You’re invited to join our book club … for a book I’m still writing.
What is the Buds Book Club?
Our book club is a private group on Facebook.
I post draft chapters of my 2nd mystery novel, Buds, for reading and discussion. Along with each draft, I ask specific questions that I’m wondering about, but all questions / comments / discussions are welcome.
Your feedback and our conversations will help me rewrite those chapters, and guide me as I continue to write the story.
Who can join?
Everyone is welcome. It takes a village to plan the perfect murder.
This group is part of my Patreon community: patrons of either level are invited to join our private Buds Book Club group on Facebook.
(If you don’t use Facebook, you can still get the draft chapters, ask questions and provide feedback via our Patreon community page.)
Will I like reading the book?
I write character-driven, traditional, literary mysteries: no gore, minimal violence. I strive to tell stories like those of Louise Penny, Agatha Christie, Charles Todd, Gail Bowen, Murder She Wrote, Midsomer Murders, Columbo …
This novel is set in the Columbia Valley of British Columbia, Canada. I write a lot of strong, female characters.
If you aren’t having fun, it’s easy to leave the Facebook group (and cancel your membership in my Patreon community) at any time.
How do I join this weird book club?
If reading, discussing & improving a book-in-progress is your cup o’ tea, please consider giving our book club a try. There are two steps:
STEP 1: Join my 2020-2022 Patreon community. For $5/month ($60/year), we can kill someone together. (I use that money for books & webinars to become a better writer.) Click here to choose your Patreon level.
“I love these conversations. They are great for discovering little things. We all catch different things as we read and these trigger thoughts in others in the group. I am loving this process. It is a brilliant idea.”
“This is so exciting to be able to read as you go, and to do this as a group. It feels like I’m doing something!”
For most of my life I’ve wanted to write Something Grand: something with an impressive word count. A novel. Ideally a well-written, enjoyable-to-read novel that would sell a million copies, get five stars on GoodReads and qualify me as the Great Canadian Writer of my generation.
Yet, despite collecting shelves of dusty, half-filled notebooks, despite a degree in English literature and creative writing, despite investing in some very beautiful ink pens, I could never write more than 4,000 words per project.
I just didn’t have a Story to tell.
But then some wise people in my life said some wise things, and I read some helpful phrases in the (many, many) writing books I’d collected, and magic happened: I wrote a 92,384-word story.
For those of you who feel that same LONGING to create a Grand Something, here is how I tricked myself into writing a novel. Maybe these tricks will help you too:
Step 1: Find your story
Write What You Read
In early 2017, after decades of me angst-ing about NOT yet writing a novel and thereby fulfilling My Writerly Destiny, my mom pointed out I only read mystery books; the only Netflix shows I watch are mystery series.
MOM: “Why don’t you try writing a mystery?”
Her suggestion reminded me of two quotes I’d scribbled down:
“If we didn’t have to worry about being published and being judged, how many more of us might write a novel just for the joy of making one?”
– Julia Cameron, The Right to Write
“If you find a book you really want to read but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.”
– Toni Morrison, from her speech at a meeting of the Ohio Arts Council
I was inspired, so I began contemplating murders.
I’ve always rolled my eyes at mysteries where the murderer, once exposed, is revealed as insane: I wanted a murder that was justified. A murderer with whom we could empathize. A logical, necessary death.
Eventually, I imagined a murder scenario that made sense to me, with characters and motives and subplots and themes I was excited to explore. I wanted to write a murder mystery set in the farmers’ market world, which I knew very well, and was excited to expose the “seedy underbelly” of market politics, the contrast between the customers’ wholesome market experience and the farmers’ harried reality.
Finding Myself as a Genre Writer
One of the reasons I’d struggled so much to write a Grand Something in my twenties was because I thought only “literary fiction” was real literature. It was Art, while genre fiction (mysteries, westerns, fantasy, thrillers, romance) was for the less-discerning masses.
At university, we didn’t read or talk about genre fiction unless a (misguided, determined) student submitted those stories to a workshop, or a (rebel) professor (e.g. W.D. Valgardson) added those books to our course reading list (e.g. First Blood).
It was a big step for me to “come out” and accept myself as a mystery writer. Even now I wince and avoid mentioning my chosen genre in conversations, because I carry the shame from my post-secondary days.
Which is just silly.
Step 2: Flesh it out
So: finally I had a story to tell, in a genre I’d been reading (researching!) since my Encyclopedia Brown, Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew adolescence.
Here is a magical thing about genre fiction: there is an inherent structure to follow. If I wanted a murder to take place, I would need to set the scene, cause the death, show the discovery of the body, show the subsequent investigation, drop in some clues, include some “red herrings” (false clues), kill another character to muddy the waters, create a dramatic crisis, and give a conclusion where Everything Is Revealed. I charted these scenes out using post-it notes on poster board and finally felt confident that I had a big enough story to fill a novel.
This reminded me of another bit o’ wisdom I’d read:
“Writing is about getting something down, not about thinking something up.”
– Julia Cameron, The Right to Write
All I had to do was write out the scenes of my story. That didn’t seem too hard.
Step 3: Write the first draft
This confidence nosedived when I learned: a modern murder mystery novel needs to be around 92,000 words, to make a traditional publisher happy. I had never written that many words for a single project before. Once again, I was intimidated and overwhelmed by the sheer number of words.
I shared my fears with Brock, and he did the math:
92,000 words divided by 365 days = 252 words per day.
BROCK: “Can you write 252 words a day for a year?”
ME: “Yes. Easily.”
And so I began to write. I made myself write at least 252 words every day: I wouldn’t let myself go to bed until I met my daily quota. Often, I wrote more. And I found that, if I got my required words written first thing in the morning, I felt calm and fulfilled for the rest of the day.
I coasted along to the 45,000 word mark, loving the writing process. (Mmmm first draft bliss.)
Life vs. Art
When Brock’s cancer progressed to the point where he needed more of my time and attention, I took a break from the book. It was a conscious decision: I knew the story would be waiting for me when I was ready and able to go back to work. I knew I had limited time left with my sweetie.
That break continued through Brock’s death, the next few months of packing and preparing for our planned move, the move itself, and then the Christmas holidays.
“I Need Help.”
By January 2018, I was ready to finish the second half of my manuscript. But I needed help. I needed someone to push me and check in with me, as Brock had done. So I signed up for OneRoom, an online coaching program.
I told my novel-writing coach, Erica Wright, that my goal was to submit my manuscript to three competitions in the fall. She worked backward, did the math, and announced I needed to write 1,000 words a week, with a first draft deadline of July.
FIRST GUT RESPONSE: “YIKES!”
SECOND GUT RESPONSE: “Hell yes.”
I was now motivated to keep writing, and devised a plan to make that possible. Whenever my four-year-old son was in preschool, I would drive to the nearest cafe and write the entire time.
I used a writing program called Scrivener to manage my increasingly bulky manuscript: the program tracked my word count progress with a delightful pie chart. Having this visual representation of my progress kept me motivated and gave me milestones to celebrate.
I completed my first full draft a little after my deadline, and submitted it to the three writing contests.
Step 4: Revise & polish
The next challenge — and one I’m still facing daily — is tweaking and revising my first draft to make it a strong, readable, polished final version.
My 92,000ish-word first draft was massive. I found it overwhelming to work with and didn’t know where to start with the revision stage.
I deflected this challenge by sending it to other writers for their input. The first chapter went to a reader via Sisters in Crime‘s Mystery Agent service. I emailed the full draft to three different readers. One was Erica, whom I paid to give me detailed comments and suggestions for improvement.
While I waited for these “beta readers'” feedback, I tried to make my 300+ page manuscript more manageable. I summarized the scenes on pieces of paper and glued them in order into a scrapbook. I made big-picture notes to move scene #4, delete scene #13, rewrite scene #32, etc. When my readers’ comments came back, I made notes on or under each scene.
Now all I have to do is refer to my scrapbook as I progress through the book, incorporating the edits scene by scene.
Staying Motivated
In April, during my rewriting stage, I learned the first draft of my novel had made the shortlist for the Crime Writers of Canada’s Unhanged Arthur Ellis Award: my mystery manuscript is one of the five best unpublished mysteries by a first-time author in Canada.
This was fantastic, mind-exploding news … and completely demotivating. Why should I struggle to polish my book if it was already good enough for publication?
Luckily, I didn’t win the award. Now I’m driven to make my story the best it can be.
While I’m still not done the second draft of my book, I know I’ll finish it this summer, and am motivated by my next goal: submitting it to my list of dream agents and publishers, with a lovely “Arthur Ellis Award shortlist” credential on my cover letter.
In other words …
If you dream of writing a novel or a Grand Something, perhaps these lessons I’ve learned will help you too. In short:
Know Thyself. I needed concrete goals, deadlines, some sort of coach, and milestone rewards. I needed to plot my story out in advance, while other writers (“pantsers”) prefer to create as they go. What approach works best for you? What carrots and sticks do you need?
Inspire the Rider; Clear the Path for the Elephant. It’s great that you WANT to write down your story, but you need to clear the path for yourself too: arrange child care, make a writing space, schedule writing time on your calendar, or do whatever you have to do to make it POSSIBLE to write. (For more on the Rider/Elephant analogy, read Switch, by Chip & Dan Heath.)
Once we find our story, make the time to write, and actually put pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard), there is often a moment of self-doubt.
SELF: “What if this is shit?”
Here’s one last bite of wisdom that helped me through that anxiety:
“OK, Universe. You take care of the quality. I’ll take care of the quantity.”
– Julia Cameron, The Right to Write
Take a breath. Remember your story. Write it down.
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I’d love to hear your thoughts. Do you have a Grand Dream? What carrots and sticks work for you? What advice has inspired you? Please comment, share this post online or read more posts on this website.