Posted in Blog

How to Avoid the Dreaded “Sequel Slump”: Three Tips on Making Your Sequels Shine

One of the worst things about being a writer is writing the follow-up to a well-received book. You’ve sat with the good reviews for a while, let them build up your self-esteem, and then… you have to write the sequel. Everyone can name at least one sequel that fell short of the high standards set by its predecessor, and hopefully everyone can also name a sequel that went above and beyond the standards that its predecessor set. While writing my own sequel to Waxing Moon, the first book in the Moon Trilogy, I picked up a few tips that helped Waning Moon stand apart and above the standards of the first book.

1: Add a new point of view or main character

If you’re stuck on how to make your sequel feel fresh and interesting, adding a new point of view can help bring a new perspective (pun intended) to the events of the story you are telling. Authors like Brandon Sanderson, Maggie Stiefvater, and Emily St. John Mandel are great examples on how to handle point of view changes within a single book. While you can simply label each chapter with the point of view character’s name, look for other ways to make your characters stand out from each other.

One of the things I did to make sure that readers knew the difference between Ashlyn and Talia, even without the point of view labels, was giving them their own unique details to focus on. Talia is a werewolf, so she mainly pays attention to the smells and sounds in her scenes. Ashlyn, on the other hand, focuses on what she can see and feel. They both use music analogies to help make sense of their surroundings, which helps keep the points of view connected. It also helps them feel like part of the same story, rather than two separate stories sewn together.

2. Specifically define the stakes, world, and character’s abilities

The best part of writing a sequel is that you can really start to dig into the central conflicts of your story. The heavy lifting of the worldbuilding is done. You did that in the first book, painting the rules your characters and world have to follow in broad strokes. Now you can get down to the nitty gritty details. If your character fails the task set, what, exactly, happens? What do they risk losing? What do they gain if they succeed? Most importantly: does that character want to succeed? You don’t necessarily have to answer these questions in the final edit, but knowing the answers yourself will help you fill out your character’s motivations and the stakes in place.

You can also take the sequel to start exploring aspects of the world you’ve established in the first book. Are there new places that are important to your characters that you haven’t fully explored yet? Do you have a secondary world that needs to be filled out more? The sequel is a great place to do this! It adds more stakes and fills out the world you’ve created. It can give your readers a stronger connection to your world or characters as well, since there will be more places that they can connect with.

3. Get Weird!

The main thing to remember is that you’re not writing for anyone except yourself. It can be easy to get stuck in your own head and focus on making everything perfect. While it’s important to stay consistent and keep your writing high quality, it’s also important that you are still enjoying yourself. I usually take the time in my sequels to get weird. Inject some humor to lighten a situation, or add a fun way for your characters to describe something.

In the case of Waning Moon, I took a dangerous trip through the Wildlands and gave Ashlyn a chance to make a terrible pun about the situation. After flying through a cloud of butterfly-looking creatures with razor-sharp wings, she deadpan calls them “cutterflies”. It’s a light moment in an otherwise heavy situation, and is also undeniably weird.

Final Thoughts

Writing a sequel shouldn’t be daunting, but it can often be difficult to feel like you can meet the expectations of a great first novel. Hopefully, these tips give you a place to start, and help make your sequel the best it can be!

Posted in Blog

The Wheel Continues On…

Hello everyone!

I have a very exciting announcement to make. After I finished writing The Ghost and the Real Girl, I thought I was finished with stories from Caelum, but it seems I wasn’t quite done yet.

All her life, Adi has felt at home underground. The daughter of copper miners, it was expected that she would follow her parents’ into the Red Mines as soon as she was old enough. Only now, she wakes to find gemstones in her bed every morning, and veins of copper find their way to the surface whenever she walks past. At first, she rejoices, thinking that her parents won’t have to work for days on end, but soon it becomes clear that each time she brings something to the surface, it vanishes from below, making the mountain crumble underneath them.

She does her best to hide her new abilities, but the small town she has lived in all her life turns on her, cursing her as a witch. That is, everyone except for Wren, the keeper of the mine’s glowfrogs. The two strike up a fast friendship, with Adi’s gems buying everything they need, and Wren singing them to sleep every night.

Suddenly one day, an earthquake buries her father and the other miners under ten tons of rock, trapping them deep underground. Adi must summon all of her new magic to find a way through the caves that snake their way through the mountain before they run out of air, water, and hope.

A companion to THE GHOST AND THE REAL GIRL, THE STONE SINGS TRUE is a story of endurance, family, and finding your place when the ground shifts beneath you.

Posted in Blog

Launch Party!

It was quite lovely! We had a few people talking about it online, and it was a lot of fun!

The setup for the launch party (ft Grace’s tail in the background)
Posted in Blog

Launch Party

Hello everyone!

A quick reminder that the rescheduled launch party of THE GHOST AND THE REAL GIRL will be this Saturday, 11/12, at 7:30 pm KST! That’s Saturday morning for my EST folks, and really heckin early for my West Coast folks, but never you fear! It will be streamed on my Instagram at my_graceless_heart, and saved afterwards if you’re interested in watching.

There will be an Author Q&A, tarot readings, and some fun giveaways! I hope to see you there!

Posted in Blog

7 Sci-Fi/Fantasy Series by Women You Need to Read.

I love love LOVE the recent push for diversity in the publishing industry, and I thought it would be a good time to bring back some old content I created a while ago, and give it a bit of a fresh face.

Just a note: the links on this post are Amazon Affiliate Links, and I do earn money from any qualifying purchase. With that out of the way, let’s get started!

  1. The Tortall Series by Tamora Pierce

A series of quartets, duets, and trilogies, the Tortall books cover every aspect of high fantasy that you want. They begin with The Song of the Lioness, a quartet about Alanna of Trebond, a ten year old girl who disguises herself as a boy to become a knight. With knights, magic, magical creatures, and dragons, these books are full of diverse heroines and messages that are definitely worth reading.

2. Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor

If you want to be a better writer, read these books. The prose is stunningly beautiful, and the worldbuilding is something to be envied. In three books, Taylor creates a world so vividly imagined that you will cry when you finish the trilogy, if only because you won’t get to read about these characters anymore. Beginning with the mystery of who Karou is and ending with the glory of peace after a war, the Daughter of Smoke and Bone trilogy are easily some of the best books of the decade.

3. Unraveling by Elizabeth Norris

Holy seven hells, these books need to be on your “to-read” list now. The duet introduces the concept of parallel universes that are crashing together because three boys just want to get home. The main character, Janelle, is a breath of fresh air, with a badass skill set and an actual reason for having it, as well as a maternity streak a mile long. The book starts with her dying and being brought back to life, then continues on with a clock that seems to be counting down to the end of the world, and a string of bodies dying from radiation poisoning. Fast-paced and wholly original, Unraveling will sink its hooks into you from the very first page.

4. The Ward by Jordana Frankel

It’s rare that I put down a book and say “this needs to be made into a movie immediately,” but The Ward inspired this immediate reaction. Set against a post-apocalyptic New York, Frankel’s tale of a young street-racer who accepts an impossible mission from the government to save her younger sister is gripping and ambitious. New York City has been flooded, and Ren has been given the task of finding a new freshwater source. In a city full of saltwater, what should be a simple mission turns out to be Herculean in its execution. When she starts looking, she uncovers an astonishing truth about the city and what lies beneath the water’s surface. With a woman of color as the protagonist, and Native American legends to draw on, Frankel’s debut novel is a home run of a work.

5. The Locked Tomb series by Tamsyn Muir

Do you like lesbians? Do you like space? Do you like necromancers? Well, have I got a book for you! Set in a haunting echo of our own solar system, The Locked Tomb follows Harrowhark Nonagesimus, better known as Harrow, and her cavalier Gideon as they vie to serve a mysterious deathless emperor. Full of brevity, bones, and body horror, this series is one you’ll find yourself coming back to again and again.

(This is also my wife’s favorite book series, and she wants more people to read it.)

6. Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor

For those of you who love the Dark Academia trend but want something a little different, look no further. Akata Witch follows Sunny, an albino girl living in Nigeria as she struggles to find her place in the world. Unexpectedly, she find it with a secret magical society and discovers that she herself has magical powers too. Bursting with childlike wonder and a terrifically ripping climax, this book is nothing short of fantastic.

7. Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel

Many people have heard of this book thanks to the television series of the same name, but it’s difficult for TV to properly capture the truly powerful impact of Mandel’s writing. Sliding back and forth across timelines, Mandel uses multiple character perspectives to take us through a deadly pandemic, past to present day. Though it may seem a little on-the-nose, given how we’re currently 2 years into our own pandemic, Station Eleven is a stunning reminder of the beauty and terror of humanity.