Character Exercise: Vehicle

Day 3: What vehicle does your MC drive?

Sadie doesn’t have a car, mostly by choice. When she left Miami and entered recovery for her addiction, she sold almost all of her belongings and moved in with her grandparents. A year later, when she moved up to St. Augustine, she rented a U-Haul and got herself there that way. She has a poppy-red vintage bicycle to get herself around beach side — she lives with her sister, her mother lives a mile away, and her uncle’s restaurant is just two miles up the beach, so it’s easy to get to where she needs to go. If she needs to get somewhere off the island, she can usually hitch a ride from a family member or friend.

Character Exercise: 3 Free Things

Day 2: Your MC can get 3 free things off the internet. What do they pick?

  1. A honking big wheel of cheese. Sadie’s favorite food is cheese, so she would find the biggest wheel of cheese she can get.

  2. A trip to Scotland. Sadie’s father was Scottish, and he asked to have his ashes scattered over his ancestral land when he died. Sadie would take her mother and sister to Scotland to visit his family and take his ashes home.

  3. A beach house. When Sadie moves back to St. Augustine Beach, she moves into her twin sister’s condo. And though she loves Rose, she doesn’t really enjoy living with her. She’s always wanted to live on the beach, so she’d buy herself a little stilt house on the beach and enjoy her solitude.

Character Exercise: Enemies & Rivals

In August, I’m preparing for working on a new project this fall by doing a character building challenge on Instagram. I will be starting the first book in a contemporary mystery series set in St. Augustine Beach, Florida. The sleuth is twenty-something Sadie Lennox, who moves home to the beach to help her uncle run his diner. Her father, who worked as chef at the diner, is recently deceased, leaving his wife and daughters to grieve him. Sadie is a recovering social media addict, and she’s trying to build a better life for herself while also trying to mend her broken relationships with her family.

The point of the challenge is to get to know the character better, and since Sadie is brand new to me, she’s a perfect candidate.

Day 1: Who are your MC’s enemies and rivals?

As part of her social media addiction recovery, Sadie is learning how to develop positive relationships and avoid toxicity. Part of this is letting go of past grudges and negative influences. After graduating from college, Sadie used her marketing degree to go into advertising, but she eventually found herself a small amount of fame as an Instagram influencer. Many of the relationships that Sadie established during this time ended up having detrimental effects on her. One of the first things she did in recovery was to sever all ties with the majority of the people she’d once considered her friends. She now realizes that SHE was the one that most people would have considered an enemy or rival, and she intends to learn how to be a better friend going forward.

I can’t reveal much about the enemies that Sadie will make over the course of the series — they’re mysteries, after all! I plan for the series to be eight books, so that means that Sadie will encounter at least eight murderers who will definitely consider her an enemy by the time she’s done with them.

#indieauthorMAYketers Day 15

Today’s photo challenge prompt is Mood Board.

I’m not making mood boards for Widow’s Weeds, because it’s pretty much done other than final edits, and I don’t need a mood board for it right now. I usually use mood boards as inspiration for what I’m currently drafting or rewriting.

So today, you’re getting a sneak peek of Book 2 in the Motosu Mystery series, which is currently in the 2nd draft stage.

jewels of their souls mood board.jpg

What I Write

The first stories I remember writing were about horses. I was seven, and I was obsessed with horses. (I am still slightly obsessed with horses, but I am more practical about what it takes to own one, so none of that for me right now.) I read many MANY horse-related books, and that was how I discovered The Chronicles of Narnia. A Horse and His Boy is still my favorite Narnia story. I started writing fantasy because of it.

Once I started writing, I didn’t stop. I wrote at every opportunity, even in the middle of class. Especially math class. I became skilled at not getting caught writing (or reading) in class. Those early stories were short and not very nuanced, but they were practice, and every writer needs to practice. In middle school, I started writing poetry, but it was never something I was serious about.

By the time I was in high school, I knew I wanted to be a writer. It was the only thing I could imagine myself doing as an adult. I was encouraged to write, but as it came time for me to go to college, I wasn’t encouraged to be a writer. I was told all the things most young writers are told: “you won’t make money writing,” “writing’s not a real job,” “teaching would be a better career.”

When I went to college, I planned to become an English teacher. I majored in English and Secondary Education, because that was what seemed like the appropriate thing to do. Except I didn’t like my Education classes, and when my counselor asked me why I wanted to be a teacher, I told her I didn’t. I just wanted to write.

And she said, “So write. We offer Creative Writing courses, do that instead.”

So I did. I dropped the Secondary Education part of my degree and stuck to English, Psychology, and Creative Writing courses (with the odd History and Anthropology course thrown in). I took part in my first National Novel Writing Month in 2003 - I wrote 16,000 words, which did not make me a winner, but it was the most I had ever written on a story before, and I was happy.

I wrote fantasy almost exclusively through my 20’s, aside from an interlude in my first year of college during which I wrote Star Wars fanfiction. I read much more than fantasy, and I regularly watched Law & Order and In the Heat of the Night, my introduction to the world of mysteries. I didn’t like reading police procedurals, though, preferring cozies and historicals, but I didn’t think much about writing them. Then, while I was living in Japan, a student introduced me to Agatha Christie. I almost immediately stopped writing straight fantasy and switched over to murder mysteries.

I wrote my first murder mystery during NaNoWriMo in 2009. It was a steampunk mystery set in the latter part of the Meiji period in Japan. I was inspired by the recent release of Sherlock Holmes and the country I was living in at the time. I wouldn’t have considered myself a fan of steampunk - and I’m not sure I would now either. I’m not all that interested in the tech, more the setting and the tone, the aesthetic. That story has evolved over time, and now it’s more “alternate history” than straight-up steampunk.

It was the first novel I ever finished, the first one I ever edited, the first one I ever let other people read. Next year, it will be the first book I self-publish.

Pretty much everything I write now is a historical mystery, alternate history or otherwise. I do have half a manuscript for a cozy mystery that might see more development in the future, but for now, I’m sticking with historical mysteries.

My first mystery series is alternate history, set in Japan in 1907. The first book has recently gone through its fifth draft and has been handed over to a handful of beta readers. It will be ready to publish in the summer of 2020.

I am currently working on a draft for Book Two, which should be finished before this year’s NaNoWriMo, when I plan to get the first 50,000 words of Book Four. (What about Book Three? I already have a half-finished draft for that, and since I like to start new projects in November, I’m saving the rest of Book Three for next year.)

I have done some work for other historical mystery series, but I’ll be saving those for 2021 and beyond.