As for the acknowledgements and dedication, they ask earlier on if I would like a couple of pages saved for them. I tend to say yes, even when I’m not sure who I might acknowledge or who or what I might dedicate the book to (and also be in danger of repeating myself) because I suspect they are a case of ‘use them or lose them’. I also feel that just going nah, I won’t bother, is a bit lazy.
So, Penny Royal is on 32,741 words and I’ll soon be abandoning it for a while to turn my attention to this editing. When I return to Penny Royal I’ll have to deal with a growing feeling of ‘time to introduce another character or twist’ – time in fact to do what Raymond Chandler did when he felt things needed ramping up. His approach was to walk in a man with a gun. My approach has structural similarities to that but might be ‘time to bring in a massive brass android with a penchant for ripping off people’s heads’ or ‘time to bring in the ancient and thoroughly unpleasant Golgoloth’.
It’s something I’ll have to ponder.
Yay! You can never have enough huge brass androids ripping off heads...
ReplyDeleteI am partial to the odd psychopathic android, but the sheer amoral evilness of the Golgoloth takes some beating. Anything that is used as a bogeyman to scare juvenile Prador has to be good!
ReplyDeleteEvery book should have a huge brass android!
ReplyDeleteWhy not dedicate the book to your blog readers ;-)
ReplyDeleteif he does that we may be rounded up for questioning.
ReplyDeleteCrane Nuff said.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the commnets. And thanks for yours, Packrat54. I actually giggled.
ReplyDelete