kind enough to review my novel when it’s published and guess what?  He said yes!  I therefore think that the least he deserves is a mention in my blogger postings and I plan to include his website in a Resources page which will go live after the novel becomes available.  But for now, here’s Guy’s awesome website, Rifles In The UK.  Please go and check it out!

I met with Jon the artist today and he kindly gave me a whole bunch of materials he’d worked on to ‘rehearse’, if you like, for the cover painting.  Now, I find this stuff absolutely fascinating, so I think what I might do at some point is to make a video of the ‘evolution of the cover’ and morph between the different iterations.  I think it would be fascinating to watch how it changes.

If you’re new to my website but not social media, why don’t you go and befriend me on Facebook or follow my inane ramblings on Twitter?  Both of them now get my Question Of The Day, a little feature I’ve started doing for fun.  Each day a new (and hopefully challenging) espionage-related question is posted.  There are no prizes right now, it’s just a bit of fun.  But why don’t you have a go?

Finally, did you hear that the Encyclopedia Britannica is to cease of publication as a piece of printed literature?  That’s tragic!  I suppose like most things the online revolution has affected it, because it’ll only be available in future via that outlet.  Shame but, hey, they call it progress.  I’m not entirely sure I agree.

Roger and out, X.

Posted by XanderRichards at 13 March 2012

Category: News

Great news!  The copyrighting of the cover painting of my spy novel happened today.  So the image is ready to go.  All I have to get is a letter of permission from Jon the artist (hopefully less than a thousand words LOL) so that this blogger doesn’t end up behind bars.  I’m not great with legalese, so I’m using a broker to take care of such things for me, rather than creating a lot of litter myself by filling the forms in wrongly.

I recently had a discussion with a colleague who asserted his opinion that copyrighting is going to die out and that this was a sign of the times.  I’m not sure I disagree.  I think in the long term it’s certainly possible.  Let’s face it – all over the world people are infringing others’ copyrights and some seem to have a very cavalier, “catch me if you can” attitude.  Nonetheless I’ve heard of several successful prosecutions in recent years.  Who doesn’t have a music MP3 of a commercial market record on their computer somewhere?  Anyway, I think copyrights will stay as they are for a good few years yet, so I’m slotting into that bracket.  I am still hoping to be able to announce the tile of my espionage book by the end of next week!

Changing the subject in a hard left curve, I am so grateful to live in Saskatchewan.  When I lived in Europe I was always forgetting the time change, daylight savings as they call it here.  I remember my embarrassment at turning up to places either an hour early or an hour late, depending on the time of year.  Now I suppose we’re all so engaged in social media that we’re unlikely to miss it thanks to many online reminders.  But here in Saskatchewan we don’t have to remember it and I’m really glad about that!  I’m sure the spies in my novel would have some clever spy gadgets which would figure out the time change for them, but maybe an ordinary GPS receiver will do that, I don’t know.

So anyway, that’ll do for now but I can’t deny I’m excited.  I don’t want to say too much, but Steve’s internet marketing tech is starting to work amazingly well.  Shhh… don’t whisper a word!

Roger and out, X.

Posted by XanderRichards at 13 March 2012

Category: News

Okay so here we are… it’s mid-March and I am buzzing around like a blue-assed fly trying to get everything finished and put into place.

Thank God I took the call to have one last editing pass through the book because I’ve actually been finding a couple of tiny errors.  These have been fixed, so far, as I’m about three quarters of the way through the chapters.  My spies are looking—and reading—better than ever before and I’m very pleased with how it’s turning out.

In other news, Steve my internet marketing – tech – social media entrepreneur / guru / chief cook and bottle washer has been driving traffic to my Twitter feed.  Goodness knows how he does it, but I’ve now got more than 600 folk following me on there.  Amazing!  Apparently, once you get to ten thousand, they offer you all sorts of mad incentives and advertising deals.  Cool – I’m 1/17th of the way there!

Okay I’m going to go out on a limb and say I will be able to announce the title NEXT WEEK!  So stay tuned – the best laid plans of mice and men being what they are!  Whilst you’re at it, go ‘like’ my author page on Facebook please!

That’s all from this blogger for today.  Roger and out, X.

Posted by XanderRichards at 4 March 2012

Category: News

I had a short discussion recently about the very start of a novel, that very first sentence, line or paragraph.  My nephew Zac drew my attention to the inaugural line of Philip Reeve’s ‘Mortal Engines‘, which is “It was a dark, blustery afternoon in spring, and the city of London was chasing a small mining town across the dried-out bed of the old North Sea.”   What a fascinating way to draw one’s reader into the story.  There is a clear meteorological description to which the reader can relate and which can be easily imagined, followed by something totally abstract (towns and cities which move?!) and then some information; the North Sea has dried up, and it happened historically.  All of this combines to lure the reader in by letting them know that there is something interesting here; so let’s explore it.

The very clever and (to me) highly useful James Thayer has put an excellent article about this very subject on his superb blog, Novelpro.net.  Thayer presents a number of examples from notable works including ‘Agincourt‘ by Bernard Cornwell and Alexander Dumas’ ‘The Three Musketeers‘.   Although he doesn’t cite it, I think my favorite is this, from Max Shulman’s ‘Sleep Till Noon‘:  “Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang! Four shots ripped into my groin and I was off on the greatest adventure of my life!”   Sounds painful!

For a long time the first line of my espionage novel was, I confess, rather bland.  So I changed it.  That line is still in the text, but in a place where its blandness becomes informative and part of the telling.  I recall a story about another author—whose name slips my mind for the moment—that received a rather discouraging rejection from a publisher.  They changed the first and last pages, sent it back and got an immediate acceptance!  So I’ve got a new first line and, whilst I don’t think it’s really up there with Reeve and Shulman, I think it’s good.  My spy novel simply begins with the words “Why do I have to kill him?” — a ‘death’ sentence.

Roger and out, X.