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Ann Robinson, Michael Morris, Joel and Sharman Ramsey at Bogey's Bar in Defuniak Springs |
Chautauqua in DeFuniak Springs turned out to be everything we had anticipated. The beautiful setting drew visitors from near by and far away. Members of Chautauqua as distant as New York enjoyed the lovely setting. Joe and I enjoyed supper with my friend and one of my favorite authors, Michael Morris. Unfortunately Michael's beautiful wife Melanie, an artist, had to attend a show and could not be with us for supper at Bogey's Bar in the historic DeFuniak Hotel. Michael's new book, The Man in the Blue Moon, once again demonstrates his remarkable gift for storytelling. The novel takes place in Apalachicola.
Ann Robison, once owner of the DeFuniak Hotel and a visionary behind the revival of the DeFuniak Chautauqua, joined us for supper.
I want to share with you some of the best direction for improving a manuscript that I have ever received. Holly McClure (http://www.HollySullivanMcClure.com) of Sullivan Maxx literary agency generously offered this advice. Perhaps some of you will find this as helpful as it has been for me.
I sent Holly the manuscript for the first book in the
Partyin' on the Plantation series
Deja Vu All Over Again. Michael Morris dubbed the series "Murder She Wrote meets the Ya Ya Sisterhood."
Dear Sharman:
Thanks for sending this. I'm looking at the first pages to see if I
spot any problem areas. I'll mark them and make comments. Editors don't like to
buy a book that looks like a lot of work, so we need to change anything that
gives them that impression. Right away, I saw passive verbs and phrasing that
could be re written to meet the criteria. Has, had been, were, could have, etc,
all serve to get a ms kicked out so we want to eliminate those. Also, show,
don't tell is important. Never tell what a character does when you can show the
action. ie, she cried, becomes tears pooled in her eyes, or something like that.
Any word that ends with ly, should be rare. Suddenly, instantly, and words like
that, annoy editors who work in publishing houses, and we don't want them
annoyed. Before you pay an editor to work on this, go over it and change these
simple things and it will give us a better shot at selling it to a good
publisher, but we have to get them to read past the first few pages and get into
the story. They won't if they see passive writing and lots of telling. That only
gets you a rejection letter and we don't want that. One other thing, you need a
good hook to open the story, which you have with the promise of genetic memory,
but the story and the writing have to live up to that promise. If you go from
that to what sounds like a meet cute romance, it takes the edge off. Keep up
the power of the promise by suggesting that he is part of that concept, s
feeling of familiarity, or something like that. Sounds like I'm ripping this
book apart, but I just want it to be the best it can be. I made comments and
highlighted some of the passive verbs so you could see what I mean. You have a
good story and writing talent, so let's make the most of it by polishing this to
at shine. See what you think of the comments below.
Holly
ByH
S. J. B. Ramsey
Prologue
[I removed the passive start because editors put the ms down when
they see that]
The theory of genetic memory confronted me in a way that made me
pay attention when I experienced it myself. This strange story remained locked
in my subconscious until the FedEx truck ran into Kevin and me at the
intersection. It killed my husband of 38 years and and passed me through every
day of our lives.
[pov issue. She was unconscious so she could know
what was happening with the funeral so I suggest something like this.] I
regained consciousness after my children cremated my husband and held a memorial
service in his family’s plot at the city cemetery. They poured his ashes into
the hollow marble obelisk I described to them long ago, requesting that it
hold all of our ashes with our names and the dates of our death inscribed on the
side. My name was already
there below “Beloved wife of Kevin” awaiting only the date of my death, which
they had anticipated would be soon. The bagpiper
they had engaged to play
“Amazing Grace” at their father’s service was on retainer to play at mine.
Then I surprised them and woke up. But, from that
point forward, my life was
totally changed.
Chapter
1
His
voice stopped me dead. as
I rolled my cart down the pansy aisle in the garden center at Home Depot.
He spoke in
a It was one of those deep Johnny Cash
voices that compelled me
to follow it to the next aisle. I knew that
voice.[suggestion, make him part of the memory, or relate to his role in the
colonoscopy. .
Compelled to follow the voice to the next aisle, I nonchalantly maneuvered the
corner to the next aisle caressing an aspidistra. And then, my eyebrows shot up
and my eyelids popped open. I forgot to breathe. His jeans were so tight I could see the
bulge of his wallet. A faded Creedence Clearwater t-shirt stretched
snugly across well-developed pects. My eyes continued upward to note his silver
hair. I sighed. The man’s assets were of Richard Gere quality…
clearly a gem of the first order as any Regency romance writer would clearly
recognize.
Probably just eye candy, I thought, dismissing the
man, and I started to push my cart down another aisle.
In
that distinctive gravelly voice he said, “My late wife used to do all the
gardening. But she died a year and a half ago Lately, I have discovered gardening.
Working up a good sweat in the sunshine is great for producing endorphins and
makes you feel so much better.”
“Late wife,” he’d said. The garden lady
looked appropriately sympathetic. My heart fluttered. A widower who still loved
his wife. I knew how lonely that could be. And I was a Master Gardener in
need of volunteer hours. So I plucked up the courage to offer suggestions.
Besides being a gardener, I discovered that Gavin
Crenshaw was a genealogist
--just like me -- and owned Annie Crenshaw’s (eighth cousin, twice removed)
cookbook and family history book - also just like me.[reveal
this in conversation. Show, don't tell.] You can find out a lot about a
man eating hot dogs outside the automatic doors at Home Depot. It wasn’t until then that he told
me that he had been the anesthesiologist for my colonoscopy and as soon as I
started giving the Latin names for the flowers I suggested, he remembered me
because I talked about flowers while under the anesthesia.[[ all this could
be very effective in conversation. Use it to build your characters, show sense
of humor, paint a picture of your people, and advance your
plot.]
I
returned home girlishly giddy from Home Depot after giving Dr. Gavin Crenshaw of
the Crenshaw County Crenshaws my phone number. My heart pounded just remembering! I had been going with the romantic
Fabio type - a pirate, a soldier, an alligator wrestler -- as heroes in my
novels. That was the fatal
flaw to my writing I now realized. What an epiphany! Write about what you know,
the How To Write book had
said.
With
Kevin’s death, our hospital bills, and the precipitous drop in the economy that
ate away at our savings and investments came the pressing need for me to bring
in some income.[again, something you can show. have her get
bills and worry or something like that. Stating facts doesn't get us into her
mind so we care.] That had
forced me back to my computer and another try at the career I had always dreamed of having but
always took back seat to my husband and children’s needs. I no longer had the family health insurance
that Kevin had always
provided and I still had
recurring headaches as the result of my concussion.[something like, my head throbbed, the lingering result of the
concussion that rendered me unconscious for weeks] Each of the seventeen
romances
I’d written I wrote before Kevin died had been rejected.
Perhaps eighteen was the
charm. Surely I had all
the losers out of my system.
My corrected manuscript now reads:
PARTYIN’
ON THE PLANTATION
DÉJÀ
VU ALL OVER AGAIN
By
S. J. B. Ramsey
Prologue
The theory of genetic memory confronted me in a way that
made me pay attention. I experienced it myself. This strange story remained
locked in my subconscious until the FedEx truck ran into Kevin and me at the
intersection we passed through every day of our lives. It killed my husband of
38 years.
I regained consciousness after my children cremated my
husband and held a memorial service in his family’s plot at the city cemetery.
They poured his ashes into the hollow marble obelisk I described to them long
ago, requesting that it hold all of our ashes with our names and the dates of
our death inscribed on the side. Already engraved on the obelisk “Beloved wife
of Kevin” awaited only the date of my death, which they anticipated soon. The
bagpiper they engaged to play “Amazing Grace” at their father’s service
remained on retainer to play at mine.
I surprised them and woke up. But, from that point forward,
my life changed.
Chapter 1
His voice stopped me dead in the pansy aisle in the garden
center at Home Depot. He spoke in an oddly
familiar, very deep Johnny Cash voice that compelled me to follow it to
the next aisle. Drawn by the voice, I maneuvered the corner to the next aisle
caressing an aspidistra. My eyebrows shot up and my eyelids popped open. I
forgot to breathe. His wallet bulged through a rip in his worn jeans. A faded Grateful
Dead t-shirt stretched snugly across well-developed pects. My eyes
continued upward to note his silver hair. I sighed. With assets of Richard Gere
quality, this gem of the first order could inspire any Regency romance writer. I recalled the cover of the novel I purchased for inspiration at the
thrift store that lay on my bedside table.
Probably just eye
candy, I thought, dismissing the man. I rubbed my temples to ward off a
headache. I started to push my cart down another aisle.
Then, in that
distinctive gravelly voice he said, “My late wife used to do all the gardening.
She died a year and a half ago. I discovered gardening out of necessity. I
found working up a good sweat in the sunshine is great for producing endorphins
and makes you feel better.”
“Late
wife,” he said. The garden lady looked appropriately sympathetic. My heart
fluttered. A widower who still loved his wife. I knew how lonely that could be.
And as a Master Gardener in need of volunteer hours, I plucked up the courage
to offer suggestions.
He set the flowers
I recommended in his cart, but when, embarrassed by my boldness, I turned to
leave, he invited me for a hot dog outside the sliding doors.
“I don’t eat these often,” he said. “I just bought a cookbook written by one of my cousins and, now that my wife is gone, out of necessity I
have learned the joy of cooking.”
“Annie Crenshaw,
right? I also bought the cookbook you’re talking about. I’ve got Crenshaws in
my genealogy files, as well. Annie is my eighth cousin, twice removed.”
“Much closer than
that for me,” he said with a smile that could make a girl’s knees go weak.
Then he said, “I
must tell you that we met before, though you won’t remember it. I administered
the anesthesia for your colonoscopy. As
soon as you started giving the Latin names for the flowers, I recognized you
because you named those flowers while under the anesthesia.”
I returned home
embarrassed but girlishly giddy from Home Depot after giving Dr. Gavin Crenshaw
of the Crenshaw County Crenshaws my phone number. I decided hearing him speak
during the procedure accounted for the familiarity of his voice. My heart
pounded just remembering! I wrote romantic Fabio types - a pirate, a soldier,
an alligator wrestler -- as heroes in my novels. I now saw the fatal flaw in my writing. What
an epiphany! Write about what you know, the How To Write book said.
The mail box
at home contained more hospital bills. With Kevin’s death and the precipitous drop in
the economy our savings and investments plummeted and with that decline came
the pressing need for me to bring in some income. That forced me back to my
computer and another try at the career I dreamed of having but always took back
seat to my husband and children’s needs. With Kevin’s death, the family health
insurance ceased yet the recurring headaches as the result of my concussion
that rendered me unconscious for weeks remained.
Seventeen rejected
romances lined my shelves. Number eighteen promised to be the charm.
“Man in a
Muddle in the Middle of the Mums,” I typed.
“It took Edison six-thousand different tries to find the right
filament for a light bulb,” I said aloud to myself, looking at the title of my
newest effort on the computer screen before me.
As I sat plotting
an imaginary world for a certain best seller, I noticed the red light flashing
on my answering machine. I pressed the button and heard the pain in my sister’s
voice.
My heart clenched
when I heard her say, “Gil died an hour ago. Heart attack. The funeral home
will take him to Palmer for a funeral tomorrow at 2 PM.” For a moment I felt
the same paralysis as when they told me Kevin died.
She held the line open for a moment longer
saying nothing and then clicked off. I tried to call her back. Tears cascaded
down my face, for her loss, and for mine. I’d been there myself not that long
ago.
_____________________________________________________
Using Waverly, their grandparents’ plantation house, as a gimmick, Dabney and Sophia finagle
their way onto the
Dishing It Network as a lark and wind up stars with
their very own show,
Partyin’ on the Plantation--though they cannot
cook!
On top of the world with her successful show and new multicultural
group of friends, trouble stalks Dabney presenting mysteries that this dabbler
at much master of little must survive long enough to solve. Start with Waverly
plantation in central Alabama, season with a multicultural cast of friends and
family, add a dash of the paranormal with the ingredients of a genetic memory,
toss in drug dealers and a psychotic serial killer in this and a previous life
while spicing it up with gentlemen friends in shades of gray and you have
Book One of the
Partyin’ on the Plantation series:
Déjà vu All
Over Again, a mystery of 90,000 words.