Buy The CEO and the Cowboy HERE |
By
Starla Kaye
Every
writer I know works differently. Story ideas, titles, and characters come to us
differently. There a ton of “how-to” books available on how to write a book.
There is advice all over the Internet. You can belong to writers groups,
critique groups, or just bounce your ideas off your friends and family.
I
have a massive library of writing “how-to” books; most of them only glanced
through when I picked them up in the bookstore. I look at some of the writer’s
advice that passes through online groups I belong to, or I pick it up when I do
research for a program that I will deliver at one of the writers groups I am a
member of. And I have solid, reliable writing friends that I can bounce ideas
off of or have them critique at least part of a story. But I rarely talk about
more than my basic story thoughts with my friends or family.
Mainly
I come up with story ideas on my own. As Barbara Elsborg said in a recent blog,
I also can’t start writing a project until I have a title definitely in my
mind. Rarely do my titles ever get changed before publication. After I have my
title in mind, then I create characters and a setting that fit it. Maybe some
people think that is an ass-backwards way of starting a story, sort of putting
the cart before the horse. It doesn’t matter. That’s the way I work.
That’s
the way I usually start out, anyway.
There are always exceptions to a rule. I’m in the process of writing a sequel
to The CEO And The Cowboy. I am using
my two heroes from that story, so I have characters already created. I will be
digging deeper into their psyches, pulling out more of what drives them
emotionally, and extending their relationship. What I mean by that is I am
adding a woman into the mix: Ruby Tuesday McMurtry.
Tentatively
titled For Ruby’s Love, the story
will pick up about a year after Calhoun and Daniel got together and struggled
to become lovers. As with many couples in real life, the “bloom is off the
rose” and although they want to be together, they are struggling to make a
relationship work. Life—each of their lives—gets in the way.
When
I was dreaming up a storyline to continue what had been started in the first
book, I knew in my heart that they needed another person in their lives. Of
course they don’t realize that at first. When Ruby arrives at Calhoun’s ranch
to help him with a traumatized horse, both he and Daniel expect a completely
different person. They had made arrangements to bring to the ranch a famous and
in-much demand horse whisperer. Instead Ruby, the man’s daughter, arrives and
refuses to be turned away. She is dealing with trauma of her own and now must
prove to these two alpha men that she can handle the job. She desperately wants
to prove herself and earn a reputation of her own. What none of them foresee is
the powerful attraction that fires up between them.
I’m
excited about writing this story. My problem is I get sidetracked…and I’m
totally blaming the publisher. I had finished coming up with my basic plot line
and was ready to dig into the actual writing. And then I heard that Decadent
might be looking for stories about older couples. Well, I had to stop
everything and work on that idea. Now I’ve got Silke’s Stubborn Cowboy racing around in my thoughts and dying to
be put on paper, too.
One
thing I don’t have is a problem coming up with story ideas. Finding enough time
to actually write each of the stories…okay, that’s where I have problems. But
I’m determined to crank these two particular stories out before too much
longer.
7 comments:
Hello, everyone. I hope you don't get as sidetracked as I do. And I hope you share some of your thoughts about how you go about starting a new story.
I should take my own advice, Starla! I HAVE to write a sequel to a story I've had published and I cannot for the life of me decide where to take it. Most unusual for me, but then I don't very often write more stories using the same characters. Maybe if I can come up with the title.... but then last night, I had a complicated dream that I really want to use for a story. I feel distraction looming! Seems we have a lot in common!
I understand the dilemma. I have many fans ask me about doing sequels that involve side characters. Most of the time I don't have a clue where to start...probably why I procrastinate on doing those stories.
But with my follow-up story to The CEO and The Cowboy, I just seemed to know where I wanted to go next. Now I just have to write it.
Thanks for confirming what I already know and do. Quess that means I'm not as crazy as I thought.
Great post. Louise
No, you're not crazy if you do what Barbara and I do. You're just a writer.
Thanks for stopping by, Louise.
LOL I get sidetracked to by other story ideas. I think our muses enjoy doing that to us. All the best!
Those ornery muses! Thanks, Jessica for stopping by.
Post a Comment