Friday, December 18, 2009

Fact into Fiction

by Karen Dionne

Details, details. You need them to make your story believable, but too many can drag your plot to a halt. Here's how to strike that just-right balance of fact in your fiction.

That's the introduction to my article "Fact Into Fiction," featured in the January issue of Writer's Digest magazine. You can pick up a copy of the magazine at your local bookstore, or purchase one online through Writer's Digest's website.

The article explains how authors can incorporate their research smoothly into their novels, and along with my own comments, includes advice from bestselling thriller authors Steve Berry, Douglas Preston, Gayle Lynds, David Hewson, and Joe Moore.

Here's a sampling:

David Hewson, bestselling author of the Nic Costa series: "The reason we use truth in fiction is so we can tell a bigger, better lie. It's the lie -- how big, convincing and 'real' it is -- that matters."

New York Times bestselling author Douglas Preston: "In a novel, something doesn't have to be true; it only has to be believable. The word 'fiction' is a marvelous cover for all kinds of shenanigans, distortions, manipulations and outright fabrications."

Karen Dionne: "Readers love learning something new, but above all, remember: a novel is a story. An author's job is to entertain. Don't let your enthusiasm for your material turn your novel into the literary equivalent of three hours of vacation pictures."

What the article DOESN'T discuss is the research trip I took last spring to visit the setting for my upcoming novel: an active volcano in Northern Patagonia, Chile. The trip was an absolute blast (pun intended).

I know I'm not alone in sticking my neck out for my art. What's the most outrageous thing YOU'VE done in the name of research?

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Karen Dionne is the author of Freezing Point (October 2008, Berkley), a thriller Douglas Preston called "a ripper of a story," with other rave endorsements from David Morrell, John Lescroart, and many others. Her next novel, Boiling Point, will be published by Berkley in October 2010. For more information about her, go to www.karendionne.net.


Monday, December 14, 2009

What are the best books YOU'VE read this year?

December is always the "best of" month, when major newspapers and booksellers sift through all of the tens of thousands of titles published the previous year and select the ten they feel are the best. I'll confess: some of the books on these lists, I've never heard of. So many books, so little time!

However, here are two I read that I thought were fabulous:

OLIVE KITTERIDGE by Elizabeth Strout
THE AMATEURS by Marcus Sakey

Which books made YOUR Best Books of 2009 list?


Bonus: Guess the name of the bookstore where this picture was taken, and I'll put your name in the hat for a chance to win a signed copy of my 2008 debut FREEZING POINT!

Friday, December 11, 2009

Kirkus Reviews is no more - good? bad? doesn't matter? You tell us!

From The Washington Post:

The journal of record of the newspaper industry and a 76-year-old book review were told on Thursday to shut down, becoming the latest casualties of last-century media cut down by the Internet and user-generated content.

Editor & Publisher, which has covered the newspaper industry since 1884, and Kirkus Reviews, which has reviewed books since 1933, did not survive a big sale of magazines by their parent company, the Nielsen Co.

"We've been aware of the rumors about the sale for the past month, and some of the reports had us included . . . and in others we weren't mentioned at all," E&P editor Greg Mitchell said in an interview Thursday. "We thought there was a good chance we'd be included but we also didn't think that if we weren't included we'd be folded the same day. . . . This really was quite a surprise."

Mitchell said it is unclear at this point whether E&P's next issue, scheduled to be put to bed a week from Tuesday, will be published. He said he received "hundreds, maybe thousands" of e-mails of support, condolence and outrage.

(AP Photo/Dan Goodman)

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What do you think? How will this affect the publishing industry? Should authors be happy that Kirkus is no more? When it comes to selling books, do trade reviews really matter? Discuss:


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