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4 Types of Characters to Help with Worldbuilding

We hear about main characters all the time, but what about the others? You know, the love interest or the best buds for life, or even that sleazy merchant guy they still do business with. Being a character driven writer, I have a tendency to rely on my characters to help describe and flesh out my worldbuilding often. Most character driven books fall into the young adult and romance stories but in recent years we’re seeing this reach out and play in bigger worlds.

No longer do we need to describe our worlds as in-depth as Tolkien or the forefathers of fantasy and science fiction. Authors and readers often ask me for advice on how to capture worldbuilding when you’re a character driven writer and the secret to this is simply: use your characters and let them do the describing! This means not only making the time to address what they see, but pull in all the senses at any given moment as well as their internal thoughts or emotions in reply. 

  1. Sight – The rows of orange groves shifted as we drove past them.
  2. Sound – Dad’s got the old country music blaring on the radio.
  3. Smell – Orange blossom’s fill the air with a bittersweet citrus scent.
  4. Touch – I want to put my arm on the window, but the summer’s sun has it too hot to touch.
  5. Taste – Popping another slice of orange, I chew on the juicy nugget, sweet on my tongue.
  6. Thought – Next we’ll be going to Hancock Groves and after that, finally we get to do some fishing!
  7. Emotion – Thinking back on that day, my chest aches knowing it’s all gone and buried under houses and golf courses.

How many times have you found yourself hating a character up until you see them broken down by a single moment in a story? Main characters will always be the easiest to flesh out because they always get the full attention of the plots and twists of the story we intend to tell. As you move to your support and secondary characters, they often push and support our main character but they also give us a second opinion on the world that may conflict with the main character. Background characters and tertiary characters fall very flat in comparison to the main characters they are interacting within the world you are creating. This doesn’t hurt your story, but neither does it help your audience connect with the world your characters live in. 

Regardless, this is like creating an American football team where you have your star players, a quarterback and a fan favorite for support, then the other guys on their team, the rival team’s star player, and the people in the stands. The levels get more and more disconnected from the reader the further you dive into the background, or world, such as the hot dog stand or the announcer. In the end, you can’t experience the world or even plot in its entirety without all the components. What good is the football game without the ticket booth to get in nor the ability to buy beer and hot dogs! 

Main Characters

All stories have a tone or essence, whether it’s surreal, dark, tragic, happy, romantic, or some other emotion that is constantly tugged at throughout the storyline. It’s not the events and plot that allow the readers to feel this tone, but the main characters in which live in this world. If the world is dark and horrible, it’s because the main character feels this way about where they live through their experiences, emotions, reactions, thoughts, body language, how they speak to others, and so on. 

Main character should be crafted with the awareness that this is the main vessel your audience is riding along with, or even inside, to travel along your plot. Even with a narrator or narrative style, we are still focusing on a main person in whom we are interacting with this world and even story. Take a moment and dissect some of your favorite main characters and their worlds. How much of your favorite memories of them involve how they reacted to something in their story? Now ask yourself if that’s what helps you identify the type of person they were? These are the ways the main character help set the tone for the readers while revealing who they are as fleshed out, rounded characters.

In the end, these characters should be the most intimate with your readers and writing. Immersion happens through them and thus the way you develop their personality and inner-workings can go a long way to make it easier for you to write your story. Granted, not every story is focused on one character, which opens doors for you to show more of your character through their interactions and even flip perspectives to show the world through more than one personality. What one character deems threatening will seem less of a concern to the more experienced fighter. 

Always remember, this is the main transportation for your readers and their way in and out of your story!

Secondary Characters

Often this is the lover or faithful friend that joins the main character at some point and sticks around for the long haul. It can even be the hero’s faithful steed, a pet, or a spirit that haunts them. These characters help give a second perspective to the world and events, and as a result, add depth to the world they are part of. They even are the eyes and reactions we use to properly judge the main character’s emotional and physical states. 

Granted, the secondary character doesn’t always have to like and aid your main character, but they should always help the audience become more immersive in the world and story. They even make the main character more tangible through interactions, including love interest and aggressive rivalry. For example, in my novel Cedric the Demonic Knight the main character is bitten by a venomous monster-sized snake. In order to express the severity of this injury, I shifted from Cedric’s perspective (Main Character), which was failing as the venom took hold, and started to express his condition through the interactions with Angeline (Secondary or Support Character). When the main character is taken out, it is these characters that help the writer to continue to push the plot forward without leaving gaps and confusion. Sometimes this switch is referred to as “head-hopping”, but the key is when writing your secondary characters make sure the reader is aware they are now riding in a “new car” and to keep clarify who is doing what.

His eyes grew wide as he gripped his arm and sweat poured over him, his tanned skin paling with alarming speed. He attempted to stand, but stumbled to the side and fell to his knees. It became very clear that he was not bouncing back from this encounter. Angeline looked around, there were no signs of any more snakes, but Barushka [their horse] was missing. Jerking the bandages from her pack, she attempted to tie off the poisoned limb. He tried to shove her away, but engulfed in the pain, he struggled to keep himself sitting. Satisfied that she managed to get it tight enough, and the wounds covered, she whistled several times. Her only hope was that Barushka was still alive and close enough to hear it. The sound of something splattering the ground brought her back to Cedric as he began to puke. The smell was unnatural, and it was a sickening black color.

Support Characters

Usually discussions state that secondary characters are support characters, but in my own writing there is a huge difference in choosing who is which. In short, secondary characters don’t have to aid or help a main character which could present an issue when developing a world and plot at times. In fact, they can even make their lives more complicated, impeding their goals. 

As for a support character, they can also be a secondary character but not always. What they are designed for is to be a constant pillar of support for the goals, growth, and development of the main character or even a secondary character can have a support character-WHAT! Crazy, but think about how real relationships work and how it influences how we see the world, or opens opportunities to expose how we feel about things in our world. Whether they are encouraging their good or bad habits, that’s totally up to you and the story you are writing.

In the story Robin Hood, there is a prime example of a support character that is well-rounded. Breaking things apart, we have the main character Robin Hood, secondary characters Little John (Fellow Outlaw) and Maid Marian (Love Interest), and a very memorable support character: Maid Marian’s servant/caretaker/maid/Fellow Lady of the Court. In most versions of the story, this character has a lot of personality. She’s a fighter, she encourages Maid Marian’s love interest, but she isn’t needed for the story to continue per say. What she does is gives the audience another means to experience the world, story, and add to our connections with the other characters. 

Sometimes these support characters simply give the world its life and more depth while providing a comic relief or address the audience’s own thoughts or feelings about what happens. They are essential tools to aid the writer to set the story in motion and guide their characters to their next event. Bottom-line, these “support characters” are the rounded characters that support some part of the story and actively support the world and plot. Almost like your own, self-made shoe cobbler elves.

Tertiary Characters

Lastly, we come to characters that fall victim to being flat or just nothing more than bland dialogue. Sometimes they are missing completely and can cause worldbuilding to feel shallow. In movies it is far easier to give these characters flesh with body language, but for written stories these often fall victim to becoming what I refer to as “background fodder.” Granted, you are going to have flat characters, like a crowd of people reacting to an event and never seen or heard from, nor provided depth of names, what they wore, and so on unless somehow it was relevant to the plot. 

This doesn’t mean you can’t have fun with a tertiary character and make them more round in how they behave. This can be a merchant, one that the characters find themselves coming back to since he always seems to have what they need or want. Why not make him quirky, comical, creepy? Give him enough personality to add to the tone of the story and give yourself a chance to expose interactions through someone other than the obvious secondary or support characters who actively lives at a different pace and level in the world.

For example, in the movie Robin Hood starring Kevin Costner, they make use of this idea. At one point in the movie, Robin approaches a Tertiary character, a small boy who is shooting arrows at a target. Robin Hood (Main) asks if the boy can shoot just as well while distracted. After failing, Lady Marian (Secondary) poses the question if he is able to do so himself. The nice thing this does is imply that Robin is no different from a young boy through the interaction and failing of the third character while being guided and pushed by a secondary character’s perspective/influence. 

It is something you will see in great writing often, when your main character finds themselves observing a rounded tertiary character and using it to reflect thoughts, feelings, and more. I even have a moment where my main character Romasanta reflects back to a tertiary character to express the mood and care being given to Cedric in the book Romasanta: Father of Werewolves.

Huffing, [Badbh] bellowed, “Well, you are up here after all!” 

Her voice brought some movement to [Cedric’s] pale body, his eyes cracking open as his chapped lips whispered, “Angeline?” 

“Oh no! Wrong girl, lover boy.” Chuckling, Badbh’s magic was impressive as she summoned cloths for his wounds. As she worked to clean his lacerations, Romasanta recalled fond memories of the woman from the Leper’s Colony tending to the ill girl. “Looks like I missed a hell of a battle!” 

“What are you doing?” Hissing, Cedric gave a baffled stare at his unhealed wounds. “Who are you?” 

“For crying out loud, it’s me, Badbh!” Puffing, she scrubbed harder, annoyed at how unaware he allowed himself to become. “We found you out here bleeding to death! Who the hell did you get in a fight with?”

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The Book Blurb Formula

Whether you call it a blurb, back cover text, or product description – there’s only one goal a book’s version of these is designed to do: tell the reader what kind of story lies within the cover! That being said, there is a winning formula and expectation that has been proven. Even in 2021 Ingram found a common pattern in blurbs among 100k titles they followed over the entire year from various publishers, big and small.

Yes, there is a pattern which means we can make a formula to make this less daunting! So, what is that formula? Here’s my take on this magic secret sauce to convince a reader to choose your book over others:


One liner movie voice guy/elevator pitch.

Main character intro. Tell me their goal, motivation, and conflict. Needs to be three sentences at least. Even if you zig-zag evenly between two characters as commonly seen in romance novels, pick the character they start with first.

Love interest/Antagonist intro. Tell me their goal, motivation, and conflict. Needs to be three sentences at least. In dystopian and post apocalyptic it can sometimes be the world here.

OPTIONAL: World or some other information you feel helps sell the book or a one liner closer or question. Or even what the characters face together.


Now remember that the goal, motivation, and conflict can be the immediate version or overall main plot version. There’s not rules on which set to reveal, though I do recommend using the main one. Some things to keep in mind:

  • Don’t worry about revealing too much! The reader wants to know what story they will be investing their time and money into so be concise what they should be expecting.
  • NAMES. Don’t shy away naming the protagonist, love interest, and antagonist! They want to get to know the characters at a glance.
  • Be sure to update the blurb after all revisions have been done. Many authors and marketers start with a blurb before the book is finished or a query letter, but often fail to revise to match major edits that were done afterwards.
  • Try writing more than one version of your blurb! Pitch them to readers or in your newsletter and get your current readers involved.
  • Add in keywords and genre specific elements so that your readers know without a doubt that your story is a Fantasy, Paranormal, Horror, etc. type of read.
  • Have an editor comb through your blurb to clean up any grammatical errors, commas, and clunky writing. 
  • Careful with word count! You never want to go overboard with how long this is! Nonfiction may get a little long, but try to stay close to 150-250 words.

So what does this blurb look like? Here’s an example inspired by Pablo Francisco’s The Little Tortilla Boy comedy bit:


He was just a Tortilla Boy selling on the streets of Chicago when the mafia wanted in.

Tortilla Boy dreamed of one day owning his own taco restaurant just like his grandfather once had. He had a passion for tacos and burritos, but self doubt wasn’t the only battle. The mafia has their eyes on his taco stand.

The mafia own the streets of Chicago and when the Godfather tastes the best taco of his life, he wants in on the business. Dark secrets will be revealed about Tortilla Boy’s jaded past when the mafia finds he not only refuses the offer, but is willing to go to war.

Tortilla Boy and the mafia duke it out in this action thriller where the tortillas are on the line and steaks are burning hot! This book contains crime, violence, language, and sexual content.


Nonfiction

But wait! There’s more! Well, more on this when it comes to writing your blurb for non-ficiton or memoir, the formula shifts to focus on why you are the expert ono the topic and what the reader will get from the book. These books serve a function, providing knowledge or service and that needs to be said clearly in the blurb. It’s encouraged to make a bullet list on what key features or topics that your book will cover or provide the reader so they can find an answer to the questions they might have on the topic you wrote about.


One liner movie voice guy/elevator pitch/what this product does for the reader.

Main purpose intro. How this will improve, solve, or change the reader’s life. Needs to be at least three sentences long.

  • A list of things offered in the book.
  • This is optional but helpful in workbooks
  • Textbooks
  • And certain Self Help books.

Tell me what they should be able to achieve with this book. Hope or walkaway message to build expectations OR who the author is and why they are the best person/expert on this topic

OPTIONAL: Author Bio can be added after initial Blurb


Memoir

Even when you change to a more memoir focused blurb, there’s a shift to also pull the reader into the focus on how they will be interacting with the story. It becomes more about what message, emotions, events, or even the walk-away lesson you the author want to leave the reader with. Be honest, let them know enough up front to pique their interest.


One liner movie voice guy/elevator pitch.

Who this book represents. Tell me their goal, motivation, and conflict. Needs to be three sentences at least. This can be hard, but think of it as a Who are you, what have you achieved, but at what costs or obstacles.

What they faced or who they opposed. Tell me their goal, motivation, and conflict. Needs to be three sentences at least. Now let’s peel back information on costs/obstacles. Was it a single force or person, or was there many factors and hint at them all here.

OPTIONAL: World or some other information you feel helps sell the book or a one liner closer or question. Often this shows who they are now, or what they hope the reader will walk away from this book knowing whether its that they’re not alone in their tribulations, share a human experience, or bring to light something that needs more public awareness. It can even be aimed to help others spiritually or with building skills!

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Happy New Year and Goalsetting

Happy New Year! 

Let me guess–you have your brand new journal picked out and ready to go, right? You have expectations for this year, important goals that you will absolutely, positively, not-letting-anything-get-in-my-way-this-time meet before the end of the year. Your head is bursting with ideas for all the magical things you will accomplish in the next 365 days. 

Except you’ve been here before, right? How did it go last time? Many people start off the new year filled with hope and promises to create, but then a day goes by where the hours just slip away, and it’s easy enough to skip your art–just for today. And maybe just the weekend. And before you know it, it’s already June and you haven’t completed anything on your goal list for the year. 

How can you keep this from happening–to make this year the one that counts? Well, as Mr. Rogers and Neil Gaiman have both said in their own ways–you have to Do The Thing. And that’s hard! Here are five things to keep in mind as you set your goals for this year. 

  1. Be reasonable.
    • I know it’s easy to imagine you will create everything in the next year–365 days seems like so much time! It is–and it isn’t. Remember that life doesn’t stop to accommodate your creative drive. While you may ache to write those words, play those strings, paint that image, the laundry still needs to be done. The groceries won’t magically appear in your kitchen (well, actually, delivery services are pretty amazing these days–but still, ordering takes time too). When you create your goals, think about how much time you can reasonably devote to your art–every day. 
  1. Work on your art every day. 
    • That’s right–I said you should work on your art every single day–even if it’s only for two minutes at a time. You’ll be amazed how those tiny increments of work can add up into something over time. Find a system that works for your lifestyle–narrate your story while waiting at red lights, sketch on a napkin on the bus, jot down lyrics while waiting for your appointment–whatever helps you create, however small it may seem. Take the small wins as they come. For writers, this may mean setting a five-minute timer while waiting for dinner to cook and writing the next scene on your phone! 
  1. Be kind to yourself. 
    • Realize that life happens and while you may have wanted to accomplish more over a certain time period, give yourself permission to re-evaluate and set new goals, especially after something unexpected happens. It’s never too late to set a reachable goal, even if it’s something small like “Today, I will write four sentences.” Give yourself a break, realize you are human, take a deep breath, and get back in there. 
  1. Consider rewards and/or punishments. 
    • Are you motivated by the idea of a reward for meeting your goal? Are you motivated by the notion of a punishment for not meeting your goal? Take a moment now to write down both for this year. Assume you accomplish your task–what do you deserve now that you’ve reached this goal? That dress on your Amazon wishlist? A day of binging Netflix? Write it down, so you can see it there taunting you on those days when you just aren’t feeling it. On the other hand, what if you don’t accomplish your task? What will prompt you to work on your art? (For me, I am motivated by punishments, so if I don’t write every day, I have to take the stairs at work. My office is on the third floor, and I am super lazy. When I want to skip a day, I think about walking up three flights of stairs up and down all day long–and I get up and write something. For an advanced version of punishment, consider having an accountability buddy–someone who suffers with you if you don’t meet your goal.) 
  1. Track your progress. 
    • I know this seems fairly simple, but if you are like me, you have a handful of journals with the first few pages filled in–and then trail off in a few weeks or months (for me, it’s always around March–when life gets too busy to track anything anymore!). Make goal tracking a daily habit, something you do automatically before bed each night, so that you don’t lose sight of your accomplishments and where you are headed in your creative pursuits. Even if you fall off the wagon for a few days, hop back on as soon as you can. Some tracking is better than none at all! Create a system that works for you. 

Now this is the part where I shamelessly plug the Author’s Accountability Planner from 4 Horsemen Publications (because writing is HARD!). This book helps you track not just word count, but time spent researching, organizing, editing, and even reading. Filled with writing prompts, exciting quotes, fun activities, and a delightful layout, this book can be the accountability partner you’ve been missing in your life! Find it here: https://books2read.com/planner23

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It’s NaNo Time!

The 4 Horsemen want to help make this NaNo a success. In the spirit of writing your heart out, please find a sample of our Author’s Accountability Planner designed specifically for NaNo!

No matter your location in the world, you can participate in NaNoWriMo. Starting in September and October, many library systems host special events in conjunction with local NaNoWriMo chapters to help prepare participants for this special event.

Every November, writers can connect with resources, networks, and events online and within their region. Signing up on the NaNoWriMo website, whether you plan to participate or not, keeps you informed on what’s happening online and locally throughout the year. The website connects you with your NaNoWriMo home region, allowing you to follow calendars, hop in forum discussions, and so much more, like year-round online sprints and NaNoWriMo Camp sessions in months that might be more aligned with your schedule and outside of holiday seasons. You may not be writing the novel in November, but that doesn’t mean you can’t join festivities and workshops!

We strongly believe writing isn’t a solitary venture, but an opportunity to build a writing community anywhere, both physically and virtually!

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Upcoming Online Events for Writers

Looking for an Online Writer’s Conference? Here’s some upcoming events full of agents, authors, and editors in the industry, including a 4 Horsemen or two!

Orange County Library System (FL) is doing their Annual conference online this year and it spans 3 days! This is a free event Jan 29-31.

https://www.ocls.info/ocls-writers-conference

Some personal favorites here is romance author Kerry Evelyn, literary agent Saritza Hernandez, writing coach and children’s book Arielle Haughee, Writer’s Atelier founder and editor Racquel Henry, screenwriter and author Jennie Jarvis, paranormal thriller author L.E. Perez, our very own COO Author Valerie Willis, and many more!

Women in Publishing Summit is drawing near. Head on over and get registered for this March 1-7th online conference with experts from all over. Learn from “Women in Publishing” and discover the latest trends in order to grow as a writer AND publisher.

https://womeninpublishingsummit.com/

Hosted by the amazing Alexa Bigwarfe, she has pulled together some amazing experts from all sides of the industry! In the past, we’ve seen some amazing insight on audiobooks, marketing, ad campaign via Facebook and Amazon, writing newsletters, self publishing and beyond. Also, our 4HP COO and CEO will be hosting some amazing topics

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It’s NaNo Time!

The 4 Horsemen want to help make this NaNo a success. In the spirit of writing your heart out, please find a sample of our Author’s Accountability Planner designed specifically for NaNo!

No matter your location in the world, you can participate in NaNoWriMo. Starting in September and October, many library systems host special events in conjunction with local NaNoWriMo chapters to help prepare participants for this special event.
Every November, writers can connect with resources, networks, and events online and within their region. Signing up on the NaNoWriMo website, whether you plan to participate or not, keeps you informed on what’s happening online and locally throughout the year. The website connects you with your NaNoWriMo home region, allowing you to follow calendars, hop in forum discussions, and so much more, like year-round online sprints and NaNoWriMo Camp sessions in months that might be more aligned with your schedule and outside of holiday seasons. You may not be writing the novel in November, but that doesn’t mean you can’t join festivities and workshops!
We strongly believe writing isn’t a solitary venture, but an opportunity to build a writing community anywhere, both physically and virtually!

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Starting Strong: Crafting Your First Lines

Whether you’re trying to hook a reader or entice an agent/publisher, your first line makes or breaks your piece. This vital line or opening paragraph/page is the sole reason why anyone continues to read or puts your story down. Here are some tips and examples of what makes a strong opening.

Don’t

Here are a couple of turn-offs we’ve discovered during the submission process. There’s always an exception to the rule, but if you intend to break the rule, make sure your submission brings a unique spin.

  1. Don’t open with the main character waking up or going to bed. Place readers into the action or a moment of significance! (Unless there’s a naked man hanging from the ceiling. LOL)
  2. Don’t start with a sunset or sunrise scene description. This is a cliche. Make it clear. It’s either night or day, not in transition. Readers just started the story. Don’t lose them to generic scene descriptions. 
  3. Don’t open with dialogue unless you establish at least two of the following: the setting, a character, conflict, or goal/motivation. Without context, you aren’t giving the reader a reason to care about the main character.
  4. Don’t show the reader–The End of the World–before the story even gets started. This robs readers of a sense of setting and characters; give them a chance to care about the world before you end it. 
  5. Don’t tell… SHOW READERS. Make the scene unfold and engage the reader, enticing them to lean into your story (like a good action flick).
  6. Don’t be mysterious or vague! Specificity and sensory details are great tools to introduce the reader to your setting and characters.
  7. Don’t wait to establish character names. Readers must know who these characters are ASAP.
  8. Don’t give lengthy setting descriptions–and derail the story’s opening–until after you hook the reader. No one picks up a romance novel expecting to read a page or more of cafe descriptions.
  9. Don’t begin with something ending (like a break-up, career upset, catastrophic life event, etc.) unless the genre specifically calls for it. This trope works in a romance but not in thrillers.
  10. Don’t disregard genre expectations. Certain audiences want specific tropes in their stories (especially in romance and erotica). Yes, it’s been done a million times–they know that and love it.      

Do

It’s not all bad news. Here are some pointers on how to make your opening line stand out. Readers want to be invested in your story and characters immediately. Take the time to explain things. Remember, even when it feels obvious, readers don’t live in your head; they won’t interpret your words the same way. If you can, get beta readers to review/critique your first lines and/or pages.

  1. Start with ACTION! Place readers in the moment, whether it’s essential to the plot or not. Make them feel like they’ve just been shoved onto a train. They don’t know where it’s heading, but they’re excited to find out! Make them say, Wait! What?
  2. Rely on universally-experienced motivations, conflicts, or goals. Readers understand the fears of starting a new job or the hesitation to knock on their crush’s front door. The motivation/conflict/goal doesn’t have to be grand. Just give enough for the reader to immediately identify with the main character or action.
  3. Decide on a point of view and stick with it! Often, new writers start with one POV, then randomly shift to another. This will confuse the reader (and shows you need more editing!).
  4. Give readers a strong sense of your character(s). They are the vehicles your readers travel within. The readers will want to know if your character is the right fit for them as soon as possible.
  5. Use your setting to establish your story’s overall genre/tone. Characters can also handle this, but don’t rule out the usefulness of a properly described setting. 
  6. Remember: sometimes, less is more. Of course you love your words–every single one of them–but sometimes, it’s better to release them. 
  7. Establish at least two of these in your first paragraph: goal, motivation, or/and conflict.
  8. Stick to one tense! Stories that constantly shift from present to past confuse readers (and suggest you need closer editing). Remember, certain genres have specific tense expectations.
  9. Beware of the order in which you deliver details to the reader. The information shared in dialogue is very different from how it’s written for readers. Pull the reader smoothly into your world (like a camera lens zooming in/out of a scene) instead of jolting the camera around.
  10. Support your title, genre, and blurb with your opening lines.

Our Favorite Book Openings

Here are a few famous book openings we love at 4 Horsemen Publications. Revisiting your favorite reads is a great way to compare and contrast strong first pages.

  1. It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife… – Pride and Prejudice
  2. It was a nice day. All the days had been nice. There had been rather more than seven of them so far, and rain hadn’t been invented yet. – Good Omens 
  3. When Mr. Bilbo Baggins of Bag End announced that he would shortly be celebrating his eleventy-first birthday with a party of special magnificence, there was much talk and excitement in Hobbiton. – The Fellowship of the Ring
  4. The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. Then the soul-erosion produced by high gambling—a compost of greed and fear and nervous tension—becomes unbearable and the senses awake and revolt from it. – Casino Royale
  5. When I stepped out into the bright sunlight from the darkness of the movie house, I had only two things on my mind: Paul Newman and a ride home. – The Outsiders
  6. I would have lived in peace. But my enemies brought me war. – Red Rising
  7. Tyler gets me a job as a waiter, after that Tyler’s pushing a gun in my mouth and saying, the first step to eternal life is you have to die. – Fight Club
  8. Everyone my age remembers where they were and what they were doing when they first heard about the contest. – Ready Player One
  9. Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.  – One Hundred Years of Solitude 
  10. There are some men who enter a woman’s life and screw it up forever. Joseph Morelli did this to me—not forever, but periodically. – One for the Money
  11. “Where’s Papa going with that ax?” said Fern to her mother as they were setting the table for breakfast. – Charlotte’s Web
  12. I’m pretty much fucked. That’s my considered opinion. Fucked. – The Martian
  13. The unicorn lived in a lilac wood, and she lived all alone. – The Last Unicorn
  14. Like a baby harp seal, I’m all white. My forearms are thickly bandaged, heavy as clubs. My thighs are wrapped tightly, too; white gauze peeks out from the shorts Nurse Ava pulled from the lost and found box behind the nurses’ station. – Girl in Pieces
  15. Your father picks you up from prison in a stolen Dodge Neon, with an 8-ball of coke in the glove compartment and a hooker named Mandy in the back seat. – Until Gwen 
  16. The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed. – The Gunslinger
  17. The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it, no paper notices on downtown posts and billboards, no mentions or advertisements in local newspapers. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not. – The Night Circus
  18. A girl is running for her life. The summer air burns at her back, but there are no torches, no angry mobs, only the distant lanterns of the wedding party, the reddish glow of the sun as it breaks against the horizon, cracks and spills across the hills, and the girl runs, skirts tangling in the grass as she surges toward the woods, trying to beat the dying light. – The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
  19. We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold. – Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
  20. This is my favorite book in all the world, though I have never read it. – The Princess Bride

Practice Makes Perfect!

Take time to write strong opening lines. This exercise is a great way to create a story prompt for later! Try different ways to start: use the same scene but in different ways (changing POV, genre, or starting point). Or mimic your favorite opening paragraph  and see how it shifts your story’s first line. 

Here are some flash fiction samples from writer Bre Brixus (Thank you for letting us hijack these!). These are strong examples of opening lines/paragraphs:

  1. It wasn’t until Lela’s third portrait that she realized the drawings were coming to life.
  2. As a mortician, I’ve heard a lifetime of jokes about being the best person to hide a body. I never imagined I’d be shoving a corpse into a dumb waiter.
  3. Jake fell from the 34th floor scaffold, delighted at the thought of making the ten o’clock news. But when he never hit the sidewalk, he feared making headlines for a very different reason.
  4. Jasmine, more a lover than a fighter, declared her arcane duel weapon–a tube of lipstick. When she kissed her rival, the enchantment was sealed: anyone she kissed fell obsessively in love with her.
  5. It wasn’t until my thirteenth life that I started to remember my previous incarnations.
  6. Trevor wasn’t her first love or her last, but throughout all of her centuries, he was the only man who always found her.
  7. When the fate of six friends hinges on a slip of paper in your pocket, you know you’ve made some shitty decisions.
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Endnotes: Restart Numbering by Chapter

Check out my quick walk-through on YouTube!

Based on Adobe InDesign CC 2020 edition.

I’ve tried everything I could think of, but at last, I found an answer. No, you don’t need to convert anything to static text. These Endnotes are linked and fully functional even when they com imported via a DOCX or RTF. This is perfect for authors and clients who want Endnotes that restart the numbering (both superscript and endnote listing) after each chapter. Leave comments below if you would like more tidbits like this from me!

Story Splitter Script

First, I recommend downloading StorySplitter.jsx script: https://indesignsecrets.com/how-to-split-long-story-into-smaller-pieces-unthreading-middle-story.php

You can simple copy and paste the JavaScript coding into a text file, save it with the “.jsx” ending to make it readable. Drag and drop this into your InDesign Scripts folder. An easy way to find this folder is to open InDesign, open the Scripts window/panel, right-click the folder you wish to add it into and click Reveal In Finder (MAC) or Show In Folder (PC). Simple drop it into this folder and it should immediately appear in the Scripts panel within InDesign.

Not only does it give you more control, it helps you be more concise on how you will be splitting the story. This is vital to make this work!

You can also take advantage of sample Javascripts that come with InDesign called BreakFrame and SplitStory.

Endnotes Setup

Unlike Footnotes that relies on the Paragraph Styles system, Endnotes relies on the story and threading features of InDesign. I recommend having Show Text Threads on so you can see how you are breaking and changing the textflow (View > Extras > Show Text Threads)

First, open TYPE > Document Endnote Options and make sure to change the drop down from Continuous to Restart Every Start.

Find the first page of the Chapter and using the Selection Tool, select the text frame.

Double click StorySplitter in Scripts Panel. Select Break Before.

Viola. That’s it. Every time you break the book like this, it will restart the counting of the associated Endnotes and updates instantly.

Happy designing and typesetting!

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Making an Author Bio with 7 Simple Questions

Whether you are new to the realm of publishing, writing your first book, or even launching under a pen name, the one element we often pain over is writing that Author Bio. No worries, 4HP has your back! Here are some things you should keep in mind to make this easier to write and maintain. Anytime you are asked for your bio, take a moment to look it over and freshen it up. It’s by far one of the most important introductory tools between an author and their readership. It’s okay to dive into your favorite authors and look at their bios and pick apart what connects with you and doesn’t work for you as a reader. So, let’s talk about making your own author bio with some simple questions and what they should be doing for you and your readers.

How Long Should A Bio Be?

There’s some art and marketing sense that needs to go into it. Every author should be keeping a GDOC or Document on their system with their bio written in three formats. The idea is to be concise and limit fluff while maximizing keywords. Here are three types of bios I’ve been asked for and recommend having ready:

  • Long bio (300-350 words)
  • Regular or Short bio (100-150 words)
  • Snippet (50 words)

Having these prepared beforehand will make your life easier when you need to update them and meet all the social media, conference, and blogging needs. The most common one used is your regular or short bio of about 100-150 words.

What goes into a Bio?

You are trying to do a lot of things with a bio with a very small word count. The 100-150 bio is the backbone commonly used for book blurbs, about the author sections within your books, and serves as a foundation for the long bio and snippet. Here are SEVEN simple questions to amp up your bio and ability to increase marketing and searchability :

  1. Who are you and where do you come from?
    • This is your pen name and where doesn’t mean you have to say Florida. Feel free to make something up, or if you’re a memoir or non-fiction writer, you can say, “I come from a long background in game development” or “A skin cancer survivor” as an instant way for someone to connect with you.
  2. What genre do you write?
    • It may seem silly to announce this, but you do! You want the reader to have a clear expectation of what kind of stories to associate with your brand name. Often, authors have several pen names to differentiate between genres and readerships. Loyal readers are less likely to dive into a book in a disliked genre, and clarity can prevent confusion in your brand/genre, limiting unnecessary bad reviews. Declaring genre optimizes your ability to include keywords for SEO or Search Engines. Keywords will connect your brand with books and authors of a similar readership.
  3. Why do you write this genre &/or what are some favorite books that inspire your writing?
    • Again, this is a great opportunity to connect with the right readership. Let’s be honest, we all geek out when an author has similar taste in books!
  4. What is something a little personal or a hobby you enjoy doing?
    • It doesn’t have to be unique. There’s nothing wrong with saying you enjoy playing video games or binge-watching Supernatural on Netflix. It’s a chance to share a little of yourself without getting too personal.
  5. Is there anything you want readers to know about you or your books, or something you hope they gain from reading your work?
    • Often this element is missing from Author Bios. Here’s your opportunity to make yourself and your books unique. You can let readers know how you craft your writing, what kind of research you do, or using Question 3 and 4, WHY those books and WHY that hobby.
  6. Are you active in your local writing community, or have you won awards?
    • I call this the closer. Most authors tend to place this first in the bio, but I find it has a better hit on the back end. If the readers have gotten this far in your bio, now you’re about to close the deal with them liking you or having more confidence and faith in what they’ve read about you so far. For example, I mention I am “an award-winning fantasy author” to answer question 1, and by question 5, I have supported this with what I read, what I enjoy doing, and the fact I pack mythology and fantasy in my books. Now, with question 6, BAM! I won bronze in Mythology fiction in 2008 for my debut book. That says a lot! And it supports who you are and how well you do it. Other ways to close is to share community involvement, show that you’re passionate, whether you volunteer at the animal shelter or library, or even participate in NaNoWriMo for the last two/ten/last year, or host workshops online. This all adds agency to you as both a person and a writer.
  7. Where can we find you?
    • This is more of a MUST HAVE for any author that wants to grow on social media, expand newsletters, and give readers better access to them. Here is where you list all the ways a reader can get in touch or keep up to date with you and your books. Some authors simply have a website link here ( www.willisauthor.com ) which in turn, has all the links and access to all the other social media and newsletter stuffs. It’s completely up to you whether to provide them with a link to your Amazon Author page, list all the social media, sign up newsletter link, or even just a Facebook page/group link. No matter what, your bio should be driving traffic and interaction by the end of it after convincing them how amazing you are!

Now Where Do I Put My Bio?

There’s a lot of places where you will find the bio helpful in your journey as an author. If you’re not sure where this crazy thing goes, here’s some ideas and commons uses to keep in mind as you craft your bio and fine-tune it to bestsell you and your writing:

  • Author Bio Page on Website
  • Description/Bio on Social Media Pages
  • Amazon Author Page
  • Back of every book you write as your Author Bio or About the Author Bio
  • Back Cover of your book (More common for Non-Fiction and Memoir)
  • Conferences and Conventions when they ask
  • Book Blog Tours
  • Author Interviews (Though I recommend shifting them to be more personal for each place that interviews you. For example, if this is with a paranormal website or magazine, you may want to add more paranormal related flair to the bio.)
  • Press Kit or Media Kit (and include all three versions for optimal results)
  • Email Signature (Seems weird, but this works well with snippet bio!)
  • Introducing yourself online anywhere! (Forums, Social media takeovers, and more!)

Did You Write Your Author Bio? Share it in the comments below!

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Top 5 Ways to Use Those Damaged Books!

Slightly damaged books happen sometimes. I love CreateSpace because the few times this has happened, they’ve overnighted a replacement! Another thing is that when we setup and breakdown for events, or leave our stock in the trunk of our cars, or kids… kids… well, books get dented, corners and spines fray, but they’re still good!

What now?

1 A giveaway! Author Harper Sloan is a great example of taking advantage and turning this into a promotional tool. Everyone loves contests and freebies, so use those dents and dings as a way to bring attention and excitement. Link to Giveaway: https://www.facebook.com/harpersloanbooks/posts/995123670649486 


2 Donate your book! Give your book to a library, donate it to a school, or leave it on the community shelf at a coffee shop. Don’t forget to slide in some signed bookmarks. I love to leave a copy of my book in these places and often sign the book, date it, and write the location. You never know when it will come back into your life again!


3 Discount special! This works great if it happened while setting up your table or on the ride there. DISCOUNT. Sell these limited few damaged copies for a steal, driving people to grab them up and most likely another book along with it.


4 Special Gift or Limited Time Offer – Don’t be afraid to even pull a “First 5 buyers get a copy of SAIDBOOK: dents are free” or even “Buy 2 books and get a copy of SAIDBOOK–only 5 in stock!” Always try to use these to your advantage. Make them a marketing tool to bring in readers.


5 ARC or Review copies – I don’t know if it’s me, but most of the giveaway books arrive dented despite how I package them. With that in mind, use these expendable copies to send to book reviewers who prefer paperbacks. Don’t forget to sign the book and say thank you for their time to review inside! If all else fails, book art is trendy and makes a great eye-catching centerpiece for your convention table!