Today we’re joined by romantic suspense author Nancy Sartor
who believes a novel should enlarge understanding, raise awareness,
plead for the less fortunate, define a better way of life, and provide a
personal story so poignant it brings tears to every eye, contributing something
of substance to the reader. Learn more about Nancy and her books
at her website.
The Day I Was Challenged to Write
Fast
Despite the clutter that seems to follow me around, people tell me I am
a perfectionist. I’ll take that label to explain why it takes me
an hour to get down a grocery list that is burdened with notes and drawings.
If I were a short-story writer, this need to make my work so clean that an
editor despairs of finding something to correct might make sense. I am a
novelist. When I “tighten” my work, it somehow gets longer. The best advice is
to make every word count, leave none untouched, dig into it until your eyes
bleed.
Great advice, but if I’m going to publish more than two more books in my
expected lifetime, I need to be moving on, not bleeding from my eyeballs.
Imagine my laughter when my publisher asked me to write a Holiday novel.
This was the first of June 2016. I’d just completed Blessed Curse and sent it to her. This Holiday novel was due in the
early fall. I spent quite a while laughing and trying to phrase my response.
“Are you kidding me? I’m the slowest writer on the North American continent and
you want a novel by early fall?”
She’d offered me a one-sentence suggestion that ended with, “or
something.” I stopped laughing long enough to re-read her email and somewhere
in that six seconds, The Muse popped up and said, “We can do this.”
“Right,” I said. “I know how we
do things. You dictate a wonderful first four chapters and go on vacation while
I’m sweating blood to make chapter five make sense with the rest.”
“Yeah,” she said, “but this time we’ve got a direction.”
Unlike, apparently, all those other times.
Here’s the thing about my publisher. Unhappy with the way publishers
treated their authors, she began her own publishing firm. A native New Yorker,
she approached the job with her usual “clear obstacles with a sledge hammer”
manner, hired an excellent couple of editors and got going. She offers writers
a chance to grow in their craft, doesn’t require they take the same cast of
characters and make up new stories for them, doesn’t require they write what
she wants. She encourages them to write what they want and does all she can to
support them while they do.
In short, she’s a keeper.
It had, at that point, been two years since my last publication. I was
“perfecting” Blessed Curse all that
time. With the Holiday novel, she’d offered me a challenge although she’d not
stated it as a challenge, more like an opportunity. I decided to try it.
A character danced on to my page, a kick-ass lawyer from Miami with a
smart mouth and plenty of determination. She was young, rich, powerful and happy.
She’d been victimized by an ass of a boyfriend who’d stolen her passwords and
used them to steal her money.
The last thing she wanted was a man in her life.
The male lead was filled by an architect from San Diego who liked women
just fine, but had no time for commitment.
Somewhere behind them a couple of shadows lurked, their need so apparent
it made my heart hurt. Further back still, a darker shadow waited, her intent
not apparent, her need deeply hidden.
I worked up an outline sort of thingie, which is as close to pre-writing
as I get, and sent it to my publisher. She liked it, but she didn’t send a
contract. I accepted that as a further challenge. She was waiting to see if I
could pull this off.
By mid-July, I had a novel. It was long enough and had the structure to
be a novel. I emailed her that I had it, gave her the word count and told her
she couldn’t have a peep at it until the absolute deadline. She sent the
contract the next day.
My perfectionist tendencies, having taken a back seat to my need to
prove myself, returned with a vengeance. Between mid-July and the end of
October, I edited the novel every day.
My eyeballs bled as I considered every word, tightened every paragraph, checked
every fact.
I delivered it on the last possible day.
The first editor returned a note saying she’d never seen a cleaner manuscript.
The second editor was so impressed, she sent me a sweet note opining that Christmas Across Time was an excellent
example of how to write a romance novel.
Obviously, my first foray into writing a novel within a reasonable time
was a success. Having thus pulled off what I considered a minor miracle, I
returned to my newest manuscript, a paranormal about a group of immortals. I’d
done it once, right? I could do it again.
I am now into the third iteration of The
Risen. I have (finally) a plot I can live with. The characters haven’t
changed since I first had this idea many years ago. One of the problems is I
have no real deadline for The Risen.
The rest I will lay at the feet of my “perfectionism.”
Bones Along the Hill
A decade-old mystery, a
power-mad enemy and his human-trafficking ring stand in the way of the hopes
and dreams of funeral home facial restorationist Neva Oakley. TO THE BONE Neva
Oakley is a funeral facial restorationist with a legendary skill at making the
dead look alive. But for all her talent, she can never bring back Gray
Ledbetter, her first love, who took his own life ten years ago.
Davis Pratt, too, is consumed.
Long ago his younger brother disappeared, and Davis won’t give up hope. Perhaps
that’s why he and Neva are such a good couple. Or perhaps that’s why they can’t
move forward. Then the search leads them to the Oakley cemetery and a murder
tied to a human trafficking ring. Suddenly, impossible crimes threaten both
family and friends, crimes that cannot be ignored. Not even the Nashville PD
can keep Neva safe, but if she and Davis succeed, together they just might
solve all their mysteries and free each other to embrace their future.
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You're characters sound intriguing, Nancy. Enjoyed your guest post.
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