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Date
Wed, 07/16/2008

Listen to Our Author's Podcasts Running the Week of 7/14:

 

 

» In this week's special Health, Fitness & Beauty episode, Nancy Amanda Redd reads the introduction to Body Drama and discusses why she wrote it, and Janice Taylor reads excerpts from All Is Forgiven, Move On.

» Listen to other Penguin Podcasts.

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Wed, 07/16/2008

Plot by Jeff Abbott:

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Last entry I wrote about how I came up with the idea for the characters in Collision. Today, I want to write about how plots start.

Yes, plot and character are absolutely intertwined. Characters drive plots when they're trying to reach their goals. But every plot needs a spark, a start, that drives the characters into action.

In this case, the spark was an image in my mind: a man's business card being found in a dead man's pocket. The image came to me, unbidden, a few days after I'd started thinking about the two main characters in Collision. And I knew the dead man was not a copier salesman or a road warrior or a doctor; the dead man was the most wanted assassin in the world, and now he was dead, and the business card in his pocket belonged to Ben, the business consultant in my being-born novel.

Why would the world's most feared hitman have an ordinary man's business card in his pocket?

I call this the Kick. You have to have a way to get the characters into the flow of the story, and sometimes you have to give them a kick. This is especially true with my characters, who tend to be ordinary people caught up in extraordinary circumstances. Sometimes an unsuspected past catches up with them (as in Panic), or they are in the wrong place at the wrong time (as in Fear) or-in Collision-they're being used.


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