New Releases and Top Rated Epic Fantasy Books

As I was filling out my possible “to read” list, I realized I could share it with you.  🙂  Here are a few epic fantasy novels I’m looking at:

Limits of Power (Paladin's Legacy)
by Elizabeth Moon
The Way of Kings (Stormlight Archive,...
by Brandon Sanderson
And just for fun check out this post:
Posted in Books | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

20 Bestselling Epic Fantasy Novels Today

I’m a Kindle addict.  I received the Kindle Fire HD as a Christmas present, and it rarely leaves my hands.  Do I use the power of the Fire HD to watch movies or play games?  No.  The kid does that if he can snatch it away from me.   I may have to get him his own… the little monster.

I read books.  I could do with a lesser Kindle, but I’m not complaining.

Anyway…

I was looking at the top 20 in Epic Fantasy on Amazon today and thought I’d share.  It’s no surprise that The Game of Thrones is dominating, but there are a few other selections on there as well.

by George R.R. Martin
by George R.R. Martin
by George R.R. Martin
by Robert Jordan
by Michael G. Manning
by J.R.R. Tolkien
Posted in Books | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

How I Organize the Mess

Creation is messy.

First drafts are horrible.

Past the mid-point of a novel everything tends to get away from me.  It’s not a plotting or a planning problem.  It’s the sheer size of the document.  I spend too much time asking myself silly questions.  Where is one particular scene?  How does it all flow?  Did I spend too much time focusing on one character?  Is my timeline out of whack?  Where the heck am I anyway?  What did I call that thing I made up somewhere in the beginning?

Trying to manage all of this in a traditional word document is a nightmare.  It’s impossible to see the whole structure of the document unless you spend a lot of time working to make it happen.  You can create headers and bookmarks, but it’s still like trying to wrap your arms around a giant amoeba.

I tried using MS OneNote for a while.  It was almost as difficult.  Last year, in the middle of the panic of NANOWRIMO, a friend suggested Scrivener.  It was exactly what I needed.  When I get to the point where the whole thing is just too big, I can look in the sidebar at the outline.  Moving scenes around is as easy as drag and drop.  There are folders for characters, places and research.  Writing tools give you shortcuts to various resources.  It has a name generator.  It will export to a rtf file.

It’s safe to say that without Scrivener I would still be working on the draft of The Lost Gateway.  Instead, I’m working on the draft of novel number two.  🙂

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments