By Tim Smith (Guest Blogger)
I
recently attended a book festival and experienced a first. A local
English teacher had given her class an assignment to talk to the
authors then write an essay about what they learned. I’ve had
writer wannabe’s pump me for tips before, but these students asked
questions that went beyond “When did you know you wanted to be a
writer?” and “What’s your favorite color?” One of them asked
something that had me momentarily fumbling for a good response –
“How do you begin writing a story?”
My
mind instantly flashed back to the first Creative Writing class I
took in high school. The opening line in the textbook still haunts me
- “Does the blank page hold terror for you?” Some days the answer
is a resounding “Hell, yes!”
This
question made me think about how I actually do it. I may read some
item in the news or hear a story that sounds interesting, and if I’m
sufficiently intrigued I’ll ask myself a question – “What would
happen if…?” There’s an anecdote about the creation of the 60’s
sitcom Get Smart. When writers Mel Brooks and Buck Henry made
the pitch, they asked, “What if James Bond and Inspector Clouseau
had a child together?” Thus was born bumbling secret agent Maxwell
Smart.
I
once used the “What would happen if…?” tactic to concoct an
entire story. Several years ago I had planned a vacation/business
trip to Florida with my sig other, but shortly before we were to
leave she became unavailable. This became the basis for Mistletoe
and Palm Trees, where two strangers end up unexpectedly alone in
The Florida Keys at Christmastime. I asked myself “What if this guy
went on a planned vacation alone because he’d just broken up with
his girlfriend, and he meets a woman who recently split from her
fiancĂ©?”
I
like to use the “What if” thing when I’m putting together a
mystery plot, usually to throw the reader a curve. If it looks as
though the finger is pointing toward an obvious conclusion, I’ll
think “What if this happened instead?” It keeps things
interesting when you’re approaching the “Aha!” moment. I’m
proud to say I’ve had readers tell me they were mad at me because
things didn’t play out the way they expected. While writing my
latest romantic thriller, Operation Payback, I knew there
would be a showdown between the hero and the villain, but I decided
to throw a curve ball. No, I won’t tell you what it is, but people
have told me they were surprised by the twist.
I
think a lot of this has to do with my dislike of clichés. Remember
the old private eye shows like Mannix and Peter Gunn?
In most episodes there was the required fight scene, where the guy
gets the stuffing beat out of him by two or three thugs (sometimes
four or five, but who’s counting?). Then he miraculously gets up
and runs after them. Get real! If he’s on the receiving end of a
savage beating, the last thing he’ll feel like doing is engaging in
a foot race. He’s probably thinking about an ice pack, a shot of
whiskey and some tender lovin’ from his busty blonde secretary.
I
busted this myth in one of my thrillers, where the hero gets jumped
by three guys then throws up afterward. When the female lead
frantically asks if he’s okay, he responds “Of course not. I just
got the crap kicked out of me.” After another character offers the
opinion “You don’t look so hot,” he says “I don’t feel so
hot. It’s a matching set.”
Here’s
a “What if…?” that I used to open my romantic mystery Lido
Key. I began with “What if the hero went to sleep in one city
but woke up in another?” then went from there:
I
had the craziest damn dream. I was standing on a cloud of white satin
while angels strummed their golden harps all around me. I swear one
of them looked like Taylor Swift. Then this guy showed up, dressed in
a double-breasted blue pinstripe suit with a gray fedora. Looked like
he stepped out an old Bogart movie. No, it wasn’t Bogart, it was
Robert Mitchum. Yeah, that’s it. Mitchum in ‘Farewell, My
Lovely.’ I always liked that movie. Mitchum handed Taylor a bottle
of cheap whiskey and she poured me a healthy slug in a tumbler. She
smiled when she handed it to me, you know, one of those smiles that
tells you everything’s all right even though your gut tells you it
isn’t. I drank it down in one swallow and felt lightheaded so I
curled up on that satin cloud and fell asleep. Probably shouldn’t
have eaten Veal Scaloppini for dinner last night.
Vic
Fallon slowly awoke from a deep slumber. He yawned, stretched his
arms then looked through one drowsy eye at the clock radio on the
nightstand. 8:30. I don’t usually sleep this late. He
yawned again. Must’ve been more tired than I realized. I never
sleep this well in a strange bed the first night away from
home. He threw back the covers, sat on the edge of the bed and
blinked a few times to wake up. Vic took his first deep breath of the
day and looked around the bedroom. His brow furrowed in confusion.
This isn’t where I fell asleep last night.
This
is the blurb for my latest romantic thriller from Extasy Books,
Operation Payback:
Former
CIA operative Nick Seven has worked hard to create a new life in the
Florida Keys with his Barbadian lover Felicia Hagens. Their life in
paradise takes an unexpected turn when a double agent that Nick sent
to prison is granted an early parole. Nick still remembers what Simon
Larch said when he was sentenced – “Someday I’ll get you for
this. You won’t know when or how. Just wait for it.” Larch is
supposedly in another state, so who’s responsible for the ominous
threats Nick receives and how does Larch seem to know everything
about Nick’s past? What kind of payback is he really planning?
Get your own copy of Operation Payback today!
Get your own copy of Operation Payback today!
About
Tim
Tim
Smith is an award-winning, bestselling author whose books range from
romantic thrillers to contemporary erotic romance. He can often be
found in The Florida Keys, where he indulges in parasailing between
research and seeking out the perfect Pina Colada. More information
about his books can be found at his website, www.timsmithauthor.com.
1 comment:
Greetings, Tim! I'm delighted to have you back at Beyond Romance.
I think all writers play the "What if" game. It's a great way to stimulate the imagination.
Good luck with Operation Payback!
Post a Comment
Let me know your thoughts! (And if you're having trouble commenting, try enabling third-party cookies in your browser...)