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Keira Gillett Author

Fierce Middle Grade Fantasy Reads

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Author

Plotting the Perfect Book

April 27, 2017 By Keira Gillett

How you arrive at the perfect book as an author depends entirely on your writing perspective. So let’s start with a quiz to figure out your stance on plotting. Answer these truthfully, because there’s no right or wrong answer.

  • I often figure out where a book’s or show’s storyline is going.
    1. True
    2. False
  • I delight in the unexpected.
    1. False
    2. True
  • The perfect book has no loose ends.
    1. True
    2. False
  • Plot holes aren’t the end of the world.
    1. False
    2. True
  • Every detail in a narrative must mean something.
    1. True
    2. False
  • I hate it when a detail is incorrect, didn’t any research get done?
    1. True
    2. False

Mostly 1’s: Congratulations! You’re a plotter!

Mostly 2’s: Congratulations! You’re a pantser!

Equal 1’s and 2’s: Congratulations! You’re both a plotter and a pantser!

So what does your answer mean?

PLOTTER:

If you’re a plotter, you like to have every detail arranged. You’ve done all your research ahead of time and organized all your notes so they’re available at the ready. Your perfect book is flawlessly arranged from beginning to end and it reads beautifully. Before you even type the first word you know where you’re going and what words will take you there. You’re meticulous and it works to your advantage.

When you plan your books, you should: create lists of characters, settings, and plot with details about how they all relate; sort out all the action and dialogue; do your research first; figure out your characters’ motivation; know the book’s climax; and lay out the storyline across all chapters.

Beware: Your need for perfection, might keep you from starting the book and finishing it. Keep to a writing schedule and a word count goal.

PANTSER:

If you’re a pantser, you go with the flow. Day by day you’re not sure where the characters will take you, but you’re up for the task. You’ll research on the spot as ideas and situations come up. You like how things tend to come together in a serendipitous fashion. Everything works out in the end, and if it doesn’t, you’ll fix it on the next draft. You don’t sweat the small stuff. You know every word is the right word at the time, and can be changed if it turns out it isn’t a perfect fit. Others might see this laissez-faire attitude and think you don’t care, but you care immensely.

When you plan your books, you should: put together idea boards for characters, setting, and plot; keep a notebook filled with any odds and ends that strike your fancy from words you like to doodles you make to research you did; use Post-Its to arrange plot points, if you know them; and look outside yourself for inspiration and ideas, whether it be in magazines and books or museums and art.

Beware: Your ability to overlook a troubling spot in the book, could impact your ability to edit later. Highlight anything you have questions on, so you won’t forget and can address them later.

BOTH:

If you’re a bit of both a plotter and pantser, you combine the best of both types of writing. You plan, but don’t stifle. You go off on tangents, but always bring the story back on point. A loose end can always be addressed in the sequel. You write with purpose, but allow for changes in direction. When you think about writing you try to figure out what works for you and your style.

When you plan your books, you should: mix and match techniques, try something new each time, and keep doing something that worked before for you.

Beware: You can fall down a rabbit-hole of either plotter or pantser techniques if you’re not careful. It’s like fad diets – if it’s not working for you, drop it.

I, myself, fall into the “Both” category. I keep folders organized for each book on my computer. They contain all my research, fragments of scenes that I started, but continued in another direction or removed entirely, and inspiration from drawings, images, videos, etc. I have pretty much compiled a guide to my world that I can access at the drop of a hat with pronunciation guides, maps, character bios, etc. I keep a notebook filled with the finer details about my characters, places, and world. It contains note cards I have received about my books from fans and advertisements I have done to promote the books. It’s my touchstone and my keepsake of this precious journey I’ve gone on.

How about you? Where do you fall? What techniques do you use?

Filed Under: Author, Quiz Tagged With: on writing

World-Building One Word at a Time

April 20, 2017 By Keira Gillett

I started my writing career as an elementary kid with a penchant for fairies. Young as I was, even back then I was writing a book series in which every book relied on the world-building I had created. I was a bit haphazard in my approach, after all I was a kid, but I took the lessons I learned and funneled them into the next project, and the next, and the next.

These days I write about fantasy adventures set in Norway, following a group of kids as they take on bad guys in their attempt to save the world. Each book builds on the last and adds new dimension to the world I’ve created. Have you ever wondered how to do that yourself? From my experience it takes time and patience, trial and error, research, and a willingness to explore the world as if you were the reader and not the author.

Let me take you through the journey of how Zaria Fierce came to be.

If you’ve followed me for some time, you may have heard the story of how I started the books with my main character, but I had no idea what to do with her. Zaria was an enigma waiting for me to puzzle out. I tried placing her in different places and with different settings, but nothing gelled. It was pretty frustrating because Zaria Fierce had become like a friend to me. She and I were on a journey together, but every start proved to be the wrong move.

Eventually, I had an eureka moment. Zaria and I landed in the middle of Norway. Immediately, the setting felt right to me. Zaria had a home. She didn’t have much else, but she and I had made progress. We were no longer searching in the dark for a place to start her story, we had found it and it was just right, as Goldilocks would say.

Next, came figuring out her antagonist. We had tried several things along the way in our search for the right setting, but nothing had panned out. I didn’t want any of those bad guys. They were too pedestrian. So Zaria and I wrote about going to school and seemingly out of nowhere a bridge appeared and then a troll! It wasn’t out of nowhere though. I have loved Norwegian folklore for a long time – one example of this is that my favorite ride at Epicot was the Norwegian ride when it was Maelstrom. I had a rich background to draw upon and I immediately followed up by reading other folktales.

It’s been a few years and a few books later from those humble beginnings. Zaria and her friends have encountered a lot on their adventures. We have seafaring trolls, giants with whale pods, wyverns that can fly, wyverns that can swim, ellefolken princes who transform, a witch in the woods without a name, and a changeling who wants to be human.

Speaking of that changeling, Aleks Mickelsen is going to be taking on the mantle of storyteller in the next three books. We’ll be seeing the world through his eyes. It’s been so much fun to dive back into the world Zaria and I created together. Aleks’ stories will plumb the depths of the world and bring out new facets. We’ll meet troll kids and befriend new creatures and face new bad guys. I hope you’ll join us on the next Fierce Adventure – Aleks Mickelsen and the Twice-Lost Fairy Well!

Filed Under: Author, Secret of Gloomwood Forest, Twice-Lost Fairy Well, Zaria Fierce Tagged With: on writing, world-building

A Rose by Any Other Name is a Cabbage

April 11, 2017 By Keira Gillett

Shakespeare might have said that a rose by any other name smells just as sweet and in normal life this is a truism. However, in the realm of stories a rose is sweet because it is a rose. Words are what an author relies on to convey meaning. This is why naming of characters, places, and things is so important.

Authors agonize over names, searching for the right one, in the same way my college friend loved to take a dozen photos of the same thing in order to choose the perfect one to Photoshop and then share. As my friend would say and many authors too, it’s worth the effort.

Take my stories as an example of how naming is important. Zaria Fierce is here today in all her glory because of her name. I had a small set of parameters when I went to name her. It had to be catchy like Harry Potter, Percy Jackson, Artemis Fowl, James Bond, Sherlock Holmes, and other characters we know and love from literature.

It had to mean something. Zaria means princess, which is integral to the storyline. Fierce, because Zaria would be taken through a transformative character arc, where she starts out shy and withdrawn and ends up as a fabulous and fierce heroine.

Many characters in the Zaria Fierce Trilogy benefit from similar attention to detail. Names are evocative and denote a lot on their own and through social context.

Olaf might be to you a happy snowman from Frozen, but to me he is a mean-spirited troll with an agenda to reclaim a river that was once his.

I like to juxtapose preconceived notions of names. I also like to cater to those in the know and find names that feel like other names. These more aspirational names are sprinkled around and the prime example is Floki, a dwarf prince. You can guess from his name that he’s not the kindest of dwarves.

I even choose names that sound like something else we know, like Koll, the first dragon. He’s pitch-black with red scale patterns just like the live coal his name evokes.

Do you have a favorite name in the Zaria Fierce realm? Who do you think is named the best?

(Bonus, do you know what flower I shared with this article? Hint: It’s not a rose.)

Filed Under: Author, Zaria Fierce Tagged With: on writing

Do Words Speak to You?

April 6, 2017 By Keira Gillett

I keep a diary of words. Nothing formal. This diary has many forms – a notepad where I keep ideas for my books, a note draft on my phone, a document on my computer, a scrap of paper, a highlighted word or sentence amidst a blocky paragraph.

Some days I am a hoarder, collecting words like a magpie. I read the words in newspapers, blogs, books, and magazines. I take note, and I think how can I share this word which so perfectly expresses this idea? I treasure them, these little dictionary fragments and tuck them away for a rainy day. Big or small, unknown or known, each have their place.

When the sun appears I start over. I regularly pitch the words, deleting or tossing the words away. I’m determined to unclutter my ever-growing list of words like a relentless wood chipper, hacking at the words until there’s not even a reminder of their roots. But no matter how many times I ditch them, words keep coming back to me. Not always the same, but sometimes the very same.

Some words are tenacious, hanging on with unforeseen diligence, determined to have their say. Some are airy and blasé, eager to come and go as they please with a laissez-faire that is admirable. These words are secure in their meaning, they know if they’re not the right fit for today they may be tomorrow. So the list grows again with careful attention on my part.

It might sound strange, but as a reader and an author words have always drawn me in and taken me down a rabbit-hole of possibilities, whispering like the wind in my ear and dancing away just as intangible to hold. Do words speak to you? What word travels with you today, dear reader?

Filed Under: Author Tagged With: on writing

5 Habits of a Successful Author

April 4, 2017 By Keira Gillett

I am often asked what it takes to be successful as an author. There’s a lot of ways someone can be successful, but I find myself going back to these five tips over and over. To be a successful author, one should:

  1. Read. Not just a little but a lot. The more you read, the better off you are, because you’ll develop your sense of storytelling. What works for you? What doesn’t? Why did you like this book, but not that one? And so forth.
    • Pro Tip: Read in genres you don’t write in to be exposed to words you otherwise might not find in your genre. If you can use these words in your writing, even better!
    • Pro Tip: Listen to audio books to get a sense of cadence and rhythm. You’ll learn what sounds right and this will enhance your own writing.
  2. Research. As an author of fiction, you’re not expected to be an expert, but you are expected to know what you’re talking about on a broad level.
    • Pro Tip: Save everything you research in a file. Try to catalogue and organize everything so you can quickly pull up what you need whenever the situation calls for it.
    • Pro Tip: Be deliberate when breaking from the truth. Own any changes to geography, history, science, etc.
  3. Write. Put fingers to keyboard, pen to paper, dictate, however you write – every day. Even when you don’t feel like it. That’s the sign of a professional author. Remember if you’re not writing, you’re not going to have a manuscript to publish.
    • Pro Tip: Set micro-goals and macro-goals. Both of these will help you feel like you accomplished something big when you complete one, and urge you onward.
      • For example, 500 word goals and chapter completion goals. I like to offset my 500 word goals to be at every 200/700 mark, that way I can also enjoy every 500 and 1000 mark and push myself between each goal. It’s a lot easier to talk yourself into pushing for an extra 100-300 words than it is to ask yourself to push for another 2,000 words.
    • Pro Tip: I hear all the time that a book is in the works, but never completed. Complete the book by any means necessary, even if you have to just type a stream of consciousness. There’s no wrong way to finish a first draft.
  4. Edit. Your first draft can be sloppy, hard to understand, missing punctuation, filled with notes, etc. The polishing of your manuscript comes during the editing process. A successful author will tackle edits many times before a manuscript is considered publishable.
    • Pro Tip: Get a reliable and trustworthy beta reader team together to tell you what is working in your story and what needs help.
    • Pro Tip: Don’t get hung up on the word count. It used to concern me that I would hear about authors ripping out thousands of words from their books during edits, whereas I’d be adding that many into mine. I’m here to tell you, both methods are correct.
      • Let me explain as an author who finds herself adding more words into a story than she strips from it. I think of books like meals. I can easily convey the meat of the story, give readers the heart and soul, but sometimes I fail to give the side dishes – the potatoes, those little extras that make a book and world immersive. Knowing that about my writing style, I ask my beta readers to be honest about where I should add the extra details – either for clarification or for pure fun. I always know what to do when I see “Potatoes” in their notes.
  5. Engage. A successful author engages with her fans. This is done across many platforms and through many avenues – social media, your author website, your e-mail lists, interviews, blog hops, book signings, etc. You should take the time to figure out what works best for you.
    • Pro Tip: Be sincere. Don’t do things you find taxing or annoying. Engage in ways that make you feel accessible, vibrant, and real. It should be fun. If it’s not, try something else. You should always be excited to talk about your books.
    • Pro Tip: Always travel with book swag, business cards, and books. You never know who will want to buy from you after talking with you. Sometimes you won’t need any of it, other times you’ll use all of it and wish you had more. Be prepared!

Filed Under: Author Tagged With: on writing

Open Mic Night: Reading from Chapter 2 of Zaria Fierce and the Enchanted Drakeland Sword

February 23, 2017 By Keira Gillett

I got an opportunity to head to a friend’s open mic night that they hosted late last year. Should have posted this earlier. Whoops! It was quite fun. Lots of wonderful individuals stood up to sing, play music, read poetry, and book excerpts. I got to do the last one. Let me know what you think!

Filed Under: Author, Enchanted Drakeland Sword, Zaria Fierce Tagged With: author reading, book reading

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