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Sue Archer

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book reviews

Reader/Writer Review: The Flaws of Gravity by Stephanie Caye

In this blog series, I’m writing about books I’ve enjoyed and learned from both as a reader and as a writer, with a focus on Canadian and indie fiction authors.

Cover of The Flaws of Gravity by Stephanie Caye, featuring a woman in a simple black cocktail dress sitting on the side of a building looking out over a city landscape full of skyscrapers with purple lights.First up is The Flaws of Gravity by Stephanie Caye, the first book in her fae urban fantasy series Gravity’s Daughter. I grabbed this one after being on a panel with Stephanie as part of Canada Fiction Fest. Urban fantasy is right up my alley, so I was excited about this one, and it did not disappoint! I’ve already picked up the next one in the series.

Synopsis 

The existence of tequila is at stake. Oh, and humanity too.

Jude Waldron’s playing both sides of a supernatural cold war. While collecting a paycheck from a secret human organization fighting against the Faerie Court, she’s also helping her friend and mentor Aubrie search for illicit magic. But when Aubrie’s true scheme pits her violently against her human colleagues on his behalf, the half-Faerie renegade finds herself taking the fall—literally.

Now Jude’s ready to cut and run, destination: “The Hell Away from This Mess.” Bonus points if there’s a warm beach nearby. Before she can pack a bag, a shady group of Faeries traps her, demanding she steal a spellbook for them—the same book Aubrie wants. She’ll have to face off with catty pixies, vicious sirens, a calculating dragon and a pissed off ex-boyfriend in pursuit of a prize that could merge the human and Faerie worlds into a chaotic nightmare. If she pulls it off, Jude will win her freedom along with safe, anonymous passage to her chosen sandy paradise. And, right, save two worlds.

Reader Review

A gripping urban fantasy! Could not put it down. Stephanie deftly handles a cast of characters with different powers, perspectives, and motivations, and Jude as the main character is very relatable in both her flaws and charms. Plus the story features several Canadian cities (Montreal, Toronto, Niagara Falls, and much more – nice to see a shout out to St. Catharines!) The various settings and character storyline strands are woven together into a fast-paced plot with meaningful stakes and a satisfying payoff that still leaves room for more.

About the only thing I would have loved to see more of is additional sexual tension between Jude and her ex-boyfriend, but that’s a personal bias and it doesn’t detract from the story. Their mutual challenge in navigating their history while trying to work together was nuanced and believable, which can be very difficult to pull off!

Writer Review

What I loved about reading this story is seeing the way in which Stephanie manages the POVs of her various characters. Jude is telling her story in first person, but several other characters have their own third-person POVs. Bouncing from one character to another so frequently can potentially be disruptive and result in unnecessary info-dumping from minor characters if you’re not careful, but here all the character handoffs served both to flesh out perspectives in meaningful ways and reveal different angles of the plot in a seamless fashion that matched the spy-like aspect of the narrative. I did not get lost or disrupted, and I left the book with a vivid sense of all the characters in ways that intrigue me about where they are going next. I definitely need to go back and study the scene structure of this story for the benefit of my own writing!

You can buy Stephanie’s book through several retailers (the series is currently 50% off at Smashwords), and you can also watch her Fiction Fest panel replay until July 18th.

 

On to the next book in my toppling TBR!

Sue

DBW Review: Description & Setting by Ron Rozelle

Today on my Doorway Between Worlds blog, I have posted a review of writing resource Description and Setting by Ron Rozelle. If you’re looking for help with description in your writing, you may want to come on by!

Sue Archer's avatarDoorway Between Worlds

Description and SettingI have a confession to make: I’m one of those readers who has been known to skip over passages full of description to get to the “good stuff.” I love the story of The Lord of the Rings, for example, but my attention wanes during those meandering sections sandwiched between poignant character moments and violent epic battles. With my avoidance of excessive elaboration (and my admittedly poor visual observation skills), I sometimes find it challenging to imbue my own writing with the right level of descriptive pizzazz.

And I know I’m not the only one. So I thought it was time to read through the book Description & Setting by author and creative writing teacher Ron Rozelle. His book is part of the Write Great Fiction series by Writer’s Digest, which features some helpful books on a variety of writing topics. I hadn’t read this one yet, and I…

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DBW Review: Self-Editing for Fiction Writers by Renni Browne and Dave King

On my blog Doorway Between Worlds I regularly review writing resources that I believe would be helpful for my readers. I’m sharing this one here since it’s focused on the art of self-editing.

Sue Archer's avatarDoorway Between Worlds

I picked up Self-Editing for Fiction Writers by editors Renni Browne and Dave King because several of my editing colleagues recommended it as a solid resource for authors. There are many books on how to write and comparatively few on how to edit your own writing. Yet this is such a critical task for writers if they want to submit a solid manuscript for further editing or publishing. I was really looking forward to reading through this book, and I’m glad to say it was a winner.

Self-Editing for Fiction WritersSelf-Editing for Fiction Writers is focused on the details of stylistic editing. The authors assume that you have already dealt with the larger structural concerns of plot, character arc, and theme. The book covers a broad range of topics relating to the mechanics of editing: showing vs. telling, characterization and exposition, point of view, proportion, dialogue, interior monologue, sound and voice, repetition, and…

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