Oct 29 2008

Name the Characters in My Next Novel

The following is from a Press Release submitted to local newspapers and on online in October, 2008:

Beginning November 1st, over 100,000 people from all over the globe will begin by sitting in front of what may be for some, the most paralyzing spectacle facing any writer: a blank page. Whether it is on a word processor, typewriter, notebook paper, or a stack of empty cocktail napkins, the sheer pressure of writing a novel settles in just after midnight on November 1st and will not let up until November 30th. This defines the challenge placed for participants every year since 1999 by the NaNoWriMo website: Write 50,000 words in thirty days.

This is the first year Glenn Sasscer heard of the challenge. “I found the website through HARO (Help A Reporter Out) and reviewed the challenge in passing. I tried to dismiss it, but something stuck with me and I started wondering if I had it in me.”

Writing is not a new adventure for Sasscer. His first novel, Suffering Madness, was released in May of 2008. He laughs, “… but it took me over ten years to write that one!” He also has articles published in magazines, newspapers, trade papers, curriculum, web blogs, and worked as a freelance reporter.

“Part of the fun in writing a novel is making up the characters,” Sasscer says. “I always enjoyed the aspect of giving them names, coming up with background information – where were they born, what they drive, what were their parent’s names, and things like that. So I thought I would share the fun with this challenge.”

Sasscer is giving a chance for his friends, supporters, or interested followers to participate in the fun of the NaNoWriMo challenge without having to write a novel. By submit character names and information when he comes across such opportunities when writing, others can contribute without the work of writing. Any suggests used in the novel will be acknowledged in the forward to the novel.

“The NaNoWriMo rules state only one writer can work on the project,” Sasscer explains. “But they leave the rules wide open when it comes to names, places, what kind of car the character drives, and other information. This would be the same thing as walking into my living room and asking my wife for a character name; I’m just opening the window and asking anybody within earshot the same thing on the Internet.”

By using his Twitter account (www.twitter.com/gsasscer), Sasscer will post a need for a piece of information and give followers up to 24 hours to offer suggestions. Those interested in participating will need to set up a free account at www.twitter.com, then search for “gsasscer” to follow his progress. You can also find his website at www.tinyurl.com/gsasscer1 or by Googling his name, “Glenn Sasscer”.

From his website, you can click on the NaNoWriMo banner to track his progress with the writing through the month of November.

Sasscer plans to use December and January to finish the novel, polish it, and then get it published in 2009. “Part of the writing process is the rewrite, polish, rewrite, polish, and continued tweaking until it is done. I hope to publish the novel in the spring of 2009 and offer it to all those who contributed at author’s cost.”

Glenn Sasscer invites you to join the fun. Find him at www.twitter.com/gsasscer.


Oct 29 2008

Chirstian Horror

I began writing what would eventually become my first novel, Suffering Madness, in 1995. My design goals at the time were fairly small - I was targeting the short story market in magazines to try to develop a name. After enough rejections to wallpaper my office, I realized my writing was pretty bad… in fact, reading it could be defined as a horror in itself for any magazine editor.

Fortunately, my desire to write and tell stories overshadowed any detail like the mechanics of writing, and I was dumb enough to press past the rejections telling me I was clueless. I joined three critique groups at the same time, each requiring writing assignments and critiques, and each holding their own strength in writing. One focused on character development, another on the mechanics of writing (”The Elements of Style” by Shrunk and White was their foundation), and the last centered on how to tell a really good story. All three were brutal to some extent, however one was absolutely bloodthirsty in devouring any mistake in grammar, spelling, or weak plots. Some writers jumped ship in their first or second week; but as I already stated, I was too dumb to know any better. I suffered through the critiques bleeding all over my precious creations, cutting up my babies, and splattering blood ink on my stories. I learned to develop thick skin and separate constructive criticism from personal opinion.

In hindsight, I spent roughly twenty to thirty hours a week working all three critique groups over the course of about four years, and I have the bruises and scars to prove it. Yet each provided their own school of instruction and helped get my writing published in magazines, anthology books, and excerpts in newspapers.

And then Suffering Madness was conceived in the death throws of a short-story writing assignment for one of the critique groups. Several supporting comments from an otherwise critical crowd brought the story out of the obscurity of an assignment into the light of a realistic novel. How could I know the short story was merely the third chapter of a much larger project?

The first draft of Suffering Madness rounded off at about 130,000 words three years later, the second draft paring it down to 65,000 words. The story survived seven more drafts to polish out at 95,000 words.

These specific words caught the eye of Suzanne Kirk, then Senior Editor at Scribner. She liked it, though without an agent, could not take me past a handwritten letter, two dots and a smiling mouth. Unfortunately, even with an encouraging letter from a prominent editor, agents would scurry away from my writing like frightened spiders. Why? Several reasons were given. Not enough warm fuzzies about the project (really… this was verbatim, part of the response!), Scribner was not on their list (what fiction agent would not bend a little for Scribner?), and what I believe to be the real challenge: Suffering Madness was too cross-genre to market.

This novel lands solidly in the horror genre, yet presents spiritual aspects lending to a Christian flavor. Could there be a Christian Horror genre? Ha! Let’s laugh now while the ink is still fresh on our monitors. So, I believe in God and like the horror genre… am I the only one?

Hmmm… This poses a whole new set of rules for marketing, attracting attention, and getting this project off the ground. Ten months were spent marketing to agents (some of the best prima donnas do not accept simultaneous submissions… based on experience, stop wasting your time and skip them!). By the time I landed an agent willing to work on a cross-genre project, Suzanne Kirk had retired.

Cringe.

I lost the next few years to cattle-prodding an agent through two marriages, two divorces, and two agency closure/start-ups.

Cringe again.

Within three months of “releasing” my agent, Suffering Madness found its way to the desk of four of the top ten most prominent publishing editors in the United States (I backdoored three to get around the no-agent clause). Their reasons for rejection varied, yet personal responses provided insight to the central theme of dismissal: cross-genre.

To the point: Suffering Madness was too scary for the Christian audience and too preachy for the secular market. You can’t suck the blood out of bodies, grind their hands in garbage disposals, and scatter their remains all over a circle slide in a schoolyard playground and appeal to a Christian audience. You also have to be careful with the “J” word for non-Christian markets; if a character says, “Jesus”, they should be cussing and not preaching.

I accept the truth in marketing to your audience and writing for your intended reader. Yet, I learned publishing is less artistic and more business in the United States. The gatekeepers in the publishing world require a toll for passage – you must be a good gamble. A cross-genre novel for an established author like Stephen King, Dean Koontz, or Richard Matheson is an easy risk or gamble, but the odds are against a new author.

Thankfully, there are specialty publishers willing to risk the odds and work with new artists.  Although small publishers in this category tend to have small marketing budgets, we see sales on Amazon, Barnes and Noble.com, in the UK, and with special orders through bookstores (no bookshelf space yet).

So, are there challenges in writing horror novels? Absolutely. Anything worth your blood and sacrifice, scraping the scales off the underbelly of society, staring evil in the eye, and still holding your head up on Sunday in church is worth the challenge.

My advise to authors: hold onto what you believe in an write what you enjoy.

- Glenn Sasscer

Glenn Sasscer lives in Northwest Ohio with his wife and three children.

ABOUT SUFFERING MADNESS: In 33 A.D., they possessed a man with such strength no mortal could subdue him. They were cast into pigs to be drowned and sentenced to the Abyss, an endless black prison. After holding a grudge against mankind for almost 2000 years, what would happen if they were released?

A serial killer feeds their hunger, but is he pawn or partner? Eric Shayman can match their strength, but is he a tool or a trick? Bailey Duncan wears a badge, but will her hurt be a hindrance?

Evil wears a new face and it is hungry. The slaughter continues, for they are many.

SUFFERING MADNESS - The legend of Legion lives…