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Signs of Portents – Author Commentary Part 2

October 3, 2016 By Lou

Editing a novel is a tricky process. There’s the story you’ve come up with and put together over many months. And then there’s the story that needs to be told within that story. What sells the arc of a character? How do you drive it home for your reader? How does it impact future books in the series? All become very important questions over the course of the editing process.

To me, there was something missing in Signs of Portents for the longest time. A player that, while minor in the novel, would come to play a larger role in events as the series played out. In my mind, at least. Draft after draft went by until it finally dawned on me who I was missing in the work.

Rufus Mathers.

He shows up in a single chapter in the novel. (Chapter 23 for those playing at home.) Just one. But by including him as a physical presence in the book his impact is felt throughout the work.

editing processWhy Mathers?

I needed a foil. I needed a face to stand against Loren and the way things had been done in the past. Someone to hate Loren for the mistakes made during his previous stint at the Portents Police Department. Someone with authority and someone with power over how Loren and, by association, Soriya could operate in the city. The notion of Standish, the troubles in Loren’s past were seeded but there was no one actually willing to say these things out loud from any place of authority.

Mathers came into focus very late in the game to fill this role and in doing so also provided the perfect place to give Captain Ruiz more time on the page.

Counterpoint to Ruiz

I knew Ruiz needed more to play with during Signs of Portents. He’s the Walter Skinner of the cast (for all you X-Files fans out there) and there needed to be more room for him to strut his stuff. The inclusion of Mathers, and the sudden creation of the events in Chapter 23, the reader gets to see Ruiz take center stage.

We follow Ruiz while he defends Loren’s actions as well as his own for bringing him back into the fold. We learn the power struggle between the two men. One wanted the other’s job and one just wanted to do the job.

It also allowed me to show Ruiz’s doubts about Loren, his fears in putting it all on the line for the man barely surviving. His doubts become the readers and it becomes Loren’s job to put them at ease.

Ruiz down the line

By setting up the work dynamic with Mathers during the editing process I was able to open up some avenues down the line. The reader gets to learn more about Loren’s blow up with Robert Standish – someone you will be reading about quite a bit in the upcoming Tales from Portents collection – and added more drama to the situation. Having someone to pile on the protagonist always add more fuel to the fire of a plot. I knew Mathers would play the part well, while also keeping Ruiz in check.

More than anything, Ruiz needed to be seen and heard more in the novel. His role in the next full length novel is greatly expanded. Big stuff happens with him. Seeding his story here and watching it grow in Tales from Portents lets the reader see how important he truly is to the overall arc of the Greystone series.

Fingers crossed that it worked.

Thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Editing, Greystone, Signs of Portents, Writing Tagged With: author commentary, editing process, Signs of Portents, Tales from Portents, writing

Signs of Portents – Author Commentary Part 1

September 26, 2016 By Lou

I love bonus materials. From director’s commentaries to deleted scenes to behind the scenes featurettes and gag reels, I find the process of creating a final product fascinating. From conception through drafting through the cutting and editing process. Every decision made, every step taken to get to the end point – a film, television season, comic book event, or even a book.

Something about the transparency of it all appeals to me. I know, I know. I’m sure there is more hidden than shown when cracking open the bonus materials on my favorite Blu-Ray. But even some insight into what went into putting together the story or the effects is better than nothing.

That is my hope here. I spend way too much time in a bubble, making choices – through quite a bit of debate with myself – and when I started this site I promised I would share the decision making process and some of what was left on the cutting room floor with all of my projects.

I will make every attempt to keep any spoilers to a minimum as we go along – though I’m sure you’ve already finished the book and left a glowing review for it anywhere and everywhere, right? 🙂

The Evolution of Signs of Portents

Signs of Portents went through many different forms and incarnations before reaching the shelves. It evolved from a four issue limited series built for comics to a full length novel to the first book in an expansive series of books. With each step choices were made, characters added and cut over time, arcs tweaked and mysteries developed to span multiple books.

Most of the book, surprisingly, survived the process and made it to the final product. There were some items, however, that needed adding and some that desperately needed cutting.

Loren’s Quirks

Greg Loren has quite a few problems in Signs of Portents. He’s obsessed with his wife’s death. He chews gum incessantly when he craves a smoke. It helps him to think but is also used to avoid deeper connections with those around him. He even has a problem with heights thanks to the way his wife passed.

That’s enough to make someone question his sanity, or at least recommend a shrink session twice a week.

The initial drafts of Signs of Portents included yet another quirk in Loren’s personality.

A fear of driving.

author commentaryThere is a scene in the parking garage of the Central Precinct where Loren and Soriya attempt to figure out what direction to head in their investigation. Soriya has the bright idea to head to the Courtyard and the two head over there. Simple. Concise.

Not so originally.

The original version had an exchange that NEVER worked for me and made me cringe every time I read through it. Soriya heads over to parking garage attendant and requisitions a vehicle using Loren’s signature which she’s mastered during their time together. She grabs some keys and tosses them to Loren who promptly tosses them back. The guard in the toll booth style box watches all this and accidentally falls out of his chair offering some comedic relief that was so far out of place it made the scene even worse. But why summarize when you can see the awfulness:

From the fifth draft in 2014:

“What’s the endgame once the pieces are back in place?” Loren asked as they continued for the bright light of the requisition desk by the main door of the parking garage leading to the first floor of the Rath Building.  Gomez, never one of the most ambitious officers in the building, operated the desk with his usual exuberance.  His feet were planted on the desk and leaned back with his hands anchored behind his head as a pillow. 

Soriya stopped before the desk, looking back at Loren.  “We can’t figure that out yet.  We need to know who he is first.”

Without warning, she reached into the small enclosure Gomez occupied and retrieved a set of keys from the wall.  As Gomez tried to stop her in a panic, his feet pushed off the desk where they had rested and his wide frame flew backwards in a loud crash.  With keys in hand, Soriya scrawled Loren’s name on the log.  The quiet detective watched in awe as she matched his signature perfectly, even adding in the small blob of ink that tended to collect at the end of his first name.  Finished, she tossed Loren the keys with a wide grin on her face.  He caught them then tossed them back.

“So we find Mentor, right?”  He asked, knowing the old man wanted in on the case.  His last request continued to echo in his thoughts.  Keep her safe.  The question, of course, made the joy fade from her face as thoughts of the two failures from the last two days played in Technicolor behind her eyelids. 

“No.”  She replied.  She let the answer hang between them for a long moment until Loren nodded, still refusing to take the car keys from Soriya.  Then she smiled wide, ever the child holding onto a secret she couldn’t wait to share.  “He has his methods.  I have mine.”

Loren then has to explain his feelings to the reader during their trek to the Courtyard instead of seeing the city as we go:

Loren knew it was coming, the scowl and the glares that came with it.  He didn’t care.  Throwing the keys to the requisitioned vehicle back on the peg to keep Gomez happy would have been enough incentive for Loren, but the added bonus of not being stuck behind the wheel of a walking death trap was obviously the true motive behind their choice of transportation. 

author commentaryLoren was a city boy, born and raised.  He walked his entire life in Chicago and though he carried a license, driving was never in his comfort zone.  The distractions of the every day driver brought shivers down his spine.  It also came with a side order of pure dread at the lack of control any one person had on the road as they drove.  Traffic was a ticking time bomb waiting to explode and take as many innocent motorists as possible.  Accidents were up 500% over the last decade alone in Portents, with the rise of Bluetooth devices and portable entertainment.  Anything to multi-task side by side with the local commuters. 

Putting his life in the hands of someone that received a paycheck from driving and the threat of an accident ending their career seemed more pragmatic, though if he thought too long about it the holes in his thesis widened greater than a slice of Swiss.

Neither section worked. Both added nothing to overall plot or the arc of Loren. His fear was yet another trait that needed constant monitoring and would never be believed in the modern day world, or tolerated by Ruiz or the police department. It strained plausibility and took the focus from their search for answers and the need to solve the case before them by turning it inward on Loren, something done for quite a few chapters before this exchange.

It needed to go.

Cut. It. Out.

Taking out the quirk and pairing down the scene refocused the characters on the task at hand. It also gave Loren the opportunity to see the city, something necessary to his overall arc for the novel.

“What’s the endgame once the pieces are back in place?” Loren asked.

“We can’t figure that out yet. We need to know who he is first.”

“So we find Mentor, right?” he asked, knowing the old man wanted in on the case. His last request continued to echo in his thoughts. Keep her safe. The question, of course, made the joy fade from her face, the two failures from the last two days playing in Technicolor behind her eyelids.

“No,” she replied. She let the answer hang between them for a long moment until Loren nodded. Then she smiled widely, ever the child holding onto a secret she couldn’t wait to share. “He has his methods. I have mine.”

Short and sweet. The focus on the two players. No movement. Nothing but the case before them.

Soriya’s city.

Since no explanation of Loren’s quirk was necessary it opened the door for a chance to show more of the city through Loren’s eyes and how the pair are so diametrically different in their approach to Portents.

Soriya’s methods were never straightforward. They were never a clear delineation to an end goal. They were, however, revealing. Revealing of the city in which Loren had spent the majority of a decade before deciding to leave for a new start. They were also revealing of his guide and her age. It had not been long since Soriya started her task as the Greystone, a task Loren remained skeptical about despite her obvious talent and enthusiasm for it. She was only twenty-two, barely starting her adult life, and together the two of them had faced monsters in the dark, both human and otherwise. It was not something he would wish on anyone.

It was during these jaunts through Portents that he forgot about all of it—the murder, the darkness of the city, the fear he felt creeping on the periphery. There was only the two of them racing through the night, searching for more than a simple answer. They were finding themselves as well.

He volunteered to drive. She laughed at the notion. It wasn’t her way.

It started with a cab ride to the east, ending at a tram station off Court. While they journeyed in the slow-moving evening tram, Soriya pointed out a street performer surrounded by the late night denizens of the area. He was a contortionist, bending and twisting his body in all manner of shapes for a crowd. Only the two of them caught sight of his blinking eyes. Horizontal instead of vertical. The thin tongue barely slipping out of his lips, forked and wiry like his body.

There was more. The city took on a strange dichotomy, blurring in the darkness between reality and fiction for the former detective. It disturbed him, made him nervous that at every turn there would be something else. Something unknown. Something dangerous. To Soriya, it was the opposite. Her smile grew with each step, with each discovery she was able to share.

This was her world. This was her city.

Advantage – Editing.

I did enjoy the no driving quirk. But it was wrong for the moment and wrong for the character. By focusing on the case in the first instance and the city in the second it strengthened the character arcs for the novel rather than distract with yet another instance of Loren’s wackiness.

In Author Commentary Part 2 – The Addition of Rufus Mathers and the Ticking Clock Factor.

Thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Editing, Greystone, Signs of Portents Tagged With: author commentary, editing process, Greystone, Signs of Portents

The Power of a Book Review

September 5, 2016 By Lou

A short and sweet visit today to celebrate Labor Day. I thought this was the perfect time to send a reminder to everyone already enjoying Signs of Portents or those that have finished to leave a book review on your favorite site.

A book review gives you a voice.

Consumers have more power in the retailer market than ever before. Is this a good thing? Most of the time. I know some people that tend to skew negative because they can. Others tend to go the other way and stay positive as often as possible. I tend to fall in the latter category. The old adage – “If you have nothing good to say about someone, keep your trap shut.” (That was it, wasn’t it?)

It was a lesson I learned trolling on eBay for comic books. A retailer sent me the wrong book by mistake and failed to rectify the situation or even answer my e-mails to work out some compromise. I left a negative review. Suddenly my inbox was flush with panicked protests over my review, a full refund and an apology. This poor retailer feared the reprisal associated with a negative review. I have never posted a negative review since.

Does this mean you should lie?

No. Never. Honest reviews are appreciated and can add to a reader’s search for their next favorite book. What I mention above is that instead of posting a negative review and hurting a person’s potential livelihood, maybe focus on something you actually enjoyed reading and leave a review for that instead. If the book, or the film, or anything else, is of subpar quality the lack of reviews will confirm this for potential buyers.

I would never say give a product five stars or walk away. I would say to weigh leaving a negative review heavily before posting. Not everyone is Amazon. Or Google. Or Microsoft. A negative review for them is a drop in the bucket. For the independents in the world, there is considerable pressure to be great. And we should be great, or as close to greatness as possible.

Again, the lack of reviews will reflect this as well. Without skewing negative.

Turning the tide.

I received an e-mail from Steve Windsor last year. Someone left a negative review on one of his books in the Nine Day Novel series – an interesting approach to writing a book when you have nothing else on your plate and impractical goals, such as myself. The negative reviewer felt the same and rather than dismiss the theory and walk away they left a blistering book review attacking Steve, even though he has proven it to work (at least with his own writing).

Steve sent out a plea to his subscribers for reviews to counteract the negative addition to his page on Amazon. When an author is J.K. Rowling with thousands upon thousands of reviews the negative never slow down the positive. They never gain a foothold. With a small press like Steve? He needed help.

He got it. In spades. That’s the power of a great e-mail list and something I hope to improve upon in the coming year. Until then, however, I want to reach out and ask each and every one of you that has enjoyed Signs of Portents to utilize your power of words and leave a book review.

A big thank you to everyone whose been able to leave a review so far. Keep them coming and I’ll keep writing.

Thanks.

P.S. I am looking into creating some Advance Reader Copies of my next book to front load some reviews on Amazon prior to book launch in February. If anyone is interested in doing this please contact me here.

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Filed Under: Signs of Portents Tagged With: book review, Signs of Portents, Steve Windsor

Signs of Portents – On Sale Everywhere!

August 30, 2016 By Lou

It is official – Signs of Portents is now on sale through finer bookstores and e-retailers around the globe!!

Pay a visit to your local shop and order your copy now!

Signs of Portents Banner

Feel like spreading the love? Head to your library and ask them to add Signs of Portents to their collection! Share a post on social media! Leave a fantastic review on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Goodreads and more!

Let people know the book is out there. Shout it from the rooftops. Scream it in the grocery store. Make a new friend at the bus stop with a friendly chat about your recently discovered favorite book. Hassle your pastor to slip it in the homily this week. (You get the idea…)

Where can I find the book already, Lou?!

Why, thank you for asking, Senor Heading Tag. You can find Signs of Portents at the following locations and more. Please shoot me an e-mail if there is a problem locating the book at any of these sites. I am doing my best to make the rounds to each for quality control purposes due to my extreme paranoia that no one is as perfect as I am (cue maniacal laughter here) but I can always use a hand.

Without further adieu – LINKS!!!

Print and Digital:

  • Amazon
  • Barnes and Noble

Print Only:

  • Books-A-Million

Digital Only:

  • 7Switch
  • Apple iBooks
  • BookShout
  • Glose
  • Kobo
  • Sainsbury’s
  • Asia Books
  • Booktopia
  • Completebook.com
  • eBookMall
  • Lybrary.com
  • Spotlink Digital
  • Takealot

Other sites will become live over the next few weeks. There is also your local bookstore which may not have a web presence but will still be able to order Signs of Portents for your reading convenience.

If you happen to notice another site with Signs of Portents listed please send me the link and I will make it available for everyone.

Thank you again for your continued support, both with the book and on this site. This would not be possible without you.

Thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Greystone, Signs of Portents Tagged With: digital, ebook, paperback, Signs of Portents

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