Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Home.

I'm home for a few days this holiday season, and glad about it. I was home a few months ago to see my cousin off to LA, but it feels like much longer since I've visited for some reason. It's good to be back.

My dogs, who exist as the king and queen of this household, always pretend to be completely starved of attention when I wander home. I'll play with them, they'll pass out in exhaustion, then wake up thirty minutes later to start the process again. They consider a simple game of fetch to be the ultimate holiday present... the only problem being they'll have forgotten about it in an hour. Such is doggy life.

I hope to finish the Magic In Dogtown edits while here, and start The Next Thing. Research for the next project is going surprisingly, surprisingly well... when usually research always runs afoul for me. But more on that later.

Happy Holidays, everyone.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Congratulations Thomas!

I just discovered that one of my friends from college got himself published! You can buy his book of short stories online here, from Amazon.

Thomas is a great guy. We lived on the same floor at a very large dormitory in college, and sometimes he would come out and read us pieces of his writing. Knowing how intelligent and talented he is, you can bet your ass I'll be ordering this book.

So congratulations, Thomas! I'll read this as soon as possible, and I hope this will lead to many more of your books being published!

Sunday, December 5, 2010

VILLAINS

I found this utterly fantastic comic linked off of writer John August's twitter feed, which explores villain motivations. Read the comic here: http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0763.html

John August has actually written a lot about "bad guys" and how to write them well. I highly recommend reading them if you're at all interested in writing a good villain or just find them fascinating in general. Here's a link to one of his entries on antagonists: http://johnaugust.com/archives/2009/every-villain-is-a-hero

I haven't written a purely evil villain in quite awhile. Most of my antagonists are either simply doing their best to survive any way they can, are attempting to overcome a major obstacle or trauma that is blocking their way, or are just trying to live with their fundamental desires.

Someone had asked me about bad guys on a previous project of mine, and what they were like. I responded with: "There are none. No traditional ones, anyway."

But man, sometimes I have the simple desire of writing a true villain who simply embraces anarchy at its most chaotic. It can be a blast. As a reader or audience member, I usually like to root for the villains. If anything, because when they're featured in stories, there scenes have no fat in them. They really move the plot along. Plus it's easy to tell that actors have a grand time in performing the roles. Even the Academy likes a great villain.

An upcoming story of mine will have an antagonist who is a serial killer. A rather gruesome one, too, so I've been thinking about "bad guys" for the past few weeks, and how to make them fresh and engaging.

Who are your favorite villains? What bad guy scared you as a kid? Which antagonist truly challenged the main character in the story? What can we learn from these dark characters? Would Batman have been as popular a franchise without the Joker? What made Scar from The Lion King so different from other Disney villains? What made Tim Roth's character in Rob Roy such a memorable and sinister villain?

Something to think about.