The end of a year, the end of a blog.

>> Friday, December 31, 2010

Happy New Year, everyone!

I am closing down this blog tonight. Since I almost exclusively post to Fire, Guns, and Zombies (my LJ), poor Merc Rants has fallen to the side of the road like a footless zombie.

It's been fun, it's been interesting, it's been all sorts of things. But it's time to move on, and put this blog away. Sometime in 2011 I will have a shiny official website to use for, well, official and pro stuff.

Until then, you can always find me on the other blog, or Twitter. I'll be around! I check my RSS reader all the time.

It's been fabulous trip, and I appreciate everyone who's visited and hung out and followed this weird little corner of the interwebs. Thank you all!

Have a wonderful, productive, zombie-Apocalypse-free 2011!

Cheers,

~Merc

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Hero's Choice

>> Saturday, July 24, 2010

Okay, just for quick reference, here is the link for Hero's Choice (serialized in ten parts) on Silver Blade. :)


*waves to new visitors*

Hi and welcome. The blog isn't updated much at the moment, but the LJ is moderately more active. ;)

Thanks for stopping by!

~Merc

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Drive-by thoughts on endings

>> Saturday, June 5, 2010


I've been reading several novels* by Hilari Bell recently, along with a bunch of other books, and I've been thinking a lot about endings in general. (What works, what doesn't, what an ending needs to accomplish, etc.)

Ms. Bell’s endings are so perfect. I can see how they would not appeal to everyone—they are short, to the point, and give you just enough wrap-up and resolution to satisfy and properly end the story, and that’s it. No long epilogues or wrap-up chapters where we see the aftermath (it’s all implied, and I like that better) and people gab and sit around discussing what happened.

Nah. It’s snap, bang, we’re done. But in a GOOD way—not too abrupt, and there is most definitely a conclusion, with a lot of what will need to be done left implied and open.

I get cranky when a story goes on and on and there is too much wrap-up and “ending credits” stuff. (When the story is done, please STOP WRITING.) I don’t actually want every last detail wrapped up and tied in a neat bow. Major threads, yes. Character arcs should finish. It should be a solid, satisfactory, sufficient ending.

If the conflict is resolved, threads wrapped up, character arcs finished (for this story), then I want the book to end. I don’t want to slog through 30 or 50 or more pages of aftermath and wrap-up and characters fiddling around with things, etc.

Endings are tricky beasts—flub it and it reflects on the whole book. Too long and it makes Merc a cranky reader. Too short and abrupt and I wonder what the hell you’re thinking, author, and why are there not a few more pages at the end.

But get is just right and there is that warm, happy glow, and a satisfied reader is likely to go read and buy more books (I am, anyway). It’s like an addiction. You give me a good ending that works just right (and I can forgive a lot if you nail the ending) and I’ll go look for more.


What about you? What makes an ending “perfect” for you? What does an ending need to pull off/include to make you happy?

____

*Novels include:

Goblin Wood
Songs of Power
The Wizard's Test

The Prophecy

I have a lovely stack of Bell novels on my TBR pile! *is a fan*

EDIT: I found an excellent article Hilari Bell wrote about novel endings (climaxes) as well.

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Delay

>> Thursday, April 22, 2010

So! I realize it's almost the weekend and I have no (real) post yet. Um, yeah. I'm working that. (Net issues complicate things.)

A couple post ideas are brewing--thoughts on conflict and how to make things so much worse in-story, and rambles on short stories as a form in and of itself. Among other things, possibly.

Sorry about the delays. Sometime in the future here I will get my game together and resume regular posting. The zombies say hi, by the way. ;)

~Merc

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Still alive

>> Tuesday, April 13, 2010

T.D. Newton was nice enough to poke me to see what's up (thanks, Todd!) and *facepalm* I completely forgot to post here. (Sorry!)

Reason is, I've moved back to Minnesota (beginning of April) so for a couple weeks I was in limbo. Still settling in and readjusting and all, but I will be back and aim to continue posting next week. :)

Hope you're all doing well! What're you all working on?

~Merc

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Editing Attitude

>> Friday, March 5, 2010


Sometimes I wonder, is the editing-hate I see some writers express due to it being actual WORK, or is it the negative focus/attitude that gets in the way? Both? Neither? Something else?

(When I say "editing" I'm talking about fine-tuning words and line-edits. Nitty-gritty stuff like word choice and sentence structure and how many em dashes you can get away with before beta readers come after you with torches and pitchforks. Editing, in this case, means the polishing stage. Revision and rewriting are different*.)

Confession: I used to hate editing. And I wondered why--obviously because it's fricking hard WORK, it's tedious, it requires concentration and focus, and it takes time. It's still not my favorite activity, I admit.

However, it's the way you make a draft good. And that's what I want, isn't it? A good draft that I can make spiffy and shiny and sparkling-clean for submission purposes? Yes. Okay, so I've established that editing = a better draft, which = I could submit it to markets, which = potential publication. (Which is a goal.)

So if my goal is to 1.) produce quality stories which I would be happy to share (I'll let people read first drafts, but only a few people), and 2.) reach a wider audience via publication, then I must learn to edit and I must have a positive attitude.

Why the attitude adjustment?

Bitter and angry and hating on something does not make it fun to do (unless you have that kind of personality, I guess). Oh, sure, there are bad days, and there are areas in a manuscript that incite bookhate, etc. I get frustrated when perfectionism kicks in and I don't produce a perfect draft the first time. Yeah, guilty. It's a hard monster to beat (again and again because it's like horror movie sequels and franchises--IT NEVER DIES). However, in general... liking what you do makes it easier to improve and do it more often.

A positive attitude and focus on (positive) goals may not make the editing less work, but it will make it easier and more appealing. Yes, I have days where I fall back into "teh hateness." But trying to stay upbeat and keeping a positive attitude makes editing easier. (It also helps if you love the story you're working on.)

Working off that theory, if I look at editing as a hateful, dire process that-oh-god-who-came-up-with-this-in-the-first-place-naggh rather than focus on my final goal (if I do the bloody hard work and get this story sparkling, it might have a chance) I'm pretty sure I won't get anywhere useful, or if I do, it'll be full of stress and bad moods and random innocent zombie bystanders will be incinerated.

That's just not fair to the zombies.

Thus, I'm learning to have a better attitude towards editing. I'm even starting to enjoy it. It's a necessary part of the craft. It's how we turn crappy drafts into readable stories. It's part of the process if you want to become a professional writer.

It may not be easy and there are days it will not be fun. I have a lot to learn (as always) and there's no guarantee the work will pay off on any particular story.

Despite all that, I'll continue to work on my attitude towards editing. Think of the zombies, after all.

~Merc

______

*Christy asked in the comments what my definitions of "revision" and "rewriting" and "editing" are, for reference. Here you go:

-revision = big changes. Adding scenes, adding/cutting/combining characters, rearranging large parts of the novel, fixing plot holes, etc. Your big lifting and large-scale fixes in a story.

-rewriting = starting over from scratch, whether it's a single scene or the whole novel. I differentiate the two because you can revise a story or novel without necessarily scrapping the entire daft and beginning all over. Maybe "redrafting" would be a more accurate term...?

- editing = micro changes. Fixing words, sentences, punctuation, smoothing tiny details, tweaking pacing, trimming excess wordage, etc. The polishing stage to make the prose sparkle and read smoothly.

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Short film: Pumzi

>> Monday, March 1, 2010

This* looks very cool.

PUMZI

(I haven't figure out how to embed videos yet, but check it out.)

Dystopian sf! *hearts* It's a Kenyan short film written and directed by Wanuri Kahui and shown at the Sundance film festival in 2010.

The movie's website, and also Wired has an article about it.

I want to watch it. So, if word of mouth gets around, maybe it can get picked up by a distributor and we see it, yes?

(Thanks to @sandykidd for bringing it up.)

___

*I will continue to ignore Spartezda's attempts to put images of Equilibrium meets WALL-E into my mind. Just no. Besides, Pumzi wins on the prettiness factor. ;)

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Hero's Choice, finale

>> Monday, February 22, 2010

The final part (chapter 10) is up on Silver Blade! Thank you to everyone who has read the story. :) I appreciate all the comments!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(I have a summary of previous installments on my LJ.)

Thank you to everyone who has helped me with this story--crit partners and beta readers and fans, I appreciate you all SO much!

I hope you enjoyed HERO'S CHOICE. :)

~Merc

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Hero's Choice, pt 9

>> Monday, February 15, 2010

Part 9 is up on Silver Blade!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(I have a summary of previous installments on my LJ.)

Hope you enjoy! :)

~Merc

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Hero's Choice, pt 8

>> Monday, February 8, 2010

Part 8 is up on Silver Blade!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(I have a summary of previous installments on my LJ.)

Hope you enjoy! :)

~Merc

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Series, Scares, and the Making Thereof

>> Tuesday, February 2, 2010

In Jessica Faust's post (on the BookEnds, LLC blog) on the subject of writing series, she says:

If you are writing a series, trilogy, or any other form of linked books, my recommendation is not to write all three books or to continue the series until you’ve sold the first one.

(Read the full article. She has specific reasons for this advice, and it's an interesting piece. There's also sister posts about series that are worth looking at.)

It's advice I've heard before, and I also know some authors and writers who work this way (one book on submission, working on an entirely different project).

Merc's reaction: "Holy crap, are you trying to scare me into having a heart attack?"

Now, don't get me wrong, this is fine (the advice, not the heart attack) if that's how your process works and you can pull it off. I'm quite impressed (indeed, awed) by writers who can finish one book, polish it and submit, then switch gears and only if the first book sells, begin (contractually) writing the rest of the trilogy or series. Hats off to you folks who do this.

I'd probably collapse from nerves at the very idea of trying it. (And that wouldn't be good, because then the zombies could get the upper hand. Or brain.)

See, the way my process works is something like this:

  • 1.) write a crappy draft
  • 2.) decide it's entirely wrong and needs to be rewritten from scratch*
  • 2a.) hopefully not more than five times**
  • 3.) figure out if this is a series book (if it is proceed to step 4. If not, return to step 1 and 2)
  • 4.) write another book in this series or world
  • 4a.) find out all sorts of stuff about the world/characters that must be changed in book 1
  • 5.) rewrite book 1 (again, if need be)
  • 6.) write the next book (repeat steps 1, 2, and 4)
(and the next steps have not been tested yet, so they are subject to change)
  • 7.) have three drafts in some chronological order so Merc does not freak out
  • 8.) polish and submit book 1
  • 8a.) actually figure out what the hell happens if book 1 is accepted (most likely with heavy doses of panic because the entire series is not done and OMG WHAT NOW)

So, yes. I'm not confident or comfortable enough with a series unless I have several books drafted. Because I change things so much. I'm tracking my progress while writing (rewriting, actually) my novel NECROMANCER RISING on my LJ. In between that and writing on a non-novel with Spartezda (prequel-ish to NR), I've discovered quite a few massive and necessary changes I need to make, in this book and the next one.

While I may plot out a novel in odd ways, my writing process requires that I world-build and develop characterization by writing. Those things don't work the best when planned out beforehand, since no one (i.e. characters) actually listens to me. I need to write a draft of a novel before I have a good grasp on what I want, what works, what direction I'm taking things, and who these people are (and what the hell they are doing in my story).

Is it a lot of work and frustration? Yeah. But I need the 'wrong first draft' to get the wrong angles and bad plot kinks and unusable characters out of my head. Then I can write the book I want right.


Jessica's advice makes sense from a business perspective, certainly. If book 1 won't sell (and even if the other books are stand alone, they might not sell either) you may have wasted your time. Fair enough.

The thing is, I have to love and believe in a project before I'll get anywhere near polishing it for submission. If that story is a series, then I'm going to write the drafts of several books. 'S just how I work. ;)

If I tried the "one book out, then don't touch the rest unless it sells" many panic attacks and no writing would occur. It would make the zombies happy (they love it when you're paralyzed) but it would make Merc cranky.

How about you guys? Do you write more than one book regardless, or do you go for writing one book, sending it out, then working on a new project while you wait? Some combination?

~Merc
_________________________
*After a period of several months so ideas and the book have time to gel before starting again on Teh Rewrites. This step is unavoidable.
**Case in point, my first NaNoWriMo novel.

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Hero's Choice, pt 7

Part 7 is up on Silver Blade!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(I have a summary of previous installments on my LJ.)

Hope you enjoy! :)

~Merc

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Hero's Choice, pt 6

>> Monday, January 25, 2010

Part 6 is up on Silver Blade!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(I have a summary of previous installments on my LJ.)

Hope you enjoy! :)

~Merc

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Hero's Choice, pt 5

>> Monday, January 18, 2010

Part 5 is up on Silver Blade!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(I have a summary of previous installments on my LJ.)

Hope you enjoy! :)

~Merc

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Hero's Choice, pt 4

>> Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Part 4 is up on Silver Blade!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(I have a summary of previous installments on my LJ.)

Hope you enjoy! :)

~Merc

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Hero's Choice, pt 3

>> Monday, January 4, 2010

Part 3 is now live at Silver Blade!




Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.


Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


Part 1, Part 2


I hope you enjoy!

~Merc

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Hero's Choice (pt 2)

>> Monday, December 28, 2009

Part two is now up at Silver Blade!


Being a Chosen One sucks, in Hero’s opinion. The big questions in his life don’t revolve around how to ask out the local village girls or whether his birthmark (a bright blue metallic star in the middle of his forehead) is ever going to fade.

No, he gets saddled with a Destiny. It’s not like he’s the usual Chosen One type, either. He’d rather follow in his father’s footsteps and become a Dark Lord, complete with burning down villages when he feels like it. And while life is never dull--he's kidnapped by rangers, haunted by a bossy ghost, and there's the obligatory quest, complete with dragon--nothing postpones his Destiny.

Hero really hopes he has a choice in fulfilling the prophecy--the one that says he will kill his father when he turns fifteen. But what if he doesn’t?


(Part 1 is here. Also, on LJ posts about this, I have a "what happened previously", and will keep a running synopsis if you'd like. Hero's Choice so far.)

I hope you enjoy, and have a good New Year, everyone!

~Merc

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Hero's Choice

>> Tuesday, December 22, 2009



It's Christmas early!

The first part of my serialized fantasy novella, HERO'S CHOICE, is now online at Silver Blade.


A new installment will be posted each Monday.

This week:

On a cold and starry night, Dark Lord Mrakota finds the Chosen One prophesied to kill him. Being unconventional, Mrakota adopts the boy and names him Hero. This does not go over so well with the Guild of Old Mentors or the rangers...


*bursts from the happy* I've been so incredibly excited about this, it's thrilling to be able to share with everyone now! I'd love to know what you think--and if you like it, please help me spread the word. I'll give you cookies. :)

Thank you to everyone who has helped me with this story! I'll figure out an acknowledgments post sometime.

*throws flaming confetti*
~Merc

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Words, words, all is words--and titles.

>> Saturday, December 19, 2009

(Book and title chosen to head the article because I love Stephanie Burgis' short stories and can't wait for her novel, A Most Improper Magick (April 2010)... plus I like the title.)

Titles.

Titles are one of the (many) banes of my existence (writing-wise), compounded by the fact I usually need a title before I can properly work on a story. Head, meet desk. Often. ("Aha, we meet again, Sir Desk!")

There's some words I (personally) dislike in titles--not so much reading them (hey, one of the Dresden Files books is titled Blood Rites) as "words I will avoid if at all possible and if not possible, THERE WILL BE BLOOD" in my own titles. Just because I want to avoid them doesn't mean I don't want to see them at all in titles. ;)

Blood**, for example. My immediate associations with that in the titles end up being vampires and horror. Yeah, there are a lot of fantasy novels and thrillers and mysteries, etc, with the word "blood" in the titles, too. (If you go to Amazon, filter a search for "blood" through books, you will see somewhere around 600,000 or more results. Sure, not all will be unique, and there's a good deal of non-fiction in there too, but you get the idea.)

There's also death (again--I think of horror elements and dark fantasy and vampires). I'm not so opposed to it if you're using it to indicate Death as a personification or character itself--I'm talking about the ones like "Halls of Death [and DOOM, bwhahaha!]".

Dead* naturally brings zombies to mind. And vampires. After that, my associations wander between more dark fantasy and mysteries or thrillers.

*Okay, I realized I've used "dead" in a title. Twice, actually, when I think about it. The first was "They Dreamed of Dead Ships," a horror serial, and I liked how it turned out, title-wise. The other, naturally, involves zombies. "Dead Tide" is the zombie octopi story.

**ETA: Dude. I also realized I have one with "Blood" too. o.O The ship serial, again. "Blood Tide" is the fifth and final part.

Son of ETA: Two. I had a story ages ago called "Blood Rewards", which had vampires (and elves). It got scrapped and turned into a novella-project dubbed Winter Kin instead. Yes, it still has vampires and elves. What? It's dark high fantasy and there's a reason it's been pushed into the cold storage bin. ;)

As much as I like to use the word dark in stories, it's another title word I avoid due to having seen it a lot. It's a milder case--I tend to like it more than some other title words

For fantasy, sword--unless used humorously--is one of those I sort of cringe a bit seeing. (I blame the Sword of Truth series.) It seems to be a very fantasy-title word. There's nothing wrong with it, I'm just not enamored with it as a word to use in my titles. Scimitars, now... mmmm.


Words I like? There's way too many to list, but off the top of my head: Necromancer(s), goblin(s), Hell, sun, moon, shadow, fire, glass, gentleman/gentlemen, steam, gears/clock/cool words like that, anything with ferrets or weasels or mustelids in general, wicked, demon(s), scar(s), hero(es), chaos, sand, mercenary...

C'mon, you can't be that surprised at my list. ;)

What are words you like/dislike in titles? (Yours or not.)


HAPPY NEW YEAR!

~Merc

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"All right, title, there ain't room here for the both of us."

And lo, a post! Shocking.

Over at The Literary Lab, Scott F. Baily has an interesting article about titles.

*clears away the dust from the floor* So, what makes a good title to you? Do you have Preferences? Do certain words or formats appeal to your more than others? Do you even notice a title, or just go for the shiny cover art?



(Soon I Will Be Invincible by Austin Grossman is still one of my favorite book titles in awhile--plus, the novel was fun to read.)

I haven't done any real analysis of what works for me. It's one of those cases of I either like it, don't like it, or don't care either way and other factors determine if I read a book. (Choosing a title is a whole 'nother post*.)

What'cha think?



(No, the emoticons have nothing to do with titles, per se, I just found that one here and had to use it. O:))

Have a great holiday, everyone!


~Merc

*Which I've started. Shock! Awe. Yeah.

Also, semi-connected, I'm digging up examples of titles for published books that were changed by editors/publishers. The list is growing and should be fun to compile. If anyone has examples (e.g. Lisa Shearin's Magic Lost, Trouble Found was originally submitted as Thief of Souls), feel free to share. The more the meatier. Merrier. I think it's time to go...

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