Full Disclosure by Dee Henderson

I wrote this review a while ago, but since it seemed more critical and speculating than most of the ones I write, I left it as a draft. But hearing my sister struggle to get through the book as well, I realized I wasn't the only one sensing that this book was a lot different from Dee's previous novels. So here are my thoughts - what did you think of Dee Henderson's return to writing?

I got Dee Henderson's latest in the mail (thanks to Bethany House for providing the ARC) and thanks to some sleeplessness due to allergies, devoured it within 24 hours. I came away enjoying Dee's writing, as usual (I do own all of her books), but I was somewhat dissatisfied with the actual story.

Spoilers below!

The phrase that echoed in my mind while reading the book was: self-indulgent. I'll explain more about that in a bit. Also, this is based on an advance, uncorrected copy - I don't know what changes were made in the final published version.

This is Dee's first book in 5 years, due to neck trauma. (Side note: why didn't she tell her readers that was why she wasn't writing? Yes, perhaps she wanted some measure of privacy, but when people buy hundreds of thousands of your books, you should at least give them the courtesy of a brief explanation as to why you suddenly disappear in the middle of two series of novels.) After that long of an absence, I suppose it's natural to prefer to just write what you want to. But Dee crafted something that seems equal parts intrigue, memoir, want ad, and fantasy.

The intrigue was classic Dee. Murders, puzzle pieces, law enforcement procedure - most of her books have this. The suspense element that usually appears was missing. Neither of her two main characters were in harm's way during the current events of the story; both were far enough into their careers that they mostly called shots and figured out thorny problems.

I read an interview that mentioned that Dee had a lot in common with Ann, the heroine of Full Disclosure. And the more of the book I read, the more I realized that Ann IS Dee - fictionalized, of course, with an added career as a cop and some past trauma to serve the storyline. And that's where the self-indulgent part comes in.

The O'Malleys appear in this book, only they're not the O'Malleys. They're Ann's friends who asked her to write their stories, so she changed their last names and some details, and published The O'Malley series. "Ann" also wrote other books, including one focusing on Paul's (the hero of Full Disclosure) brother and his wife (that would be True Honor) and Paul's cousin, Luke Falcon (True Courage, later published as Kidnapped). And yes, they use the real titles of the novels. Ann also shares a bunch of other details with Dee - engineering background, age, love of big dogs, etc.

This fiction-within-fiction lends a sort of Inception quality to Dee's work as a whole, but also kind of destroys the fictive dream within the O'Malley series. The best stories feel real as you're reading them. For one book to claim the others really didn't happen as they were written forces you to choose one world as false. And Full Disclosure isn't a good enough story for me to prefer to live in that world rather than the world of the O'Malleys.

Paul Falcon seems a little too perfect - great job, well-off, awesome family, and a willingness to bend over backward just to get Ann to let him into her life. She tells him she can't handle being a mother, so if he wants kids, he should find someone else. Once they start talking about marriage, she tells him that for this to work, he needs to give her 4 hours of alone time every day, and a week when she can disappear every month, just so she can function as an extreme introvert. Knowing that Dee Henderson is single, the way Paul is written almost seems like she's saying, here's what it will take to win my heart. Be this guy.

As a single, introverted writer myself, I have wondered if I would have trouble adjusting to married life. But throwing down a gauntlet like that makes Ann seem out of touch and selfish. Especially since Paul doesn't get the option to put any of his own requirements on the table. Yes, Ann does quit her job as the MHI to get married, but it's her own choice because she doesn't think she can add marriage to her life without taking something out.

In some ways, Ann is similar to Sara from Danger in the Shadows - writer, nightmares from past trauma, wary of letting a guy into her life, and not wanting to have kids. But in Sara's case, the last two items tie in strongly with her past and a very real threat. Adam's high-profile life could lead a dangerous man right to her, and her childhood kidnapping makes her afraid to have children she could one day lose in the same way. Ann, on the other hand, is extremely private and just doesn't want kids.

But Paul slowly breaks down her barriers and caters to her whims, and she reluctantly lets him in. There's not really much emotion to their love story - it's full of fascination and respect, building trust and working together. They get married several months before the story ends, so it's atypical in that respect as well.

Knowing Your Story and Yourself

One of the worst mistakes I made in my writing career was following someone else's timetable.

I'm not talking about deadlines - of course every working writer needs to do what he/she can to meet deadlines if at all possible. This is more about process than time.

A while back, I signed up for a two-year novel-writing course. It took you from idea, to worldbuilding, to plotting, through writing and editing. As mostly a SOTP writer, it was the most pre-planning I'd ever done for a novel. But this was my first major foray into fantasy writing, and I loved the guided help as I set up my storyworld.

Soon, though, I knew it was time to start writing. I was ready to go. Scenes were starting to write themselves in my mind. But everyone in the forums said no. Writing wasn't supposed to start for about a dozen more weeks. Hold off, they said, and my story would be that much stronger.

Stupidly, I listened.

I continued with the planning exercises, but instead of being helpful and insightful, they seemed meaningless and out-of-touch. As the weeks slowly slogged by, my passion to start writing my story faded every day. Eventually, I set the class and the story aside. The magic was gone.

I can only imagine what my story would have been like if I'd ignored instructions and started writing when I knew I was ready to. Sure, it might have been choppy. Sure, I might have needed to add and edit some things once they came up in the course material. Sure, I might have gotten some backlash for not staying with the group. But the magic would have still been there.

I did eventually pick up the story again, but the passion never returned in full force. This time, it was hampered by a dozen ways of "how to write a novel" drilled into my head by well-meaning blogs and books. The words slowly ground to a halt, and years later, the story still sits, unfinished.

I know myself better now. I'm more content with being a rebel. I know that I'll never be able to turn off the internal editor completely, so I'll edit my work as I write. I'll ignore how many drafts others say I need to do, and not see my story as half-baked after my light revisions. I'll shell out the money for a good editor who can help make my story the best it can be instead of wallowing in cosmetic changes. I'll mash together the genres I want to mash together, write the length that feels right for the story, and view both traditional publishing and self-publishing as equally viable options.

And so I'm going back to that 2-year course. I'm building another world. And this time, when I'm ready to write, I'LL WRITE.

And magic will follow.

Off-the-Rack Advice Won't Fit Every Writer

I have to laugh at some of the writing advice I read online. It might be great for some people, but I know it doesn't work for me. Two pieces of advice in particular have cropped up multiple times in the past few weeks, and they're starting to irk me now. Why do these people think that their advice automatically applies to every writer? Am I so atypical, so in the minority, that my opinion doesn't count?

Piece of advice #1: Clearing your desk before you start working (some say every day, others only for a new project).

I'm a messy person by nature. Nothing kills my creativity faster than a perfectly clean room or an empty desk. I know, because occasionally I've tried working on ideas or prose in these environments, and my page and mind stay as blank as my desk. I don't know - perhaps if I always cleared an area to work before I began, I might eventually get used to it. But it just seems so . . . sterile.

It's not real. Life is messy, and writers will always have things pressing in on them while they're writing (unless they're rich enough to go away for a few weeks and do nothing but write in a remote cabin). I think it's better to get used to clutter and noise, and find your writing sweet spot amid all that, then to have to waste precious time preparing your location. But I do know some people who are as bothered by clutter as I am by emptiness, so if that is you, clean away!

Update: Just came across this article about noise firing up creativity. If it works for sound, perhaps visual noise accomplishes the same thing?

Piece of advice #2: If you want to boost your creativity, stop or severely limit your TV watching.

I created a TV blog, so you can guess part of the reason why I think that advice is hogwash. But all TV is not created equal. I don't mindlessly turn on the TV to see what's on. I don't let it play in the background while I do other tasks or try to write. I don't watch reality TV or talk shows or competition shows or even the news. I stick with live-action scripted shows pretty much exclusively, and I watch them for the story and the characters. I only watch "my" shows, and I drop the shows with poor storytelling.

I know you can learn more about writing novels from reading novels than you can from watching TV shows. Mastering things like POV and internal monologue are important, and you can't learn those from TV or movies. But dialogue, plot arcs, setting, and characterization can all be boosted by watching great TV.

There has to be balance, of course. For many years, I read hundreds of novels and watched next to no TV, so I'm content with the ratio being inverted for the time being. But if you find your TV watching to be negatively affecting your writing, by all means, cut back (or find better shows to watch!).

Rant over! Back to your regularly scheduled programing. :)

CSFF Tour: Residential Aliens

I haven't had too much time to look around Residential Aliens' website, but I read the first story in their free issue ("Petition" by L.S. King) and loved it. The navigation on the site seems a bit tricky - once you click on a page, the only obvious link to go anywhere else on the site is the "Home" button at the top of the screen. And when you read a blog entry, you have to scroll back up to the top to get to the next one.

Other than that, the site seems a great place to find science fiction written with a Christian worldview, and I know I'll enjoy exploring further!

Visit the blogs below for more:

Noah Arsenault
Brandon Barr
Thomas Clayton Booher
Grace Bridges
Beckie Burnham
Jeff Chapman
CSFF Blog Tour
Carol Bruce Collett
D. G. D. Davidson
Dean Hardy
Ryan Heart
Bruce Hennigan
Jason Joyner
Carol Keen
Shannon McDermott
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Lyn Perry
Sarah Sawyer
Jessica Thomas
Steve Trower
Fred Warren
Phyllis Wheeler

CSFF Tour: Darkness Follows

This month, the Christian Science Fiction Fantasy blog tour is featuring Darkness Follows by Mike Dellosso.

I've received so many books from publishers over the years that finding time to read them is a challenge, so I try to limit my requests to ones I plan to read. I'm not a fan of horror in general (except for certain TV shows that blend in a good dose of comedy to offset it), so I didn't request a copy of the book or read it. But I love promoting speculative authors, so I stayed on the tour.

Here's a brief synopsis of the novel:

Sam Travis lives in a Civil War era farmhouse in Gettysburg, PA, where he awakens one morning to find an old journal with an entry by a Union soldier, Capt. Whiting, written in Sam's own handwriting. When this happens several more times, both at night and during waking, Sam begins to question his own sanity while becoming obsessed with Capt. Whiting and his bone-chilling journal entries. As the entries begin to mimic Sam's own life, he is drawn into an evil plot that could cost many lives, including his own. Can the unconditional love of Sam's daughter, Eva, break through his hardened heart before a killer on the loose catches up with them and Sam's past spurs him to do the unthinkable?


Check out the blogs below for reviews and discussion:

Noah Arsenault
Red Bissell
Thomas Clayton Booher
Beckie Burnham
Melissa Carswell
Karri Compton
CSFF Blog Tour
Chris Deane
Cynthia Dyer
Nikole Hahn
Ryan Heart
Bruce Hennigan
Jason Joyner
Julie
Carol Keen
Inae Kyo
Shannon McDermott
Allen McGraw
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Joan Nienhuis
Sarah Sawyer
Kathleen Smith
Jessica Thomas
Steve Trower
Fred Warren
Phyllis Wheeler

CSFF Tour: The Ale Boy's Feast by Jeffrey Overstreet

This month, CSFF is featuring Jeffrey Overstreet and his latest novel, The Ale Boy's Feast. I interviewed Jeffrey several months back for an author profile in FamilyFiction's March/April issue (you can read the issue online here or download the PDF here).

Here are some excerpts from that interview that didn't make it into the article (or were paraphrased for space).

On becoming a writer:

I was so fond of books that I would actually copy down the entire text of books I was bringing home from the library, because I loved reading books and was just so fascinated by the whole experience of books that I wanted to make my own. Pretty soon I started making changes to the stories I was copying . . . by the time I was 6 or 7 years old I was writing original adventure stories, typing them out with one finger on an old Black Royal typewriter. I loved fairy tales especially, and that’s sort of the shape my stories have taken since then.


On the world of Auralia's Colors:

And the kingdom just becomes this gray, dull, sterile, somber place in the middle of an extravagantly beautiful landscape. Then I realized I was seeing this place over the shoulder of this character who was an artist who lived in the woods, who didn’t like what she was seeing and wanted to restore a sense of imagination and beauty to that place.


What he hopes readers take away from the story:

I hope they really enjoy their journey through this world, as dangerous as it becomes. I hope that they come away with some new questions about the role of imagination in our lives, what art does best, the many ways we try and exploit art for our own purposes, which really ends up hurting imagination.


Find out more about this book (and the entire series) on the blogs below:

Gillian Adams
Red Bissell
Grace Bridges
Beckie Burnham
Morgan L. Busse
Valerie Comer
CSFF Blog Tour
Shane Deal
Chris Deane
Cynthia Dyer
Andrea Graham
Ryan Heart
Bruce Hennigan
Jason Joyner
Carol Keen
Dawn King
Inae Kyo
Shannon McDermott
Shannon McNear
Karen McSpadden
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Eve Nielsen
John W. Otte
Sarah Sawyer
Kathleen Smith
Donna Swanson
Rachel Starr Thomson
Robert Treskillard
Steve Trower
Fred Warren
Dona Watson
Phyllis Wheeler

CSFF Tour: The Strange Man by Greg Mitchell

I haven't had a chance to read The Strange Man, so I'd intended to opt out of this tour, but I forgot to in time. But here's a quick blurb about the book:

Dras Weldon is a 22-year-old unemployed washout who lives in a world of horror movies and comic books. But when a nameless demon threatens his friend Rosalyn Myers, things change! Putting his faith into action, Dras races against time to turn Ros---and a whole town---toward God and away from unspeakable evil.

And here's the book trailer for the next book:



Noah Arsenault
Red Bissell
Kathy Brasby
Grace Bridges
Beckie Burnham
CSFF Blog Tour
Amber French
Tori Greene
Bruce Hennigan
Timothy Hicks
Jason Joyner
Carol Keen
Inae Kyo
Emily LaVigne
Shannon McDermott
Matt Mikalatos
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Gavin Patchett
Andrea Schultz
Kathleen Smith
Donna Swanson
Jessica Thomas
Steve Trower
Fred Warren
Dona Watson
Phyllis Wheeler