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Lynne

The Freaking Process – The Idea

January 23, 2013 By Lynne

I’ll be doing a short series about the writing process. I’ll try to answer some of the questions I’ve been asked and explain how I get from idea to novel.

The number one question that I’m asked is – Where do you get your ideas?

I have an overactive imagination so I have lots of ideas. Most of them would make truly lousy novels. But every once in a great while, something decent percolates out of the mud and I grab onto it. Those ideas have been kicking their way to the top of the heap, and I have come back to them time and again like a terrier to a bone. The idea for Stuck in Korea Time was well ahead of the idea for A Shared Fear, but I couldn’t figure out how to make it work. But it just wouldn’t go away. Those are the ones that mean something.

Sometimes, the initial idea comes from a conversation that I overhear.
Guy #1 – “It’s hard to date when you’re a single parent.”
Guy #2 – “Dude, you have no idea. Wait until she’s a teenager. Thirteen year old girls are nothing but judgmental divas. Mine complains about anyone I date. Too tall, too short, too fat, too thin. It’s like they’re trying on some bitchy new personality.”

My immediate thought was, “What the hell would she say if you brought home someone five years older than you?” That thought was followed by a scene playing out in my head of an offended daughter making a snotty comment after coming home to find her darling daddy canoodling with the older woman on the couch.

My second thought was, “What if the woman she was so rude to was now the only person that can keep her alive when she is kidnapped?”

Saving Emily began with that overheard conversation and those two questions.

Ideas also come from goofing around. I was practicing for a speaking engagement, and I was playing with my laser pointer. Yes, I’m easily amused. I pointed it across a dark room just to see how far the light beam would go and when it appeared on the far wall, I thought to myself, “Wow! That looks just like a laser target dot. I wonder if it would fool anybody.” The scenario that popped into my head was an ATF agent confronting a group of bad guys with no backup. His girlfriend, hiding behind something puts the red dot on the leader’s chest and tells him she’s got them covered. I didn’t wind up using the laser pointer idea, but that’s how A Shared Fear actually came into being.

Sometimes, the idea comes from the things that scare me.
My biggest fear when I was in the military was that I would let someone down when they really needed me. That if we deployed to the wrong place at the wrong time, someone would get hurt because they were trying to take care of me instead of taking care of themselves. During my career, I heard literally dozens of stories about the problems during deployment. Diverted personnel, the wrong personnel, the wrong equipment showing up, equipment that never showed up, lost paperwork, no medical personnel, no rations, being stranded and being ignored. Protecting Parker was the sum of all these stories.

[By the way, if you think things like this don’t happen – you’re wrong. I can show you examples from every war where the wrong people and equipment are sent to the wrong place. The example I most frequently use is from Vietnam and the Battle of Ngok Tavak. When you read the sanitized version on Wikipedia, (it appears in a section about the Battle of Kham Duc and begins in the section marked Prelude) you should keep in mind a couple things. #1 – Captain White requested assistance in extracting his Mike Force. #2 – A Mike Force is supposed to mobile. They are best at the hit and run. #3 – A howitzer is NOT really mobile. #4 – The 33 Marines dropped into Ngok Tavak with their howitzer were artillery guys, not a trained recon unit or special forces. And just to be crystal clear – these types of things still happen.]

I can trace each of my books back to the basic idea or concept they came from. What I can’t explain is exactly why I couldn’t let one particular idea or image go. I simply know that when I can’t – it’s usually going to be a good book.

Filed Under: A Shared Fear, Protecting Parker, Saving Emily, Stuck in Korea Time, Writing

The Damaged Blood Link IV

January 18, 2013 By Lynne

The Damaged – Blood Link IV by Lynne Scott.
Blood_Link_IV-_The_Damaged_Cover

Blood Link: Where the military and vampires meet.

Until he came to the team, Marine Corps Staff Sergeant Sonny Pauley was positive no one cared if he lived or died. He wasn’t sure he cared either. Now he’s ready to face the looming vampire war beside his chosen family. As Milo and Katherine send a violent and bloody message of their intention to annihilate the unit and everyone in it, Sonny has one last task to accomplish before the unit is ready to fight. He needs to help Esmeralda “Essie” Cannon move past her dark and violent history, so she can face the enemy beside them. But helping someone else often means sharing more of yourself than you are comfortable with. Sonny will have to face some of his own demons if he’s to help Essie confront hers.

Editor: Arwen Newman
Cover Design: Liquid Reality Studios
121,559 Words

Available from Amazon through the link on the right side of the page.
Also available in paperback at CreateSpace and Amazon.
Available from Barnes and Noble for the Nook.

Filed Under: Blood Link Tagged With: Blood Link, The Damaged

Lost Again

January 12, 2013 By Lynne

I was writing away like a mad woman the other day when I realized that I’d gotten sidetracked. It happens. My mind likes to take these little trips away from what I’m actually supposed to be writing and work on something else. Some of my best and worst stuff comes out of these little excursions.

My newest story was intended to be a fish out of water story about a symphony conductor who witnesses a murder and is stashed at a Southern Arizona ranch for a week while the Phoenix cops solve the case. There’d be some trouble on the ranch, the characters would have hot sex, the killer would show up, the heroine or the hero would save the day. Sort of a modern day western.

Like most of my great plans – it took a left turn at Albuquerque.

Somewhere along the line, I decided that I needed to do some research about my location. I’m a genealogist and a history buff. I like to know what I’m writing about. Like usual, I got hooked on my damn research. Two glorious days of reading about the history in the Santa Cruz river valley, its people and the ranches, ensued. It was fascinating stuff. But when I returned to writing my story – well, there I was in the middle of my book “sharing” this information in what I thought was a good little back story about the ranch. What should have been two paragraphs turned into four pages of ranch history. I can put all of that in, but not all at once, and certainly not in chapter three. Talk about bogging down a story.

The second problem I ran into was that I info dumped my characters. I’ve written their back stories and I know almost too much about them, and I just blurted it all out, taking away any interest or “mystery” as to why they behave the way they are behaving. “Hello, my name is Lynne. Let me vomit out my life history.” A rookie mistake to say the least.

The third problem is actually the thing that made me stop where I was and seek guidance from my mentor and a couple friends. I wrote a chapter about the cop and what was happening in Phoenix. I wanted to know more about him and the investigation and this seemed like a nice counterpoint to the ranch. I was planning to use the murder investigation as the story timeline. Well, the next thing I knew, I was writing the murder story and liking it. A few characters became many and four chapters later, I realized that my folks at the ranch were still standing in the kitchen. But I really like this cop and the story!

Realizing that I had a problem – the first step is admitting you need help – I sent bits and pieces off to three people. One went to a musician friend of mine to see if I had at least written that character correctly. One went to a trusted reader who pulls very few punches. And one when to my mentor, a fellow author who pulls even fewer punches. The responses were (bless their hearts) encouraging, but each pointed out exactly what I knew to be true. I have gotten lost in my own story.

My favorite comments:
“I liked the dog the best.” (So did I.)
“It’s not a bad story at all…” (A polite way of saying it ain’t good.)
“The first chapter was good.” (Clearly meaning the other three weren’t.)
“Who is the book about – the conductor or the cop?” (I was wondering that too.)
“I’m confused. Is this a suspense novel or historical fiction?” (Well, crap.)
“I like the cop and the foreman best.” (I like them too, but…)

Now you see what I mean about not pulling punches.

Writing a book has been equated to taking a journey without a map. Sometimes you take a few wrong turns, and while I happen to like those side trips, those roads don’t lead to my destination. It’s time to backtrack to the main road and decide just what the hell I am writing and whose story it is.

I better put on another pot of coffee.

Filed Under: Writing

How many books per year?

January 8, 2013 By Lynne

More than one person has asked me why I don’t publish more books each year, so I thought I should address this question. Since March 2011, I have published seven books. If things go well, I’ll put out Blood Link IV in the next two weeks and that will still be a total of eight novels published in a two-year period.

I actually started writing seriously in June 2010, but I first submitted Protecting Parker to a publisher in October of that year. At that time, the four Blood Link books were one (rather jumbled) story of about 125,000 words, and I was sure that book was all just a waste of my time. Now the word count for the four books of the Blood Link series totals almost 400,000 words, and the ten people who actually read the darn things love them to death.

These eight books are not all there is. There are two books written that are in the beta cycle right now. The Healer – Book V of the Blood Link series centering on Dr. Peter (Mac) MacKenzie. My next standalone novel (tentatively titled The Embassy Guards) is a thriller about a special ops team with a cover as (can you guess) embassy guards. While those are in beta read and head for edits next month, I’m currently writing Book VI and the next standalone thriller. Those will be the four for 2013.

What most people should remember is that this isn’t all about me and what I can do. For every book I write there are numerous beta readers. All of whom have lives and may or may not be able to jump right in on the manuscript I send them. For every book I write there is an editor. My two editors do not do this for a living – they do it because they foolishly agreed to in a moment of weakness and now can’t figure out how to get the hell out of it. They have lives and other things they would rather be doing. Marcia prefers retirement and genealogy to editing. Arwen is a high school teacher and would much rather ring hand bells, hunt for old cemeteries, do needlework, and read for pleasure. Neither of them derives a great deal of satisfaction in facing the never-ending assaults by my comma fairy, and they are both more than a little embarrassed by my gerund fetish. The fact that I now know what a gerund is continues to amaze all of us. Two books each per year is a big enough imposition. Anything more than that could mean my death sentence.

There is also the issue of creating a quality cover and the technical aspect of the publishing to consider. Dean actually has a real business that he needs to attend to, but he makes time for me because I’m like a tubercular cough and won’t go away without large doses of expensive medication. (The truth is that he’s too busy to file the request for a restraining order on me.) Despite my obnoxiousness, he turns out my covers, reconfigures each book for the different sites, and takes care of actually getting my books online and making sure that they stay there. He’s also on call for my computer issues, technical (think geek) questions that I need to know for my manuscripts, and the poor bastard has to actually read every book I write. How much suffering can we expect from one man?

Publishing four books a year is what my team and I can manage, and probably more than any of them would like.

Filed Under: Writing

My Resolutions

January 1, 2013 By Lynne

I hate New Year’s Resolutions. I think they are the biggest damn waste of my time that ever was. They rate right up there with those silly quizzes in the women’s magazines. You know the ones that ask stupid stuff like, “Do you know how to keep your man happy?” Hell, no! I have no idea what makes him happy on any given day. I’ve been married to him for 28 years and it’s still a damn mystery. “Do you dress for success?” Um, heeelllllooooo! There’s a reason I chose the military. In case you haven’t noticed, Uncle Sam sorta takes fashion and choice out of the equation. The simple answer in case you missed it is NO. I like sitting around in jeans or jammies when I write. What’s it to ya anyway?

As you can see – New Year’s makes me cranky. I went to online banking because I hated writing the wrong year on my checks for the first three months of the year. Don’t even get me started on the whole New Year’s Eve thing. What is the point of starting off the New Year puking your guts out and being hung over? Did it once and learned my lesson.

Where was I? Oh yeah… resolutions. I finally quit doing the resolution thing a couple of years ago. I made the same ones every year. Literally, year after year.
1. Lose weight. I do. And then I gain it back so I have to do it all over again.
2. Be nicer. I am. Then I go out in public or watch the news and that one’s over with.
3. Be kinder. It’s different than nicer, but the same thing happens.
4. Quit speeding. I do. But then I remember how much fun it is and I begin to channel Lori.
5. Cook healthier meals. Refer to #1.

What I finally realized was that every year I was setting myself up for failure and a boatload of self-loathing. I already know that I’m going to screw all those things up so why did I put them on a list and say I was going to do them. I thought if I put them out there then I’d be too embarrassed not to do them. Then I realized that almost everyone I know was failing at them too. Sure, there’s a couple over-achievers that you want to smack at the end of the year, but for the most part, we all make resolutions that are hard to keep.

Now I make a list of stuff that I can and will do. It’s nothing fancy, but I like the idea of starting out the year with the probability of success. My friend Dean likes to say that I’m aiming low to avoid any real expectation, but we all know that I’m just avoiding the disappointment of not meeting my goals.

So these are my resolutions for 2013 –
1. I will not step on my scale more than once a month. The damn thing just annoys me so I don’t know why I’d want to spend any real time with it. It’s rude, obnoxious, and the little bastard lies.
2. I will step away from anyone who I can’t be nice to or won’t be nice to me. Both in person and online. In person, this will save me the hassle of calling Mr. Scott to pick me up after arraignment, and online, it will keep me from leaving a permanent trail that can be used against me in a court of law.
3. I will adopt a dog this year because I have no trouble being kind to a dog. I like them better than most of the people I encounter. Dogs like me, and they don’t care if I’m overweight, have no fashion sense, curse too much, and don’t give a rat’s ass about dusting.
4. I will keep my one living houseplant alive for another year. It helps that it’s a cactus, but it’s still a challenge to me.
5. I will hoard three-way incandescent light bulbs. I hate those new squiggle damn things.
6. I will not go back to doing things that I have already managed to give up doing. Therefore, I will not be smoking, seriously drinking, or jogging. If I take up jogging again, you can bet that I’m drinking heavily.
7. I will lower my head and not look directly at the other driver when I call him a freaking useless Asshat that can’t drive to save his soul. I’m getting too old to get out of the car and beat the hell out of people. It’s also not as easy as it used to be to beat up on those old white-haired ladies since more of them are going to the gym and eating healthy.
8. I will not eat any beets or lima beans. I don’t like them. I don’t want them. And as an adult – I don’t have to eat the damn things if I don’t wanna.
9. I will avoid daytime television, reality television, and anything with wives, bachelors, survivors, gold hunting, trucking, crabbing, axe, or swamp in the premise or title. I’ve suffered enough brain damage from the serious drinking and I don’t need to add to it with this useless drivel.
10. And finally, I will stay at least one-half mile away from Sam Elliott. The restraining order was quite clear about the distance, and I’m pretty good at following rules when there are consequences.

That’s it. Those are my ten resolutions for the coming year. I know that I can keep them. Now all you have to do is keep yours. Happy New Year and best wishes for the coming year.

Filed Under: Personal Commentary

Lori’s Living Eulogy

December 20, 2012 By Lynne

My friend Lori is dying. It’s no secret. Lori tells everyone that up front. She has ALS (Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. She was diagnosed two and a half years ago and is now heading into the final stretch. In the beginning, her doctor gave her a rough time estimate of three years. Her response was, “I don’t think so, Doc. I’m going on the twenty-year plan.” Lori still has the attitude, if not the time.

I debated long and hard about posting this piece, but in the end, I really didn’t have a choice. Lori’s church held a celebration of life for her several months ago so she could attend. I thought that was one of the coolest things ever. People say the nicest things about you at your funeral. Wouldn’t you actually like to be around to hear them? I figured there was no sense in waiting to write the eulogy that I would give if I were going to attend her funeral. I want her to know what I would say.

So, here’s your (living) eulogy, Smiley.

I’ve known Lori for forty-three years. I’m not sure how that’s possible since neither of us is that old. Physically, we may have accrued those years, but mentally, we’re the same kids we were when we first met. I’m surprised the geologists didn’t register the Earth trembling on that first day of ninth grade at Colin Kelly Junior High in September 1969. My family had just moved to Eugene, Oregon, and I didn’t know a soul. It all started with, “Hi. I’m Lori. You look lost.” I explained that I wasn’t lost, my classroom was. She pointed to the door and giggled. We were friends. At our thirty-year class reunion, Lori gave me a huge hug and told me that I hadn’t changed a bit. I still looked lost.

Lori was one of my father’s favorite people. She was so small that my dad began to tease her about looking like she was in seventh grade instead of ninth. I wasn’t all that big, but Lori was tiny, and my dad referred to her as Tinkerbell tiny. She had this giant smile, granny glasses, and blonde hair that was a bit shaggy. Okay, it was a lot shaggy! My dad was on her constantly about getting the hair out of her eyes. He frequently asked who had let the scrawny blonde sheepdog in followed by an order to my mother, “For God’s sake, don’t feed her, Shirl. We’ll never get rid of the damn thing once you feed her.” Lori would giggle, my dad would try to look stern, and my mother would actually smile. Deep down in that secret place in my heart, I always knew that I was really the stray, and I’d been the lucky one who’d been found by Lori.

She and I spent a lot of time hanging out on the front steps of our houses or in each other’s bedrooms scheming and dreaming. We didn’t want to go to college, and I don’t think either of us was really aware in those days of just how freaking brilliant we actually were. Contrary to what our fathers occasionally told us, we did have enough brains between the two of us to get in out of the rain. Think about it—we wound up in Texas and Arizona. Don’t think we’re so dumb now, do ya?

I always knew Lori was going to join the military. We didn’t talk a lot about that for some reason, but I remember telling her that I thought she’d be good at it. She wanted to go somewhere and learn something practical that she could use all of her life. I clearly remember trying to talk her into going into the Air Force instead of the Army, but Lori always knew what she wanted. She’d verbally hem and haw, but Lori was never the one who was lost.

The only real problem Lori had in travelling her path was that she was going to have to take the bus to travel it. She’d never get there if she was behind the wheel of a car. You see, Lori was the worst driver known to man. She’s nodding and saying, “It’s true!” right now. Lori couldn’t drive to save her life in high school. I’m pretty sure the driver’s ed teacher started smoking weed prior to getting into the car with Lori because drinking that much alcohol just wasn’t practical. I only rode with her a few times before I realized I didn’t have a death wish and refused her offers of a ride. She wrecked her parents’ car at least twice before she graduated from high school. We can’t even begin to count the number of near misses she had. The second accident wasn’t very far from her house, and her father showed up. Once Mr. Armstrong was sure she wasn’t hurt, the fireworks began. The politest way to say this is–Mr. Armstrong was not happy with his daughter. The poor officer almost had a heart attack when Mr. Armstrong snatched her license from his hand and tore it up, telling both the cop and Lori that she was never driving again. The cop actually felt sorry for her by the time Mr. Armstrong was finished with her. I didn’t. She was a known mailbox killer, and they needed to get her off the damn street! While Lori may have developed a few more driving skills later in life, paying attention to the speed limit sign was never one of those. “Lead Foot Lori” remains a legend to more than one law enforcement agency.

Lori and I have managed to stay in touch despite all the moves and name changes. One or the other of us dials the phone every so often, and the conversation just picks up where we left off. There’s the update about the family and work, and then, we just wander off on whatever subject takes our fancy. Two hours later, one of us realizes that we’re supposed to cook dinner or be somewhere and we disconnect. We aren’t much for goodbyes. It’s usually an “I love you,” followed by a “See ya later” or “Talk to you soon” type of ending.

I went to visit Lori recently and discovered that nothing between us has really changed. As soon as I got in the door, the giggling began. I’m not really much of a giggler, but I seem unable to control myself when I’m around her. The smiling doesn’t stop either – her smile is positively infectious. This trip was the first time we’d met each other’s husbands. Our guys aren’t big on being arm candy at reunions and such. We shouldn’t have been surprised that they hit it off and disappeared to the man cave to look at tools and machines. They were content to leave us girls to our memories and conversation.

We talked about the past, and we talked about the present and, as always, the future. I’ve watched Lori face her disease head on and with an openness that frightens many people. While some of the people we know have avoided facing the facts of ALS, Lori never has. She has researched and studied everything she could find, and then, she did what few others have been able to do. She skipped through the five steps of grief and moved on. She won’t try to bullshit you and tell you that she hasn’t had days when the knowledge of her coming death hasn’t gotten to her, but she refuses to let those times dictate her life. They are hours of discontent, not days or weeks.

Lori is one of the few ALS patients who have never been on anti-depressants. You see, Lori has done what we’d all like to do—she has made her peace with herself. She doesn’t want her family and friends to remember a woman who spent the last bit of her precious time mired in depression about the life she wouldn’t get to lead. She figures the people who do that are missing out on all the joy in the life they currently have, and Lori has never been a gal to miss out on a good party. That reminds me of a great story about this party at… ummm, never mind.

She recently posted on Facebook that she had her funeral planned and everything was ready. Tie-dyed tees and blue jeans are the uniform of the day for her and her family. She’s got her pair of knitted socks, and she’s even got some Rollos to bribe St. Peter with. I couldn’t help but laugh as I suddenly remembered a few less than stellar moments from our past. I gleefully pointed out that one little sleeve of Rollos wasn’t going to cut it. She needed to lay in a couple fifths of decent booze, a few cartons of Winstons and several pairs of high-quality silk stockings if she was going to bribe her way past those gates. She isn’t trying to slip a little white lie past someone. This is St. Pete! That ole boy knows more than Santa about who’s been naughty or nice. Once reminded of a few of our indiscretions, Lori became concerned that she might not have purchased a large enough casket to hold the necessary amount of bribe material. She’s worried about the size of the casket, but I’m worried about the poor pallbearers needing trusses when this is over with. With that much stuff, they may need to just be honorary pallbearers and walk beside the forklift we’re going to need to move this behemoth.

We have many things in common besides our love of Rollos though. Lori and I both believe that Heaven exists but that it’s not necessarily the standard image that some people have. It’s not like a permanent address, and as a singular location, it’s not that big. It’s a stopping place on the way to a bigger excursion. Sort of like a boot camp for eternity. You check in, do your paperwork, figure out the rules, and then, once you have an interview with whoever’s in charge of the duty roster, you move on to whatever it is you move on to. I know Lori is sort of hoping for a role as a guardian angel, but I think a lot will depend on that interview process and when it occurs. You see, Lori and I also believe that the Marine’s Hymn has it right and the streets of Heaven are indeed guarded by United States Marines. And where there are Marines, there’s bound to be a good party. I’ve always had bail money for her before, but I’m not sure how this one is going to work out. If the interview occurs after the party, she might need a mulligan. And if there’s tequila at the party… she may need more than one mulligan.

Lori and I have remained friends for many reasons. We don’t like a lot of weeping and wailing. We aren’t big on drama or drama queens. We’ve worked since we were old enough to babysit, and we’ve both taken whatever job we needed to in order to put clothes on our backs and food on our tables. We crept through the mud picking strawberries and sweated in the August heat picking green beans because we knew that if you wanted something, you had to work to get it. We are the type of women who hope and pray for better, prepare for the worst, but deal with the facts as they are presented. We remain close because we are the realists.

One of the strongest bonds we have is our respect for each other. We’ve always stood behind each other’s choices in life and honored the tough decisions we had to make. I respect her choice to not have a feeding tube or a ventilator. I respect her family for having the strength of character to honor her wishes. I respect her refusal to surrender who she is as a person to a disease that is robbing her of her body.

Her ability to face every day with a positive attitude and laughter along with her dignity, passion, and courage are incredible. Lori didn’t choose to become the example of the life lesson we all swear we’re going to follow, but she is. She has chosen to live every day to the fullest, and in the process, she inspires all of us to be better people than we are.

I know that if I were there with her, I would take on the role of her bouncer. I’d run off the whiners and criers, and I’d be the strength she needs me to be. I’d offer her my shoulder to lean on and my hand to hold if she needed it. Mostly, I’d just be the Barney to her Andy and give her one more reason to laugh at life. It’s what we’ve always done for each other. I’ll have to do it from afar, but she knows I’m with her in spirit. I’ll honor her wishes and respect her decision, and I’ll do my level best to make her smile every damn day.

But I won’t lie. I do not have Lori’s strength and composure when no one is looking. I want nothing more than to rage that this bright light is being taken from my life. I want to sit in the corner and pull the blanket over my head while I cry and berate God for what is happening to this wonderful person. And, more than anything else, I want to bask in the beauty of my friend’s smile for just a little longer.

But I know what Lori will say when she reads this last little bit. I can hear her in my head. “Bite me. Quit whining and get off your butt and write a book for me. I’m not gone yet. I still have time to read one more.”

That’s my girl. Still working on that twenty-year plan and looking towards the future. There’s just no quit in Tinkerbell.

So, I’m in it with you until the end, Smiley. I’ll type the words and tell you a story about two girls who dreamed together about all the wonderful places they would go and the wonderful things they would do. Two girls who even though separated by great distance never stopped being a part of each other’s lives. Two girls who even today just pick up where they left off. And two girls who have never, and will never, say the word goodbye.

I’ll do my part, Lori. But you have to do yours once you bribe your way past St. Pete and make it to that final interview. When you get asked for the list of people you would like to be a guardian angel for, you have to include me. Because without you sharing my path—I’ll not only look lost, I will be lost.

Talk to you soon, kiddo.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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