Part I – The Challenges and Rewards of Co-Authoring a Novel
A few months ago, I had the
privilege of editing The Blade, an
excellent thriller by Lynn Sholes and Joe Moore. This was my first experience
working with two authors simultaneously on one book, and I worried that it
might be too complicated, but the collaboration went very smoothly! I
can’t imagine co-authoring a book, so I was curious about how the process works
for them. – Jodie Renner
JR: Welcome to Crime Fiction Collective, Lynn and Joe.
Your new thriller, The
Blade, has only been out on Amazon for two weeks and it has already
garnered several glowing 5-star reviews. It promises to be a huge hit, and I
feel honored to have worked with two such talented authors on the final tweaks
and polishing of this riveting international thriller.
So how did you two end up co-writing, anyway?
Lynn: Joe and I
belonged to the same writing critique group that met every week. During
the middle of each session we’d take a break and we’d all chat. Sometimes
we’d share ideas about other projects we’d like to do. I had this idea
about a book I wanted to write, but it wasn’t in my comfort range because of
the genre. Joe thought it was a great idea, and after a year or so, he
finally threatened me that if I didn’t write the book, then he would. We decided to give co-writing a whirl.
That produced THE GRAILCONSPIRACY, our first collaboration, which did very well. It was ForeWord
Magazine’s book of the year and an international bestseller. So far, it’s
been translated into 24 languages.
JR: Really? That’s
impressive! Congratulations!
JR: What about the logistics of it all? How do two people
write fiction together?
Lynn: I can only vouch
for what Joe and I do. At first it was very difficult, not because we disagreed
on anything, but rather because our styles and voices were so different. Joe
wrote male action-adventure with a very bold voice. I wrote historical fiction
with a more lyrical voice. So blending took a lot of work, but we stayed with
it. As a matter of fact, friends are always guessing which line one of us wrote.
They’re usually wrong, but we never tell. As far as the mechanical process, we
do outlining and brainstorming so we know the story. Either of us could write
it. Then whoever feels they have the best handle on a scene takes on the first
draft of that scene. We send it back and forth for revisions. Using Dropbox
makes it easier. We drop a file in the shared Dropbox folder and voilà!
The other picks it up.
JR: Dropbox – hmmm…
I’ll have to find out more about that…
JR: For The Blade, I love your main characters, Maxine Decker and Kenny Gates, and their story was fascinating! And multi-faceted! Not to
mention whisking readers to all those interesting locations. Where do your
ideas come from?
Joe: An idea that
sparks a story can come from anywhere, anytime. Movies, newspapers, magazines,
other books. What we look for is the seed that grabs our attention. Our first
book written together came from an article in Discover Magazine about a cup
found by an archeologist in Israel. He believed it was the Holy Grail and
subsequently discovered that traces of blood residue were present. Could it
have been the blood of Christ? What if someone used the DNA to clone Christ?
The result was our first thriller written together, THE GRAIL CONSPIRACY. An
article I stumbled across on the Internet about the Germans working on an
atomic bomb at the end of WWII prompted our latest thriller, THE BLADE.
JR: Do you revise as you go along or when the novel is complete?
Joe: Because there are
two of us and we exchange drafts of each chapter many times, the revision
process is ongoing, with the final one after input from our editor. By the way, Jodie, we liked your process of editing in sections as we go along. That way we could change future sections before you got to them, based on suggestions on earlier sections.
JR: Some authors write long chapters and some write short
ones. You seem to favor short chapters. Can you explain why you use
that technique?
Joe: Most of our
chapters average 1000 words. We do that to keep the reader turning the pages.
If they see that the next chapter is only a couple of pages long, they will
decide to read just one more. And then one more.
JR: Do you ever have writer’s block? If so, how do you
handle it?
Lynn: Because Joe and
I write together, I don’t think we’ve ever had writer’s block. Having a
brainstorming partner tends to prevent that. Of course we have plot issues we
have to work out, but not true writer’s block. One thing we have learned is
that when you come to a stumbling block and don’t feel you are writing the best
that you can, write through it and something will eventually pop up. That’s the
beauty of knowing that there comes a time that is devoted to revision.
JR: It’s obvious from reading The Blade that you are both not only accomplished writers, but passionate
about producing compelling, suspenseful fiction. What do you love most about
writing?
Joe: Entering into the
“zone” where you lose track of time and place as the words flow freely.
JR: The “zone” – ahh, that coveted
place all authors wish for every day…
Readers and writers - do you have any questions for Lynn and Joe about their process or novels?
Part II of this interview, Learning the Craft and Indie Publishing, appears
here tomorrow, March 3. See y’all there!
Lynn
Sholes & Joe Moore are the international bestselling authors of THE GRAIL
CONSPIRACY (#1 Amazon Kindle bestseller), THE LAST SECRET, THE HADES PROJECT,
THE 731 LEGACY, THE PHOENIX APOSTLES (#1 Amazon Kindle bestseller), and their
latest, THE
BLADE. Their thrillers have been translated into 24 languages including
Chinese, Russian and Greek. Visit
them at: http://www.sholesmoore.com.
Jodie Renner is a freelance
fiction editor specializing in thrillers and other crime fiction, and she also writes craft-of-fiction articles and books. Jodie’s website: www.JodieRennerEditing.com. Jodie’s
books: Writing a Killer Thriller and Style that Sizzles & Pacing for Power.
Jodie, thanks so much for inviting us to the CFC blog, and for your terrific work on editing our latest thriller, THE BLADE.
ReplyDeleteGreat to have you and Lynn here, Joe! And working on your exciting thriller was pure pleasure! Every morning I couldn't wait to see what would happen next! Working on riveting manuscripts like yours makes me really love my career!
ReplyDeleteI've thought about co-authoring a lot. It seems like a great way to combine skills and create something greater than the parts. Yet it makes me wary. I don't even belong to a writers' group. But you've got me thinking about it again.
ReplyDeleteInteresting post and interview. I've always imagined co-authoring would be quite challenging, so it's interesting to read a behind-the-scenes look from those who've done it.
ReplyDeleteOne of these days it might be fun to co-author. I love the aspect of brainstorming.
ReplyDeleteHave you published independently?
How do you handle disagreements?
(And Jodie, I love Dropbox. I use it to transfer files/folders between my desktop and laptop, so I'm always current.)
LJ and Jenny, collaboration on fiction is not for the weak of heart. But it can work. Step 1 is to leave your ego at the door. Step 2 is to believe that no matter what you write, your co-author can make it better.
ReplyDeletePeg, Lynn has six novels published prior to us joining forces. She wrote under the name Lynn Armistead McKee. Regarding disagreements, we do get into some heated debates now and then, but the bottom line is that we both want to write the best book possible. Usually, one opinion will win out over the other because it makes the most sense.
I imagine it would be impossible to collaborate over a whole long, involved story without disagreeing. But being able to brainstorm and bounce ideas off each other must make up for it. Lucky for me, I didn't have to get involved in any disagreements, so the process must be working well. And the stellar final product is proof of that!
ReplyDeleteI'll definitely have to find out more about Dropbox, as I'm often away from home and using my laptop for editing or writing, and files I need are on my computer at home.
Having someone working on a novel with you who has a vested interest is quite a bonus. It's not like talking to your spouse or a friend. This is work and you and your writing partner are thinking about the story all day -- while grocery shopping, doing dishes, riding in the car, walking out to get the mail. We really are talking all day, here.
ReplyDeleteLynn, even as a fiction editor and not the author of the novel, I get really involved in the stories I edit. Because I only take on manuscripts in genres I read for pleasure, and that are already well-written and compelling enough to grab my interest and fire my passion, I find I get sucked right into the heart of the novel and start thinking about the logistics of the plot, characters' motivations, etc. And because I dive right in and get emotionally invested, the story world comes alive for me and I'm in a position to provide the author with additional insights that someone just casually reading it won't pick up.
ReplyDelete