Showing posts with label Mark Holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Holmes. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

Romancing the Genre (With Apologies to the Stone)


This week, we're going to look at working romance into your other genres. What is the appeal of having romantic subplots in stories that are more typically focused on action, adventure, or even horror? We turned to the jury to get their verdict. 

Have you found a romantic subplot in your action and adventure (whatever genre you're actioning in) stories to be a helpful extra layer or not? Why?

Corrina Lawson: To be specific on questions, my own work straddles the line between romance and other genres. It's a terrific layer because it should (ideally) key into the growth of the character. A character has to undergo a sort of transformation to their best self in the story--and sometimes it's only the romantic interest who can see through the chaff to that best self. (Witness, say, Romancing the Stone, where Kathleen Turner basically forces Michael Douglas to take a hard look at who he wants to be.) 

Selah Janel: I haven’t written a lot of romance, but I’ve done a few things and a lot of what I write has romantic subplots. For me, I really like exploring relationships and interactions between characters. I really like playing with circumstance and tension, and getting under the surface to explore how characters relate and grow together. 

HC Playa: I write adventures with sex and love because I cannot for the life of me write actual romance.

Lucy Blue: Why do I write romance? Because I think human connection is the most interesting, most valuable reward any protagonist can achieve. It’s what we fight for. It’s what we survive for. And we can portray that by putting in a generic hot chick or dude to fridge and forget while we get on with the kung fu fighting. Or we can be brave and let that relationship be real. In movies, that works all the time. But in books, a real relationship equals romance, and romance equals Hallmark. And yeah, that makes me tired.

Emily Leverett: I've got a romantic subplot in my Eisteddfod Chronicles. The two MC have an affair. It's as much about the political implications as the personal, and both will continue to matter as the story comes to a close. Sometimes (all the time?) it's not possible to separate the personal and political. 

Sean Taylor: I almost always have a romantic element in my stories. I think it makes a fantastic B-plot or even C-plot depending on the length of the work, and it allows me to showcase more characteristics of my characters rather than just their ability to punch or exorcise horrors. 

David Wright: I tend to let the characters decide.

Mike Hintze: I go with the flow. The story tells me what happens

What is the appeal to readers to find a romantic story squirreled away inside other genres?

Lucy Blue: I have never written about rose petals in my life. I write action-packed, gory, hard-edged horror and fantasy stories with real conflict and peril that just happen to have a romantic relationship at their center. But as soon as I say I write romance, other horror and fantasy writers think rose petals and emotional melodrama. (This is me not talking about it.

Sean Taylor: As a reader myself, I always love to find them, as long as they don't overpower the A-plot. But they can get as close as they want to without bothering me. I look to the greats like Rebecca or even Haunting at Hill House. Without the romantic subplots, even those stories (one to a great degree obviously) would have been far more "one note" stories.

Emily Leverett: A romance can make a good backdrop for those explorations, because little is more personal than who you're having sex with.

Selah Janel: I think people tend to simplify what romance is and why people read it. I think it’s another way of seeking catharsis and when a person sees themselves or their personality reflected in a character, it gives hope that things can work out for them and they’re worthy of love, too. There’s a whole gamut of situations and emotions to explore - is a feeling required, unrequited, is there loss involved or baggage that might be an obstacle, how they see themselves and others - just all sorts of things that factor into how people relate to each other. It makes that moment when two characters do connect or reconnect that much more interesting and sweeter.

Corrina Lawson: The appeal to readers is more insight into characters, I would guess. Less so than in novels, but in movies, the romance part often seems tackled on because the love interest is only there to be rescued or in peril. *Even today.* I think romance gets a bad rep because of those types of movies. Most of the time, the movies would be better without them because they're not central to the character's story.

Or do you feel that romantic subplots just get in the way of your main plots?

Mark Holmes: I love a good romantic subplot! The problem is in 8 to 10 pages of a comic script I usually don't have any space to tell one other than a quick smooch at the end of the story.

Nik Stanosheck: The romance can be a way to get to know the characters and to help them grow and develop more.

Corrina Lawson: Romance is a type of relationship. I find authors who write relationships well tend to also write romance well, and it adds character and depth to a story. I should clarify, that in the genres I write, characters try to find their best selves. Obviously not true of other genres where tragic endings are fine. But romances there can also underscore character faults and bad choices.

Sean Taylor: At least the way I try to write them, they add to the main story rather than getting in the way, at least I sure hope so. That's the plan when I start to write anyway. 

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Favorite Holiday Tales (A Festive Writers Roundtable)

No big fancy topic this week. Just one simple question for everyone to answer. So, here it goes...

What's your favorite holiday story and why?

Mark Holmes: "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle" by Conan Doyle. Holmes and Watson follow a clue of a lost hat and a goose to free a wrongly accused plumber of theft. In the spirit of the season Holmes lets the real pathetic thief go. A fun story that has Christmas as it's setting and gives us a glance at a Victorian celebration. The story takes place on "the seventh day of Christmas" The 12 days of Christmas are after Dec. 25th. Something we all have forgotten.

Ellie Raine: Hogfather because of its punny goodness.

Jeff Hewitt: I have to second Hogfather for all the reasons that make it so good, and all those reasons are the book itself. Amazing stuff in there. But especially Death's speech at the end. "Humans need fantasy to be human. To be the place where the falling angel meets the rising ape."

Marian Allen: Anything by Connie Willis. She writes WONDERFUL Christmas stories!

Stu Thaman: I like to read Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" around Christmas. It is..... uplifting? I don't know why.

Nikki Nelson-Hicks: The Hogfather by Sir Terry Pratchett

Katina French: Dickens' A Christmas Carol. It's quite possibly the earliest example of "urban fantasy" (there are ghosts & spirits, and it's set in the author's contemporary London).


Sunday, December 7, 2014

Quick Hit Press Releases





Astounding New Adventures of the World’s Most Famous Detective - The Astonishing Tales of Sherlock Holmes!

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s creation that literally changed the face of fiction and popular culture lives on in a daring new imprint from Pro Se Productions. Author Nikki Nelson-Hicks takes Holmes and Dr. Watson on a mystifying, shocking journey into mystery and intrigue in the line’s debut volume- The Astonishing Tales of Sherlock Holmes: The Shrieking Pits!

Dr. John Watson discovers that his friend, Sherlock Holmes, has gone missing while hunting fairies in Norfolk with Ulysses K. Todd and his secretary, Mrs. Bernardine Dowell. Concerned that his friend is on a drug induced bender, Watson goes with the pair to Almertune to help his friend, only to discover something more sinister is afoot.

What appears a frivolous excursion into myth hunting takes on a different tone when Watson discovers encrypted notes from the Diogenes Club to Holmes. The World’s Greatest Detective is not hunting fairies, but on the trail of Viking silver and a daring heist. Holmes must use every skill at his disposal to discover the secret of the Shrieking Pits while deftly maneuvering around ghost hunters and fairy enthusiasts….and not add to the body count.

Nikki Nelson-Hicks brings her adoration for Doyle’s character as well as her own fervent imagination to brilliant life in The Astonishing Tales of Sherlock Holmes: The Shrieking Pits! From Pro Se Productions.

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Brighten up the winter night with a Candle in the Dark from Inkstained Succubus Productions. Five romantic tales of winter holiday fantasy and science fiction. Ebook and paperback half price through Cyber Monday.

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Golden Age western bad girl turned good girl The Black Phantom is "WANTED" in FemForce 169 in a story written by Mark Holmes and illustrated by Scott Shriver.

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Scottish soldier, Ian MacAndrew's mission to kill the Butcher of Prague in the heart of Nazi-ruled Prague teams him up with a pale-skinned titan, Donner Grimm, against the legendary forces seeking to unleash Ragnarok and the end of the world.

Man With The Iron Heart
Written By: Mat Nastos
Cover: Mat Nastos
Release Date: AVAILABLE NOW!
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00OX6R43I

For the past 20 years, Disney TV veteran Mat Nastos has been writing, directing, and illustrating for television, motion pictures, comic books, and video games. Known best for bad horror movies about giant scorpions, killer pigs & dinosaurs in the sewers, Mat's work has been published by Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Warp Graphics, Playboy and Highlights for Kids, and has been seen everywhere from the Disney TV to SyFy Channel to Cinemax. He is the author of the Amazon #1 Best Selling Science Fiction Action novel, The Cestus Concern. His third novel, MAN WITH THE IRON HEART, is has just been released.

In May of 1942, Scottish soldier, Ian MacAndrew, parachutes into the heart of Nazi-occupied Prague on a mission whose success could alter the course of World War 2 itself. MacAndrew and his men are set to kill Reinhart Heydrich, the man best known as "The Butcher of Prague." When things go from bad to worse, the veteran soldier finds himself thrust into a battle of myth and legend itself. With the marble-skinned warrior, Donner Grimm at his side, MacAndrew must face off against necromancers, Nazi berserkers, and the power of the demons known as the Jotnar, all vying to bring about Ragnarok and the end of humanity.

Nazis, Norse Gods, and Lovecraftian monsters: what more could you ask for in an action-adventure novel set in the midst of World War 2? "Man With the Iron Heart" is perfect for fans of Hellboy, Indiana Jones, Supernatural, or Inglourious Basterds.

Check out what critics are calling "a thrilling alternative history adventure," "urban fantasy done right," and "the sort of adventure that keeps readers on their toes from page 1."

Read what the critics are saying:
"Nastos continues to show why he is the next great voice in sci-fi. --Rob Liefeld, Creator of Deadpool, Cable, Youngblood and X-force, and founder of Image Comics

"Mat Nastos is one of the most exciting writers working in the field of adventure fiction today. Every page is an adrenaline rush and by the end of the story, you're left breathlessly anticipating the next. If you're not reading Nastos, you're truly missing out." -Barry Reese, Award-winning author of The Rook, Lazarus Gray and Gravedigger

"It was the best 80's action movie I've read in a long time." -Derrick Ferguson, New-Pulp author of Four Bullets for Dillon and The Adventures of Fortune McCall

"It's rare when a book takes both the front line experience as well as the supernatural elements so readily associated with World War II and the Nazi party and turns them into something seamless and intriguing. "Man with the Iron Heart" does that exceedingly well and the characters live, scream, fight, and die right off the page, not content with just leaping."  - Tommy Hancock, Award-winning author and publisher of Pro Se Press

"The Man With the Iron Heart's tight and snappy prose takes grounded supernatural mysticism, a charming cast of very human characters and then hurls it all into an adventure that revels in the unapologetic grandiosity of classic action movies!" - David A. Rodriguez, Writer of Finding Gossamyr and Lead Writer for Skylanders: SWAP Force

Find out more about "Man With The Iron Heart," including an exclusive excerpt from the novel, at: http://niftyentertainment.com/2014/10/man-with-the-iron-heart-by-mat-nastos/

Order Now on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00OX6R43I