Showing posts with label Anna Maclean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anna Maclean. Show all posts

Friday, June 17, 2011

On Writing a Book Series by Guest Author Anna Maclean

Happy Friday, all!


I'm very excited to have author Anna Maclean with me today. She has a new book out: Louisa and The Missing Heiress, the first in a trilogy of mysteries from Penguin Books (NAL),
featuring sleuth Louisa May Alcott.

Please welcome her as she shares some thoughts on writing her book series.

What’s most exciting about writing a series instead of a single novel is this great opportunity to follow a character through a longer time line than a single mystery could allow, to take her from here to there in terms of character development. Specifically, with Louisa May Alcott, who is the sleuth in my series of cozy mysteries, beginning with Louisa and the Missing Heiress, I wanted to begin with her in young adulthood, when she is unknown, inexperienced and uncertain of what she wants to do with her life. And then, take her up to that moment when she begins to become the Louisa May Alcott we know, the woman who writes Little Women and becomes astoundingly famous.

I begin the series in 1854, when twenty-two year old Louisa is living with her family in Boston, teaching children in her parlor to earn money, and secretly writing some pretty exciting tales of dangerous men and femme fatales in her attic writing room. But she’s also beginning to think about writing on a very serious level and soon after the beginning of this novel publishes Flower Tales, her earliest book for children. The book does well in that it earns her a little money and a little recognition…but she senses there is much, much more to come from her imagination. And so, in this first mystery in the series, she begins to think about the characters that will, in years to come, become her Little Women.

Of course, what is difficult about a series is that each book must stand alone and be able to be read, and enjoyed, independently from the others. Information can’t be repeated, yet each book must have all the information the reader needs to ‘know’ Louisa. The character has to change, to develop, yet remain completely identifiable.
There are many things that ‘unify’ my Louisa as a fictional character, so that while developing and changing she retains an inherent character: her love of writing, her devotion to her family, her conviction that she must remain independent if she is to do her best work.

In Louisa and the Missing Heiress, Louisa is just beginning to ‘separate’ from her family on an intellectual level, to realize that she may support causes her father may not support – specifically, women’s rights! So there is that tension, of the girl becoming the women, the free agent, the free-thinker. Throw into that emotional setting a series of events quite plausible for nineteenth century Boston – illegitimate children, sexual abuse of young girls, a murder – and you end up with a Louisa who is certainly different on the last page than she was on the first!

What some readers and admirers of Little Women may not know about Louisa May Alcott is that, in addition to writing grown-up tales of romance and forbidden love, Louisa also had a great sense of humor. I used that in my mystery, allowing Louisa moments of caustic yet never sarcastic fun, as well as a little romance.

I'm a huge fan of Little Women, so you using Louisa May Alcott as your character is so interesting!


Thanks for stopping by! Here's a little bit more about her book:


Long before she will achieve fame as the author of Little Women, Louisa May Alcott is writing stories of a more dark and mysterious nature. But nothing prepares her for the role of amateur detective she assumes when the body of her dear friend, wealthy newlywed Dorothy Wortham, is found floating in Boston’s harbor.

It’s well known that Dorothy’s family didn’t approve of her husband, a confirmed fortune hunter, but Louisa suspects that some deeper secret lies behind her friend’s tragic murder...

CONTEST: Anne will be giving away a Victorian tea cup and saucer to one randomly drawn commenter and, for the host with the most comments, she has a page of cartoons from a mid-nineteenth century issue of Harper's Bazaar - cartoons Louisa herself might have laughed at.


For more information about the author, please visit her website: http://www.annamaclean.net

Good luck!

Do you enjoy reading series books? What's your favorite?
If you're a writer, have you ever considered writing a series?