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| Best known for his award-winning
novel Mystic River, Dennis
Lehane has also penned a successful mystery
series which includes A Drink Before the War, Darkness
Take My Hand, Sacred, Gone Baby Gone and Prayers
for the Rain. Bestseller Mystic River was a finalist
for the PEN/Winship Award, won both the Anthony
and the Barry awards for best novel, and is now
a Clint Eastwood movie. Like Lehane's earlier detective
series, it is set in Boston's working-class Catholic
neighborhoods. Lehane's latest book, Shutter Island,
also made The New York Times bestseller list. It
represents a departure from his home turf of socioeconomic
imprisonment to the psychological nightmare of wrongful
confinement in a mental hospital on an island off
Boston. Dennis Lehane, who lives in Boston, was
born and raised in Dorchester, Mass. He now makes
his living exclusively from writing and from teaching
writing at the University of Southern Maine. He
has worked as a counselor with mentally handicapped
and abused children and in a bookstore, and has
held down other odd jobs as well, all of which feed
his fiction. |
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The New York Times bestselling
author Gayle Lynds has
written three international spy thrillers, three
novels co-written with the late Robert
Ludlum and five Nick Carter pulp-fiction adventures.
She is the first woman to successfully write international
spy thrillers.
Her debut solo thriller, Masquerade,
was rejected initially because "no women
could have written this." Doubleday ultimately
published the book in 1996. Beth Convey, the protagonist
of her most recent novel, Mesmerized, is rare
and refreshing: a female thriller lead, written
by a woman writer. Born in Nebraska, Lynds grew
up in small-town Iowa, where she graduated from
the University of Iowa with a degree in journalism.
She began her writing career as a reporter for
the Arizona Republic in Phoenix, and later became
an editor with "top-secret" security
clearance at a government think tank.
Her fiction writing began when, after 10 years
at home raising her children, divorce triggered
the threat of poverty. Two of her short stories
were published in literary journals, but the need
to support her kids led her to tackle pulp fiction
when offered the chance. Now firmly established,
Lynds is a master of plot and motivation. Romantic
Times magazine named Mosaic thriller of the year, and in 2002 Mesmerized became a finalist for the Daphne du Maurier Award
in mainstream suspense.
Her latest novel is The Coil,
a sequel to Masquerade. Lynds lives in California
with her husband and fellow writer, Dennis
Lynds (known to readers as Michael Collins). |
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Stuart
Woods has written more than 27 novels. His
first mystery, Chiefs, won a Mystery Writers of
America Edgar Allan Poe Award. A later book, Palindrome,
was also nominated for the Edgar.
A voracious reader as a child, Woods is now a
voracious writer, regularly producing two novels
per year. He has two successful mystery series
going (Stone Barrington and Holly Barker). His
most recent Holly Barker book is Blood Orchid.
His 2003 novel is Capital Crimes, featuring Will
Lee, Woods' favorite character. Barrington and
Barker appear together in Reckless Abandon.
Woods has spent much of his adult life traveling,
and currently divides his time between Florida
(winter), Maine (summer) and New York (spring
and fall). As adventurous as his characters, Woods
got his pilot's license in 1986 and flies himself
to book-tour locations and between his various
houses. His love of the air is matched by his
love of the sea. In 1976, he competed in the Observer
Singlehanded Transatlantic Race, completing his
crossing in 45 days and finishing in the middle
of a highly competitive field.
Woods has written two nonfiction books that grew
out of his interest in sailing and traveling:
Blue Water, Green Skipper and A Romantic's Guide
to the Country Inns of Britain and Ireland. |
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Dennis Lehane, Gayle Lynds and Stuart Woods
tell you how to create a great plot
By Jillian Abbott
The
Writer Magazine
A cursory glance at the bestseller list will
reveal a common thread: Novels
that sell well, more often than not, contain, in addition
to memorable
characters and beautiful language, a gripping plot. To help
us get a handle
on this important element in fiction, I asked three plot masters-Dennis
Lehane, Gayle Lynds and Stuart Woods-to share the secrets
of their craft.
The following questions and answers were assembled from in-person
and e-mail
queries.
JA: What is the place of
plot in your fiction?
Dennis Lehane: Starting
in the 1960s and continuing through the 1980s, plot became
a dirty word in literary circles. Fiction lost its way. A
great novel comes when there is beauty of language, illumination
of character and a great plot. All three elements are necessary.
Ideally, plot serves character. If you analyze a story, say
The Silence of the Lambs, you can begin to see plot as a conflict
between a character's wants and needs. Clarice Starling wants
to catch the killer, Buffalo Bill, and to impress her boss.
Yet Clarice is unaware of her deeper needs to silence the
screaming lambs of her childhood, and to come to terms with
her relationship with her father.
Gayle Lynds: Plot is about
tying a series of story elements to character. After I have
the elements, I live with them awhile until characters start
to show themselves to me, and I give my hero, heroine and
villain something each desperately wants. That, of course,
creates the crisis of conscience.
Stuart Woods: Plot isn't
everything-there's characterization, exposition, observation
and dialogue-but without plot, a book is like a human body
without a skeleton. It can't stand up and walk.
JA: How do you approach
plotting?
Lehane: I put a character
on the page and I have him want something-it could be as simple
as a cup of coffee-and he goes out to get that thing. And
hopefully, he bumps into another character and then another
and conflict will gradually develop. I'm not a good plotter
in the early stage of a novel. The trick is to remind yourself
that no one's ever going to see those early stages of a book,
so let yourself loose and let your characters loose and see
what happens. Then go back and rewrite it all to make it look
fluid.
Lynds: Plotting is not a
conscious activity. It takes second place to story "elements."
My way of finding plot is through what I call elements, which
means I find two or three things in which I'm truly interested.
In Mesmerized, it was the heart-transplant
thing, the idea that so many ex-KGB [agents] were retired
and living in Washington, and the idea that many government
agents use media as a cover. And I wanted to write about an
international attorney in D.C.
Woods: Plotting is a process
akin to a jazz improvisation: You establish a theme, then
improvise on it. I do this on a chapter-by-chapter basis,
planning the events that take place, then improvising the
writing. I begin this improvisation with a situation (i.e.,
protagonist discovers skeleton) and build from there.
JA: What is the most common
mistake you see beginning writers make in plotting?
Lehane: They either don't
have one, in which case their main character sits around thinking
and awkwardly telling us, the reader, who he is and what he
looks like, or the author starts with a bang, going right
into "high-concept" action without us knowing a
damn thing about the characters.
Lynds: Timing. When we first
begin writing novels, we often either tell too much too soon,
or we "save" information for later. From my viewpoint,
what's most important is to get the plot and story rolling.
After that, the backstory should be earned. In other words,
once the book is in full swing, there will be moments when
the backstory fits in logically. By the writer's waiting,
the reader is already invested and wants to know, which makes
the timing appropriate. On the other hand, by withholding
clues or other information in an attempt to increase suspense,
the author short-changes the book, often making it far too
long, too loose and occasionally confusing.
Woods: Too many writers
offer too much information and description, obscuring the
bones of their plots.
JA: Is it necessary, in
order for a plot to be satisfactorily resolved, that your
protagonist get what he or she wants?
Lehane: No. Your [main]
characters must get what they need, not what they want.
Lynds: Absolutely not. In
fact, if the protagonist always does, suspense goes out the
window. Within limits, I agree with Aristotle that the journey
is all. But if we know the ending, the journey grows tainted,
and our interest declines. I find it far more interesting
and useful to have a protagonist who is flawed and fails occasionally
throughout the book. By the end, the reader is a bit worried,
which again increases suspense. As for endings in which the
protagonist takes all, sometimes they work, sometimes not.
The integrity of the book is what counts.
Woods: Yes, pretty much,
though it shouldn't be too easy.
JA: How can a conflict between
what a character wants and what a character needs propel a
plot forward?
Lehane: It goes back to
the cup of coffee. David Mamet said something I've never forgotten:
As long as a character wants something-anything-the audience
will be interested. So, as long as the character has a want,
the need will grow out of that, organically, and the more
you'll figure the character out. Tension will develop for
the reader the more elusive the pursuit of both goals is.
Lynds: In Mesmerized,
a high-flying Washington lawyer receives a heart transplant,
which seems to come with its donor's personality, tastes and
history. She desperately wants to return to who and what she
was, although that is unrealistic. Finally, the tension between
wants and needs reaches an explosive point. She has to put
to rest all the intrusive thoughts and the strange ideas that
began after her surgery. She can't live as if constantly under
siege. After that, she goes in search of her donor, speeding
the plot forward.
JA: How did you learn to
write compelling plots?
Lehane: The best question
I ask myself is: What would a playwright do? Playwrights can
only show; they can't tell. Now, I'm a novelist because I
occasionally like telling, but it helps if you keep your eye
on ... the constant unfolding of drama.
Lynds: Well, I sure didn't
learn about action-adventure in the literary short stories
I wrote! Probably my male-pulp-novel era is the closest to
training I had. I wrote five Nick Carters, which I figured
was a deal, since I was being paid to learn. I was told nothing
about plot or much of anything else, except how many words
were wanted.
Woods: Lots and lots of
reading. As a child, I read horse and dog stories, such as
Lassie Come Home and The Black Stallion. After about the age
of six, I was reading Mark Twain and Dickens.
JA: What impact, if any,
can setting have on plot, or vice versa?
Lehane: If a novel works,
they're all tied together-plot, character, setting, language-and
to such a degree, it's hard to pull one from the other. So
I wouldn't know how to address that question exactly, except
to say if setting works, you don't notice it; if it doesn't
work, that's when you notice it.
Lynds: Once again, the Nick
Carters demonstrate this connection well. Writing them, I
learned very quickly that if I wanted a contract, I needed
to come up with a book that took place in an exotic locale
that the series had not addressed in a very long time, or
at all. So I ended up setting parts of books in Antarctica,
the Sudan, Macedonia ... a host of places I perhaps never
would have considered. The experience taught me to pay attention
to scene-setting. To move the plot, to give a sense of freshness,
to keep the action going-change the scenery. That forces the
author to do some work that lingering in the same spot might
not. You must think of a compelling reason for the story to
be moved to the new location, and then you must provide a
payoff to the readers.
Woods: Place gives your
characters mountains to climb and cliffs to fall from.
JA: If plot is the problem,
how would you approach a solution?
Lehane: If I have a plotting
problem, I usually can't move forward. I block. Then I have
to take the time to figure out where I screwed up. Once I've
identified it, I go back in and try to fix it. If I'm successful,
it's pretty apparent because then I can write again. If I'm
not, I'm still blocked.
Lynds: Once I know the plot
isn't working in one particular spot, I rethink the book,
bringing myself up to date. Often, that's enough to remind
me of some thread I've forgotten that can now be brought into
play. Other times, I discover the characters are a bit off,
doing or saying things that really aren't in character. And
finally, it may be simply that I need to be more clever, that
a solution simply hasn't occurred to me, and I must be patient
with myself and take a walk or a nap or wander around, sometimes
for days, until at last I have that eureka moment when I understand
a new way of seeing the remainder of the book.
JA: What techniques do you
use to create and maintain suspense?
Lehane: Mystic River is
constructed around shifting points of view, third person limited,
tight on each point-of-view character. This technique not
only maintains and extends suspense, but it also drives the
plot forward.
Lynds: I have two favorite
words, which I have tacked onto my lampshade at eye level.
They are "jeopardy" and "menace" - jeopardy
refers to the hero and/or heroine, while menace, of course,
refers to the villain. The villain has an overriding goal,
and that is what drives the plot. To create suspense, the
author must understand and respect that villain, and allow
the villain to put the protagonist-and society-in jeopardy.
Plus, the villain must be smart enough, good enough, with
goals frightening enough that he or she is truly menacing.
Will the villain succeed? Will the protagonist succeed? We
read books to the very end, biting our nails, to find out
the answers to those two questions. In my opinion, they're
the foundation of suspense.
Woods: I look upon writing
as a kind of magic, and I'm afraid that if I examine it too
closely, it might go away.
| Formerly a columnist
for The Australian, Jillian Abbott just finished writing a
female action/adventure, The Leopard's Claw. |
(return to Interviews
& Articles) |