Marin McGinnis on Common Mistakes a Copyeditor Can Catch

Mindy:   Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see as a guest.

Mindy: We are here with Marin McGinnis. Marin is here today to talk about a lot of different things, but one of the things that I wanna focus on specifically is that Marin is a copy editor. So, we're gonna talk a lot about the importance of copy editing and the different things that an individual can do... Maybe beforehand to catch those small mistakes, the most common mistakes. But first... Marin is my cousin, and we found each other because we both have an interest in genealogy, and we found each other through ancestries. How are we related specifically again?

Marin: We are fifth cousins once removed.

Mindy: Our last shared ancestor died in 1825, is that correct?

Marin: That is also correct. One day, maybe, we'll figure out who his parents were and where he came from.

Mindy: I shall never cease. Also, I just think it's really interesting that we are both individuals that are writers and we move in the publishing and the book industry. There could be an argument made that some of it is innate. We'll call it a gift or a talent that you definitely still have to learn some things in order to hone it, but I think it's interesting that we found each other and they we're both writers.

Marin: I think we have a lot of things in common like that, and it is very curious that even though we are five generations and about 12 years apart, we have a lot of similar characteristics. Thinking about that is kind of funny when you think about genetics.

Mindy: We will talk about writing soon. Genetics kind of blow my mind because the old nature versus nurture argument, of course, is always there, but I have friends who have children whose fathers are not present or vacated early on. These children have their mannerisms... Ways that they hold their fork when they eat, like very intimate things that they didn't learn by watching him 'cause he's gone. But they have these very specific little things in facial expressions that man, it's their dad. It's bizarre.

Marin: My kid has some of my father's mannerisms, and they didn't know each other very well at all. So, it is interesting.

Mindy: So, you are a writer, first of all. You are a full-time lawyer and you're really smart, and that's cool.

Marin: Thank you.

Mindy: I kind of introduce you that way to people in my mind, or whenever I'm thinking about you. It's like my cousin Marin, who's a lawyer, because I don't get to say that often. Also a writer, you are published in the romance category, and you are also a copy editor, which is one of the big reasons that I have you here today. So you do offer copy editing and editing services. So that's something that I wanna give you some room to talk about. But first of all, I would love to have you talk a little bit about copy editing, specifically. What it is, how it's different from broad editing, and why it's so important.

Marin: The services that I provide are proofreading, copy editing, and line editing. Proofreading is kind of obvious. You're looking at a finished edited work to just make sure that you catch the little errors that people make in spelling and punctuation and grammar. Copy editing is a step above that, and it is a more substantive review of a manuscript to correct the same kinds of errors, but also to look at syntax of your sentences, ensure consistency in spelling, how you hyphenate things, the fonts that you use, what words you capitalize, and then to note ambiguous or confusing words or sentences. Line editing is a step above that as well, and it's intended to flag issues of overuse words, unnecessary words, run-on sentences, passive voice - just stuff that needs to be tightened... Pacing, structure, use of filler words like "that," and words that can slow down the pacing of your writing to ensure consistency in language. Make sure you spell the character's name the same way every time.

Mindy: One of the things that I hear people getting confused about sometimes is the difference between copy editing and proofreading. Because proofreading, like you said, is a little more just like searching specifically for errors. Copy editing comes down to many different things. They are searching for those as well, and they catch them... Also grammar. 'Cause I do write small town rural areas, often the copy editor will go through and they will fix grammar in dialogue, and I will reject the fix. That is not true to how this character would speak. I am college educated, and I've written 12 books. And I cannot tell you the difference between lay and lie. I've never said whom in my life. So those are things that copy editing will catch, and if it doesn't fit the voice of your character, those are things that you can reject and say, "No. I don't want this character to be speaking with proper grammar." Or even their internal dialogue, at times. To keep the voice correct, grammar may not be your highest priority. 

But one of the things that my copy editors catch the most often - continuity. Continuity is something that we don't always think about - even a timeline. That's my big problem is time. My timelines are always a mess. One of the ways that I specifically get away from it is that I'm not specific ever. So, my characters will say, "Hey, do you wanna go to movie sometime?" They don't say when. They don't say where. They don't say anything specific. I usually, if you're paying attention, won't say anything about time in terms of what month it is. Typically, I will mention a season or an upcoming holiday, if there's like Halloween or Christmas, but I'm not gonna say it's Tuesday, October 27th. I'm not gonna do that because I will mess it up. If I have an anchor somewhere, I won't be consistent. Along those lines, what are some continuity errors that you see occurring really often?

Marin: Time is definitely one of them. Geography is something that I pay attention to. Somebody's writing about somebody who is driving in a car from one place to another, and it takes 15 minutes. I'll actually look at a map. It does not take you 15 minutes. It takes you 45 minutes. If you're gonna use that kind of really specific detail, you have to make sure that it's right. So that's another one that I notice. Somebody has their eyes closed, and they never open them and all of a sudden they're looking at somebody. Point of view kinds of errors, I also note. So somebody is talking to somebody else, and the writer mentions the eyes of the person who's speaking. Well, you can't see your own eyes unless you are looking in a mirror. So those kinds of things are fairly common.

Mindy: Absolutely, in my very first book, Not A Drop To Drink, it was my first experience having a professional copywriter go through my stuff and it was amazing. The things that you don't think about as a writer. There was a scene where the two main characters, they're in a basement. This is a world that doesn't have electricity. It's night. They're underground. There is no light source, and they're having a conversation. And one of them smiles, and the other character sees it. And my copy editor's like, "No. They didn't. Because it's pitch black, and you've said that multiple times. So no. You might be able to hear a smile in their voice, but they didn't see it."

Marin: Those are the kinds of things that you just don't always think about when you're writing the book, and it takes an outsider looking in to say, "Hey, you might wanna think about this."

Mindy: You were talking about level of detail on your end. Looking at a map and deciding how long it would take someone to drive from this place to the next. I had, in one instance... I had said Tuesday, October 27, and my copy editor was like, "Well, Tuesday, October 27th only occurred in the year 2012 or the year 2044." So you have to pick which year this is set in. I'll mention there's a full moon, and they will check the lunar schedule.

Marin: Copy editors are a funky breed. We really get into those weird nitty-gritty details that most people probably don't care about, but if you keep them in there, there will be at least one reader who will say "What?" and throw the book across the room. So you don't want that. You want to be as accurate as possible. If your book is set in the real world on some level, then you need to be precise.

Mindy: That's the kind of stuff that just, as a writer, I get hung up on. And like I said, timelines are my biggest thing. I'm never specific about what my characters look like either. I actually was interviewing Laurell K. Hamilton, she writes the Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series, and she told me that she has a character whose eye color changes. The series is like 30 books long. So, it's bound to happen. His eye color changes across the course of this series because she just forgot. She forgot what color his eyes were.

Marin: That's what I tend to do the same with my own writing, is that I don't go into too much detail about what the characters look like. Partly because I want readers to be able to imagine the character however they picture them.

Mindy: I also do not physically describe my characters in very much depth at all, if I can avoid it. Partially because, yes, I wanna be consistent, and I know that I won't. But mostly because, like you said, I want the reader to be able to envision this person however they want. I know that when I was younger, junior high, I was reading Lord of the Rings, and for whatever reason, I had the hugest crush on Faramir. Like Faramir was my dude, and I was into him. And at some point, Tolkien says he has a beard, and I was just like "ugh." I was like 12. So I was just like, "That's gross." But I immediately was like, "No, he doesn't. He doesn't have a beard. No, he doesn't." It pulled me out of the story because I had a picture of what Faramir looked like. It was probably Cary Elwes, let's be honest.

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Mindy: Something that I have come across in my own editorial business, and I just actually yesterday was working on a first 10 pages. And the book was written in first person, and I read all 10 pages and they were pretty good. And I gave him some notes, and then I said, "So here's the thing. I don't know your main character's name." Because when you're writing in first person, it's all I and me. They never said her name. What are some other common mistakes that you run into that are either POV or sometimes tense. Tense is the other thing I run into that people have made mistakes.

Marin: I do see tense issues sometimes, although that's rarer. When you start out writing a book in first person, you do generally stay there. You don't tend to switch. I have noticed that if somebody starts a book in one tense and then switches and goes back and re-writes in a different tense, then you can find errors that way. But other errors I see are they have some statement about how one character is feeling or thinking about something, and your POV character cannot possibly know that. There needs to be a little bit of explanation using body language, for example, or expressions or some other indication explained in the narrative about how the POV character can tell how the other character is feeling.

Mindy: Yeah, absolutely. They can infer how they might be feeling, but they cannot say with absolute definity what that character is feeling on the inside because they are not that person.

Marin: Right.

Mindy: So, as someone that moves in both the traditional and the indie world... HarperCollins copy edits. They also then have a proofreader go through them as well. That's all taken care of for me. On the indie side, I do hire out that work, as you know, because I hire you. It is an expense, but it is also a needed one. I can send you something that I think is pretty damn clean and you send it back and it's red marker city. And you just don't see them yourself. So if you can talk a little bit about the importance of a copy editor, if you don't have one built in, in the traditional publishing world.

Marin: A lot of people who are self-publishing probably think... I'm a little guilty of this too. I'm pretty good, and I have beta readers. And they catch a lot of stuff, so I don't really need an editor. Let me give you an example of a book that I edited very recently. It's a romance, and the hero in the book is unwilling to find love, experience love, and tie himself to another person because his mother has a terrible disease that he will pass on to his children. The disease itself, if you yourself don't have the disease... So if your mother has it, but you don't have it and you don't have the gene to pass on the disease, you can't pass it to your children. And no one had caught that. The author didn't know. That kind of thing can really cause a serious issue with your book and readers who know about that disease, unless you make it up, would be like, "This is ridiculous. Totally unbelievable," and will give you terrible reviews. So that's just one kind of extreme example of why you need a copy editor - why you really should spend the money to have someone else do it for you. Because it will catch those kinds of issues in addition to all the nitty-gritty, how you use a comma, how you use a colon.

Mindy: I am super curious. How did that client then fix that book if the entire premise was faulty?

Marin: She hasn't fixed it yet. Afterwards, we were brainstorming ways that she could fix it without rewriting the entire book. She could give the hero the gene for the disease, so he knows that he's gonna get the disease eventually. But that's not really great for a romance when you want them to be a happily ever after, but you know the hero's gonna die of a horrible disease. Another one was finding a different disease. And then another one was not specifying which disease, and I thought, "Well, yeah, you could do that, but the heroine is a nurse. So she's gonna ask."

Mindy: Oh man. She really wrote herself into a corner.

Marin: Yeah, and I feel really bad that I pointed it out, but it's better to point it out before you publish the book and have a reader point it out to you.

Mindy: Oh, absolutely. You want that stuff to get caught ahead of time. And speaking of things getting caught or not caught, what's amazing is that things still get through. One of the reasons I think why you definitely need a copy editor and a proofreader is because the brain is fantastic at auto-filling. The brain will fix things automatically, even though your eye is relaying the visual that is incorrect of the text. Your brain fixes it and doesn't recognize it as an error. So, I don't know if you've seen this before, but your brain actually only processes about every third word that you read, and everything else is auto-filled... That you're not individually processing each word. I thought that was ridiculous, but I remember years ago finding an example of a paragraph that someone had written where they took out every third word, and of course, if the third word is endometriosis, then maybe not. But it was amazing because my brain... I read it and I knew what it said. Even though it was specifically purposely missing words. It is amazing, especially when you as a writer already know things. So your brain auto-fills things or assumes things that isn't actually on the page for the reader. In my first book, Not A Drop To Drink, in the hard cover editions, there is a line of dialogue that is attributed to a character that is dead. There's a mother-daughter duo and the daughter passes away, and they have similar names. When the mother is talking about the daughter who has passed away, she doesn't say her name, but she's speaking about her in the dialogue tag, "dead daughter said." That made it to print. Nobody caught it. The brain was like, "Yeah, we're talking about this person. That's the person that's talking."

Marin: That is actually a common error. When you are using dialogue tags and say that so and so said something, it is very often the wrong character. I do notice that a fair amount. You see it at least once in just about every book.

Mindy: That's amazing. So is that something like... Let's say I'm thinking about my friend Amanda, and I need to call the dentist and make a dentist appointment. And I call my friend Amanda. Is that what's at work there? That the brain is just making free associations?

Marin: I think so actually, and I actually came across this in my day job as a lawyer the other day. One of my paralegals had written "Hi Ashley" in an email that she was drafting, and I said, "Her name is not Ashley. It's Angela." "Oh yeah. I was thinking about Ashley so and so, who is a different client." So I think that what you said makes a lot of sense. That you are... You're thinking about something else, and so your brain puts the two of them together.

Mindy: I did something similar myself just this week. I had a publicist reach out about their author. They wanted to get them on the show. And I emailed them back, and I was like, "Yes. I would love to speak to April in April." Cause April can also be a name. And I was looking at the calendar, and I was like, "This is when I could schedule it in April." And I emailed the publicist, and I said, "Yes. I would love to speak to April in April." I immediately like... Listen, uhh, I know her name. 'Cause she's a pretty famous person... So I was like, "Hey, so... I'm dumb." And she was like, "No. It's okay. It's no big deal." But yeah.

Marin: That's funny.

Mindy: The brain is a funny little thing. We're recording this on March 15th, and my 12th book just came out yesterday. A friend that is a writer, who sent me a text, and she was like, "Hey, congrats. Happy release day. There's a typo in your Goodreads write up. The blurb for the book is wrong." And I was like, "Oh, okay. Cool. Let me know what it is. I'll go fix it." One of the things that happens in the book is there is a flash flood, and on the Goodreads write up it said "flash food." Alright, flash food's not a real thing. I go into the metadata on Goodreads. I fix it to flash flood, and I'm going about my day. I'm trying to do social media. Doing all the stuff you do on release day, and then I was like, Hey, I better check my own site because when it comes to the blurb, but you just copy paste things everywhere. I wonder if I picked that up and used it on my own site. I better make sure that on Mindy McGinnis dot com it's correct. So I go to Mindy McGinnis dot com and sure enough, on the blurb for Long Stretch of Bad Days, it says flash food. I'm like, okay. I go in and I fix it.

And then all of a sudden, this little red flag goes up in my brain, and it's like, "Hey man. I'm pretty sure that you copy pasted that information from the official flap copy from your publisher. You need to go to make sure that that's right on Amazon." And I was like, "Yeah, that's a good point Self." I go over to Amazon, and I look and in the Amazon description it says flash food. Total stomach drop. I was like, "Oh shit." Because that's the catalog copy that gets loaded on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and all of the online stores. That's the official material. And I get up, and I go to my book closet where I have my books. And I pull out A Long Stretch of Bad Days, and I open up the dust jacket. I look at the flap copy on my hard covers. It says flash food. Well, shit. There's nothing we can do. Every single hard cover that was printed has a mistake on the jacket. It happened. There's nothing we can do about it. It's actually kind of funny, and my publisher was like, "Oh my gosh. We are so sorry. We cannot believe this happened." And I'm like, "You know what? That's okay. I didn't catch it either, right?" Like this passes through me and I approve things, but flash food translated in the brains of probably 20 to 30 different professionals in the publishing world as flash flood and nobody caught it.

Marin: I follow a bunch of authors on Facebook and every once in a while, one of them will have a new release and will say, "Oh my God. There's a typo in my book. 25 people looked at it." It happens all the time, and even if you have the world's most careful editors, you're gonna miss something.

Mindy: That's absolutely true. I was reading a book just last night. I was reading a hard cover, traditionally published, pretty big name author, and I found two mistakes in the first 100 pages. I'm pretty sure that's wrong. And I went back, and I read it again. Yep, that's wrong. That's how things are, and nothing is perfect, and this is life.

Marin: Correct.

Mindy: Speaking of having the best possible copy editor in the world... Why don't you, last thing, go ahead and let listeners know where they can find you if they would like to make their own work a little stronger by using your services.

Marin: Absolutely. You can find me at Marin McGinnis dot com. There is a page there which talks about all about my editing services.

Mindy:     Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Jessi Honard & Marie Parks on Co-Authoring, Pacing a Fantasy, and Responsibly Writing A Diverse Cast

Mindy:         Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see as a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Marie Parks and Jessi Honard who are the authors of Unrelenting, which is a fantasy novel with the pacing of a thriller which also features LGBTQ+ characters. So we're gonna cover a bunch of different topics, but one of the things that I want to talk about first is the fact that the two of you brought 11 years worth of content marketing to your writing and publishing journey. And so you were kind of able to approach this with one foot, of course, in the creative world, but then also very firmly planted in the business world and knowing how important that is to success in publishing. So if you could talk about how you blended those two things, and especially how you brought over content marketing skills to your book launch for Unrelenting, that would be great.

Jessi: Yeah, absolutely, and thank you so much for having both of us here. It's such a great opportunity to chat with you. I'm Jessi. Absolutely, you're completely right. It is a blend of these two skill sets. Marie and I both were fiction writers for years, and also we run a content marketing business together. When we approached the launch for Unrelenting, one thing we had heard frequently from other authors was disappointment and feeling like the wind had kind of been taken out of their sails around their own launches. And often that, when we did a little digging, came down to not really having a solid grasp of the business side of it, and through no fault of their own, right? Most authors are creatives and they wanna really dive into that creative side of things, and so we went into it, well before the pre-launch period started, knowing that we really had to put that business hat on if we wanted to see the sort of traction that we were hoping for. And so I think a lot of it was just the mindset right from the get-go, we went into it saying, Okay, yes, this is a creative piece. Yes, this is something we've been working on for a long time with our author hat on, but now it's time to take that hat off for a little while. Put on the business hat and approach this just like we would one of our client projects. Marie, I'm not sure if you have more to add to that, but that's sort of the framework that I went into it with.

Marie: It may sound overwhelming for some folks who don't have over a decade of experience doing this day in and day out. But I think at the end of the day, this is something that any author can do so long as they are willing to remember that really at the end of the day, it's about relationships - leveraging the relationships you have. For instance, we were really fortunate that we were connected with you, Mindy, through our publisher, that we were able to have this opportunity to chat with you. But also those relationships with your readers. Doing what you can to make them feel special. So, putting out content that's fun for them. We did a lot of gamification. Chatted with our publisher about like, "Hey, what would be a good goal for us for pre-orders?" And then we shared that goal with our audience and said, "Hey, can you help us get there?" And then when we hit that goal, they were like, "Let's bump it up a little bit." And so it was kind of like a group team effort, and it was pretty fun.

Mindy: So when you're talking about using those elements and the things that you bring from content marketing, you're not just tweeting. A friend of mine that used to run Epic Reads, which is the YA marketing arm of Harper Teen - very good at what she does, she did that for a living for a long time - published her own book. Margo Wood is her name. And she was talking about how intensely difficult it is to stand out, and how you can really feel like on the social media side, that you're screaming into a void. And it's almost impossible to gauge what kind of effects anything is even having. I replied to her on Twitter and said, "Yes, I know. It's like, I've been doing this for 13 years, and I still don't know what works." And she replied, tongue in cheek, "Mindy, you just make a TikTok." And I'm like, "Oh, that's right. You just make a TikTok, and then you're a millionaire." Yes, there are some people that have done very well on TikTok, but the truth of that matter is that that's all fan-generated. The authors themselves are not actually creating that content. So when you talk about that high quality content, you're not just talking about, "I'm gonna send a tweet, and I'm gonna watch that go sell me some books this weekend."

Jessi: No, definitely not. Social media is a viable strategy, and it is one arm of what are many possible avenues that you can take. There are two important things that we kept in mind. One is, what Marie already mentioned around relationships first, and the second thing that was really important to us was making sure that we were keeping tabs on what we could control. If you send a tweet out into the void, you have no idea who's going to see it. You don't know if it's going to work or not, and so we set a goal for ourselves to keep track of what we could control because there's a lot that we can't. So the gamification is a really great example of that. We had a goal for our pre-orders, but we also knew that, as anyone who's published anything knows, reporting of those numbers is a little difficult to track sometimes. And so we issued a challenge to our audience of - tell us when you pre-order the book. So that we could just Excel document, put down they tally and say, "Hey, we're up to this amount of pre-orders." And we could deepen those relationships with them, and they could become a part of the community cheering us on. We also made sure that we weren't just relying on sending a tweet out. We had... Primarily email was the avenue that we relied on. We sent out a significant number of email marketing messages during the pre-launch and launch period that were focused on, yes, getting people to buy the book, but also providing value for them. Giving them sneak peaks behind the scenes looks at our writing process and our marketing process. How we had taken this journey to a published book. And I think that combining that with sending some tweets out, sending some Instagram posts out, and really, most importantly, having conversations with people, listening to what they had to say and adjusting as people gave us feedback and whatnot. I think all of that had a really big impact on our ability to reach people.

Marie: Yeah, and not just to purchase the books, but also in the back end to feel invested enough to go ahead and leave a review.

Mindy: Everything that you're saying is so true. We cannot do well if we are just sending out our tweet. And yes, of course, making a TikTok is great. I have actually been pulling back from social media pretty heavily as a consumer. I am still very present as an author. I went through a break up that was really difficult. I had to drop out of social media and all of that interaction, and I was gone for about three months. And I didn't make an announcement and say, "Hey, everyone. I'm going through a tough time. Not gonna be around." I just dropped out. And here's the thing. Number one, no one noticed. And number two, it didn't matter. It did not affect my sales. It did not affect the open rate of my newsletter. It did not affect anything. I'd been I think publishing for eight or nine years at that point, and I was like, "Why have I been setting aside like two hours a day every day to do this when it's actually not doing anything?" And I think that that tide has changed a lot. Now, you mentioned email marketing. So that is something that I will absolutely beat the bushes about for younger writers and people that are coming into this to understand. Like say for instance, TikTok. Everyone loves it. Everyone's using it. It is the go-to social media right now. If you write YA, that's where all the kids are. But there's a lot of talk about TikTok data mining and getting information from you, and TikTok has been on the verge of being shut out of the US once or twice. So if you are really relying on TikTok, and this can happen with anything - you don't know, and if you have heavily relied on 30,000 followers on Twitter... Elon Musk buys Twitter and says, "We're done with Twitter" and shuts it down, you've just lost all of that following. Your email list, the people that you have drawn to you, that want to hear from you - that belongs to you, and you have a direct access to their inbox.

Marie: Absolutely. Consistently email is the highest return on investment platform that you can leverage for your content marketing. Anyone who's trying to sell anything, including us authors. I think the stat heard most recently was like, for every dollar you spend, you get 38 back. Pretty fantastic. So it's definitely one of those things where we focused in on it, and like Jessi said, we tried to make it not just "buy the book, buy the book, buy the book," but you kinda have to. Don't be afraid to get out there and to say it again. And, as Jessi said, we added other fun stuff in there like a little character feature or let's talk about the setting or the magic or whatever. So that it also felt worth opening for somebody who had already done all the things, and they'd already purchased the book, already shared with their friends. It's about creating the invitation of the conversation.

Jessi: I would be remiss to ignore the impact that having a community as we were building our email list had for us. If you're an author who doesn't have an email list and is still building it up, one of the best things that Marie and I ever did for ourselves, well before we had our book with a publisher, was to start connecting with people who were similar writers to us and similar readers to our target audience and just building those relationships in those connections. Going to network events, whether they were in person or virtual. Joining discord communities where these people are having conversations every day about the craft of writing, about publishing, about reading, about the different types of books that people are enjoying, and just sort of being an active part of those communities to the point where you develop true friendships. And they can help uplift you when it comes to time to hit the pavement and start doing the marketing. And hopefully you can then return the favor for them.

Mindy: One of the things that I think a lot of authors struggle with when it comes to the marketing side of that, most of us are a little quieter. We're not that outgoing. I am fortunate enough to have both introvert and extrovert qualities so that I can apply both in my career and utilize both aspects of that personality. But not everybody is that way. Asking someone for their email, you're saying, "Hey, can I have some access to you?" It can be difficult, I think, to go that route and ask people to give you access to them and to say, "Hey, I would like to be more present in your life." I have a free short story, and so I'm giving you something. I'm like, "Hey, you sign up for my email newsletter, and you will get a free short story." And it's a little... I'm also giving you something. I am not just taking a thing from you.

Marie: Yes, 100%. That's such a good strategy. We even use that for our own business. You often, you get some kind of resource or tool for your content marketing.

Jessi: I completely agree. Having some sort of reason for them to join your list beyond, "Hey, just be on my newsletter," which let's face it, we all get so many emails in a given day that just being on another newsletter is not the most enticing ask in the world. Absolutely, having something that they can receive so that they can look forward to receiving those emails from you and get a sense of who you are, how you communicate via email, all of that.

Mindy: If anybody is interested on the best ways to begin and to cultivate and to proper care and feeding of your newsletter, I highly recommend the book Newsletter Ninja by Tammi Labrecque. I started using her step-by-step advice from this little book. It was a huge, huge impact for me. It has improved my email list and the open rate and the click rate. Everything went through the roof. So for those of you that are looking to do that, I recommend Newsletter Ninja by Tammi Labrecque.

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Mindy: So you guys are co-authors, and that's something that I think a lot of people are really curious about. So can you tell us a little bit about being a co-author and what your process is like?

Marie: Go ahead Jessi.

Jessi: I like to say that we cheated a little bit being business owners together. So we spent a number of years working together prior to sitting down and writing a novel together. That allowed us to just build those collaborative skills over the years. The other side of that is our process is really kind of chaotic. It works, but it's very different from many other co-authors that we've talked to. For us, it's immensely collaborative. We do everything in Google Docs. We tend to do it live together in Google docs. We'll set a day or a few hours aside to meet at the same time, and we will be quite literally writing the same scene together. One of us will be writing, and the other person will be a few sentences behind editing. And then the writer will eventually run out of steam or not know quite how to phrase something or reach something where they know the other person is slightly more adept at it, and so they'll stop and the editor will take the writer's position and the writer will loop back and become the editor. And we'll just keep trading places.

Mindy: Of all the co-authoring processes I've ever heard of, that one is original.

Marie: It's definitely not the most efficient thing in the world. The most efficient thing might be... Maybe each of us takes a POV character. We each write half a novel. We lace it together. I mean, I've heard of that before. That sounds actually really smart. Maybe we should try that sometime, Jessi, but instead we take twice as long, 'cause also on top of it, we're both discovery writers. What are we trying to accomplish in this chapter? At what point is this in the book? What kind of plot points are we hitting? And then from there, we start writing and sometimes all the plans go out the window. But I think the thing that's been most important about it, and I think this is true no matter what a co-author strategy looks like in the weeds, being able to take our ego out of it, so that it's not like, "Oh, my idea or your idea." It's more just like, "What's best for the story? What's aligned with the shared vision that we have for it?"

Mindy: Definitely. So I do write under a pen name and I co-author with two other friends. And our process is similar that we have a Google Docs and so we often won't know exactly what is going to happen. And so we will dive into what we are writing and we'll have a general idea of characters and the world or whatever, but we don't know what's gonna happen in a particular plot. And sometimes one of us will just be like, "Guys. Um, I'm sorry, I killed this character. If you don't like it, that's fine. Let me know." But generally what happens is that one of us will take a scene and then we write it, and then much like you guys, each of us then also passes over it, makes some adjustments, says, "Hey, I don't think this character would say this." The amazing thing about co-writing is that the manuscript gets longer when you're not working on it.

Marie: True. It's pretty magical.

Jessi: It's magic, yeah.

Mindy: That's my favorite part of it. So one thing that I find can come up often, for us anyway, because there are three of us with our fingers in it - is continuity issues. So for my listeners, continuity would be like if we say that this character has black hair and then suddenly she's running his fingers through his blond hair. At the beginning of us all working together, we attempted to keep what's called a Bible, a series Bible, and described our characters and locations and anything that is involved in the world building. But then the act of just keeping the Bible straight was so much work that it would have taken - that would have been just someone's job - so we, of course, hire a copy editor. And our copy editor goes through and tries to catch all of those things. How do you guys handle continuity?

Jessi: Sort of similar to you in our drive folder for the greater Unrelenting universe is a bit of a chaotic mess. We have landed on a sort of internal series Bible, we call them our global notes document. We have them for Unrelenting and now we're working on the sequel to it. And so we have this global notes document that as we're writing something and there's an event or there's a timeline or something like that, that just like we know, we'll probably forget it at some point, we throw it into that document. We also leave comments for each other within the document itself. Yes, we wanna make sure that there's continuity within revisions, but we don't have time for that yet because we just wanna keep moving with the plot, so we'll just leave a comment in the Google Doc.

Marie: And then sometimes too, it's just a matter of like, can we simplify it? We spent probably 15 minutes one day trying to figure out what side of a door the hinges were on. Couldn't we just say instead of she pushes or she pulls, she opens the door?

Mindy: I find that to be very important myself in my individual writing as well. Something I am bad at, and I mean bad at, is linear time. My copy editors and my proof readers really just kind of hate me a little bit. I don't care what day it happened on. It doesn't matter to me. That's not part of the plot. That does not matter to me. I do not use days of the week. I'll just say, "Hey, do you wanna go to a movie sometime?" I use very general time words because I will not get it right and it will be a mess, and I truly don't believe that readers care about this. But man, copy editors do.

Marie: That's a really great hack though.

Jessi: Yeah, we had a similar issue, and it still comes up. Like, with seasons. The entire premise of the first book is that the main character, Bridget's, sister has been missing for nine months. This whole book is taking place in a location that has four distinct seasons. We need to know at least what time of year each of these events happened because it just will dramatically impact what's happening outside.

Mindy: Yep, and if you have someone walking outside and it's cold and it is June, they will find you.

Marie: I only hope a reader would care enough, but I think you're right, I don't think they really care that much. But on the off chance that they do, it could totally throw someone out of the story and the immersion, so it is totally worth fixing.

Mindy: Now, I will say, readers don't care unless you are writing a real place and they live there. And then, boy, they will be on your ass. I also wanna talk about responsibly writing LGBTQ+ characters. 'Cause representation is of course very important. Unrelenting includes asexual, bisexual, and gay characters. And especially in fantasy, I feel like a lot of the time that it is changing. Luckily, it is changing across all genres, but a lot of fantasy, I would not see this representation apart from maybe the past 10 years. So if you could talk a little bit about representation and responsibly writing these characters, not just being like, I included this so that I can claim diversity and I get my stamp.

Marie: First of all, I would say we're not certainly the resource for that. Writing the Other has so many great resources and classes. There are several teachers who are just amazing. We've learned a lot from them around, just in general, writing characters who are believable and multi-faceted. How intersectionality plays a role in how they move around the world and how they experience the world. I think a lot of it was just learning and listening a lot. We also were able to pull from personal experience, lived experience of ourselves. We were also very fortunate that our editor is also an accomplished sensitivity reader, and so was able to provide additional support for us. I mean, I really do believe it's the author's responsibility to do their research and do as great of a job as they can on it. And then also, whenever possible, to lean into additional support and to make sure that that person is compensated for it. I don't know if you have more specifics around that, Jessi, you wanna dive into.

Jessi: You just said it's the writer's responsibility, and I agree with that as far as the research is concerned. I think it's also the writer's responsibility to create a world that is representative of reality, even when you're writing science fiction or fantasy. What you were saying, Mindy, about how 10 years ago or 15 years ago, you really didn't find these representations as frequently, especially within genre that is true, and also such a shortcoming of what actual world is like. If you are a member of the LGBTQ+ community and you are an avid fantasy reader, and you just gobble up fantasy book after fantasy book and you never see yourself in it, that takes its toll. We went into Unrelenting, not necessarily on a mission to wave the queer flag, but on a mission to make sure that the characters within Unrelenting represented the world and called upon some of our own lived experience, and that avid fantasy reader who picked up our book may see themselves represented in that.

Marie: Yeah, and I think it's also important for somebody who may be straight or cisgender and who may not identify as queer, for them also to see protagonists and characters who are queer. And it's not only encouraging and normalizing for people who do identify as queer, but for everybody, right? To say like, “Hey, everyone is capable of being the hero, being the sidekick, being the fill in, being the whoever, being the anything” right? For us, because Unrelenting is not a coming out story, we sort of laugh that it's like a book of casual queerness. People having adventures, and for some of them, this happens to be a part of who they are. It's not a story about struggling through life as a queer person or coming out as a queer person. It's just like people having adventures and some of them happen to have this identification. It doesn't always have to be about struggle. It doesn't always have to be about coming out. It can just be a story.

Mindy: I see writers who don't share that identity often hitting really hard on the struggle or the negative aspects. Being discriminated against. Being treated negatively because of this quality of yourself that just happens to be part of who you are. I do agree that it is so important just to show someone who is queer just having a regular day.

Jessi: And those coming out stories and those stories about struggles are absolutely valid as well. And I think we need those stories too, but we need more than just those stories.

Mindy: So the pacing for Unrelenting is very interesting because it is a fantasy novel; however, it has the pacing of a thriller. So how do you go about, combined with this co-authoring process, of managing your pacing when you are discovery writers and you're not necessarily plotting things.

Marie: I think we stumbled across it by accident. Is that fair to say, Jessi?

Jessi: This kind of maybe dives into a little bit of how Marie and I differ in our writing style. I tend to be very drawn to fast-paced plotting and cliff hanger chapter endings, which is part of what I lent to Unrelenting. A natural consequence of that as we were writing the story is that it sort of accidentally ended up taking on that thriller pace, and then we really realized it was working. People were really enjoying that fast-paced as opposed to the slightly more languid one you might find in some fantasy novels.

Marie: We were in a class that was being taught by Dan Wells, Let's Talk about Thrillers, and was defining thrillers. And I was like, this is our book. Our book, we accidentally wrote a thriller. So that was kind of fun, and at that point, I think the manuscript was already done enough that we weren't going to be making dramatic changes to hit every single beat. It's, I think, helped us in moving forward with the sequel more mindfully. We've actually learned a lot about plotting and telling compelling stories. We were told once that we kind of wrote this one by ear, just 'cause we're such readers. But now we're able to go forward more mindfully and it's yielding cleaner drafts and more purposeful writing. We're able to go forward more mindfully now.

Mindy: I also am a discovery writer. I just go. I feel like I write every single one of my books by ear, and so far it's worked out. Last thing, if each of you would like to share where you can be found on social media and where your book Unrelenting can be found as well.

Jessi: Yeah, absolutely. I am Jessi Honard, J-E-S-S-I H-O-N-A-R-D, on pretty much all of the platforms, and that's also my website address as well.

Marie: And you can find me at Marie Parks on Twitter. That's also my website, but then if you're also looking for the book, you can find it in all the places - a place where you can read a little blurb about it and then decide what seller you want to scope it out through or library. It's in a number of library systems also. Head to The Grigori, G-R-I-G-O-R-I, books... The Grigori Books dot com slash order hyphen Unrelenting.

Mindy:     Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Tess Gerritsen On Writing A Series & Pleasing Your Fans... Or Not

Mindy:         Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode. at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see a a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Tess Gerritsen, who is the New York Times bestselling author of The Rizzoli & Isles series with Listen to Me returning on July 5th. These books have inspired a TNT television series, over 40 million copies have been sold, and this is the 13th installment in this series. First of all, I think as a writer, how do you keep something fresh when you've been working with these characters for so long?

Tess: It's sometimes a challenge, and I think what helps is to have a universe of characters. So you're not just dealing with one or two people, you also have the people around them - Jane's partner, Barry Frost, and Jane's mom and Jane's family. It's like a soap opera in some ways, because everybody's life is at a different point in every different book.

Mindy: I think it can be really helpful as an author, considering them as real people all the time, moving through real lives.

Tess: Right, you can't have them static. So in the course of these 13 books, we've seen Jane go from a single cop to married to a mom, and unfortunately, her pregnancy, I think took four books. Yeah, we've watched Maura fall in love and out of love and get into romantic issues. We've watched Jane's mother, who started off as a devoted wife and mom, suddenly get divorced when her husband left her, and now we're looking at her at a different stage in her life. So it is like real life. You watch your friends get older and you watch their changes, and it's always interesting.

Mindy: And speaking of Jane's mother, she is a fan favorite for sure, Angela, and she gets a mystery of her own in this installment.

Tess: That's right. I hadn't expected to write another Rizzoli & Isles book, which it explains the five-year gap, but Jane's mother started to speak to me in my head. She's always been a fun character for me, and I've loved watching her bloom as her husband left her and now she's finding her own feet. So Angela began to speak with her Boston accent, "If you see something, say something." And I thought, "Well, what is she seeing?" She lives in a suburban street, a little bit north of Boston, and it's a quiet neighborhood, and new neighbors have moved in across the street. But they are strange people. They keep their curtains drawn. They're installing bars on the windows, and Angela wants to know what is going on there. So that becomes her little investigation, which her daughter kindof poo-poos because it's just Mom.

Mindy: Right. That five-year gap - what is that like to return to these characters after such a long time?

Tess: It was fun to see what they're up to now. You get to see little bits of Maura as well, which I hadn't revealed. We know from earlier books that Maura does play the piano. She has a piano in her house, and we get to see her perform at a doctor's concert where she is a soloist and it reveals another part of her life or about her personality anyway. Maura is a perfectionist. She cannot stand to be publicly embarrassed. So this concert is a great deal of stress on her and just tells you a little bit more about this fairly complex and very self-contained character.

Mindy: You yourself, of course, have a background as a physician, and I kind of had an unusual route to a writing career, so my audience is mostly writers. If you could talk a little bit about how you came out of one professional world into another.

Tess: Writers come from all professions. Young people ask me, "What should I do to become a writer?" I tell them, number one is to live your life and to remember your experiences and to use that in your writing. I just happen to have a background in medicine. I wanted to be a writer when I was very young. I was seven years old, and I told my father I was gonna write Nancy Drew type books when I grew older. And he said, "That's no way to make a living." So being from an immigrant family where security is really important, he asked me, just think about science. I loved science already. I was interested in Biology, so going to medical school wasn't that much of a detour. But when I was in medical school and going through medical training, I knew that I was still a writer, and I would write short stories in my spare time. When I went on maternity leave with my first son, and I had a couple of months home, that's when I really got serious and wrote my first book. I know people are going, "wait, you had a newborn. How did you do that?" I had a newborn who slept a lot. So I was blessed in that way. He slept all the time, and I was able to dig into my writing. So that's how I got back into it. A couple of years later, I sold my first book to Harlequin Intrigue, which is a romantic suspense publisher. It was fun. It was great training. I wrote eight of those books.

Mindy: It is a very good example of how to, as you said, live your life. I absolutely love that advice. People ask me too, often, "how do you become a writer?" Of course, but also, what are those steps? And I think that it is imperative all the time to be aware that writing is part of the entertainment industry, and you don't have any more guarantees of success in that then you do of saying, I want to become a rock star or a famous actress or a professional athlete. It is very difficult. I think because it feels more accessible than those other things, I think a lot of the time people feel like the barrier to entry might be a little bit lower. Well, I always tell people that writing needs to be plan B. You have to be able to pay your bills, and there are no guarantees of success. So you obviously took the route of going to medical school. I have a degree in English Literature and Philosophy & Religion. So while I didn't necessarily go like a super useful route, I did end up working as a librarian for 14 years. And I just think it's very important to kinda walk that fine line between never giving up on your dreams, but also being aware that we do live in reality and our bodies need shelter and food.

Tess: Right. Well, the great thing about writing is that you can do it on the side. It needn't be your profession when you start off. You're a librarian. I know people who are airline mechanics and geologists. Every one of those people, they have a story to tell about their own profession. I, as a consumer of entertainment or a reader, love to get an inside look at places that I don't get to see. How does the geologist think when he goes walking through the woods and he sees something? There are so many puzzles that they can solve that I cannot. So I would love to read a book about a geologist who solves mysteries, or a librarian who sees something in the stacks that ends up being really important, or who has obscure knowledge that may just be the clue. So it's important to earn a living, to feed yourself, but also remember that while you're feeding yourself, you're learning things, you're experiencing things that nobody else knows, and that can go into a book.

Mindy: Yes, and speaking about things that people know or don't know, I'm sure that you run into this a lot, probably as you said a consumer, even before you were writing yourself. But as a person with a medical background, you have the opportunity to write the medical world correctly. But how often did you have experiences where you're reading something or you're watching TV and you're just like, "Oh no, that's really wrong?"

Tess: Yeah, all the time. All the time. And it's important also to know that writers make mistakes. I'm sure I make mistakes all the time, and an alert reader or a reader who's got a bee in his bonnet is going to tell you. They're gonna write you and tell you you made a mistake on that firearm, and that seems to be the number one source of mistakes for mystery writers - firearms. We always get something wrong, and the gun people will tell us, "No, you didn't - you got your caliber wrong, and there's no safety on that gun." The mistakes we make are the ones that we don't know, we don't know. I had a throwaway detail about a man who had a car in his barn that hadn't been driven. I just said it was a 1945 Ford. I got so many letters from people writing back to me and saying, "Don't you know they didn't make cars that year because we were finishing up the war?" And I didn't know that, but a lot of people did.

Mindy: Yeah, it's funny the things that you will be caught out on, and I certainly don't mind when people catch me on things, but it's embarrassing. Yes, 1945 they didn't make cars. I wouldn't know that. I don't think that many people would. I have never been near an ocean. I live in Ohio, we are super land-locked. When I was writing the end of one of my books, my characters are standing out on a beach out on the West Coast, and the sun is rising. So all the rays are bouncing off of the water. They're saying their goodbyes. It’s like a mother and daughter and she rides off... Well, not into the sunset, 'cause it's in the wrong part of the sky. What's funny, and you know because you live in this world, is that that made it through editing. It made it through proofreading. It made it through copy editing. It made it through everything. It made it to print.

Tess: Oh my gosh. Oh yes, that's scary.

Mindy: The sun came up on the wrong side of the world, and literally - and what's funny too, is that I've only had one or two people say something to me about it, so.

Tess: Well, the copy editor was probably asleep at the switch on that one.

Mindy: I mean, I would like to think that they were so wrapped up in the story that they did not notice the sun coming up in the wrong part of the sky. That's pretty big. That's a big boo-boo. I don't know if you experienced this as well. I notice things, and it doesn't necessarily have to be something I know because of my environment or my background, listeners are probably tired of hearing this, but I grew up in the Midwest, and I live on a farm and farming is always wrong. I notice things because I am a writer and because I do watch my own Ps and Qs so closely. I was listening to an audio book the other day, which is also a different experience, so you notice things. There was a door. It was an exterior door of a house and it was opening the wrong direction. Someone was trapped inside and they were trying to get out and they kept ramming their shoulder into the door. And I'm like, "Well, that's why it's not working dude, you can't...

Tess: Yeah, pull, don't push. I know.

Mindy: So do you find that sometimes that clinical eye, the editorial eye that you turn on yourself while you're working can interfere with your actual enjoyment of just reading?

Tess: You know, not very often. I don't read that many medical thrillers, maybe that's why. It's a little bit like returning to work when you read something that has to do with your profession. I wonder if that's true for other people. They don't like to read about their own profession because it feels like going back to work? It's part of the reason I don't watch medical shows on television. I get anxious. I don't really read the stuff that I would catch mistakes in, but when I do catch it, I think, "Oh." If it was a big error, I thought I would think, "Oh, you just didn't talk to the right people."

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Mindy: When it comes to obviously writing your own books, you have that background. Do you end up running into areas where you need to do a little bit more research yourself or you've got to brush up a particular arena?

Tess: Oh yes, absolutely. I wrote a book back in 1999 called Gravity, which was set aboard the International Space Station. It was a medical thriller set in space, and that took two years of nothing but research. Going to NASA. Reading everything I could about medicine in microgravity. And I had as my premise that there is a series of disasters or a Titanic of space where everything goes wrong on ISS. Well, to know how everything goes wrong, you need to know how everything goes right first. How do things work? I got down to downloading blueprints of the International Space Station, which hadn't even been launched yet, and talking to medical doctors who work in aerospace medicine about the finer details of how do you do code blue when there's no gravity and how everything changes in space. That was very research-heavy, and the whole time I was terrified I was gonna make a huge mistake, but apparently, I didn't. It was probably the biggest challenge of any book I've had to write, having to do with research. I've also done some historical medicine in 1830, and that was another deep dive into things I didn't know about. I ended up buying antiquarian books, medical books from the 1810s, 1820s. How do you amputate an arm without anesthesia? And these old medical textbooks, oh my gosh, they were like computer manuals. They would tell you how many people you needed to hold down the patient. How you keep them under control, where you tie them down, because of course they're gonna be screaming and thrashing. How do you go about cutting off an arm? These are details that made it into the book because they were so dramatic. It was horrifying research, but it was also fascinating.

Mindy: Yes, absolutely. I remember reading a book. It's just called Birth, and it's just about the history of giving birth. Dear God, how are any of us still here?

Tess: Right, I know. Once you've had a baby, that's like, "Why would you wanna have another one?"

Mindy: Oh my Lord. I'm interested too, because one of my books is set in 1890 and it deals a little bit with medical elements, although it's more of like mental health, medical procedures in asylums. When you were writing and reading about medicine in 1830s, was your experience along the lines of, man, this is barbaric, or was it more like when you're doing your research, you're like and they were doing the best they could with what they had.

Tess: It was barbaric. It really was. You were better off not going to a doctor in 1820, especially if you were about to give birth. Lots of cases of child bed fever. Women just got infected while giving birth and they died, and they almost invariably died once they were infected. And the barbaric part of it is that they wouldn't have died if they had just given birth in the fields. It was doctors who are introducing these infections. Not washing their hands. Infecting women, whole wards of women, who would all then proceed to die. So it was, yeah, you were better off having your baby at home. Doctors also had a lot of strange cures and they would give things to cure people and end up poisoning them. In a lot of ways, Mother Nature was kinder than the human medical doctor was.

Mindy: Well, I think especially if you were a woman too, because the doctors were men. And I just remember reading there were men delivering babies that weren't looking because they didn't wanna see a women's genitals and I'm like, okay.

Tess: I guess. How do you do that anyway?

Mindy: Going back then to the medical world. You write medical thrillers. Are you ever going to be interested in writing about Covid or are you just like, you know what, let's leave well enough alone. I don't ever wanna hear this word again.

Tess: I'm avoiding the topic. I have to say that when we're in the midst of something, it's really hard to read about it. And also, we're living it. We all know what it's like. The way I'm handling Covid is in this 13th book, I write about it as if it's in the past. Jane goes in to interview the colleagues of a nurse has just been murdered, and she reflects on the fact that this hospital was a killing ground, just a couple of years ago. People were dying left and right of Covid. But that's about the only mention I have of it other than that nobody shakes hands in this book. That's probably not a safe thing to do anymore. We don't shake hands. And the victim, when she has her autopsy, it's revealed that she has some scarring from Covid pneumonia. But those are the only things that come into the story.

Mindy: When I'm reading, it's interesting to me to see the authorial choices about whether or not they mention it, whether people are wearing masks, whether they just omit it from their fantastical world entirely. I have not written it into any of my books yet, because in my worlds where I don't have to deal with reality, I go there for a reason. I don't know that I want to willingly take that with me.

Tess: Yeah, yeah.

Mindy: Like I said, you've been writing 13 books now in this series, and you have a duo at work here. When you're writing your different characters, how do you keep things balanced between Maura and Jane and do you consider fan favorites? Is there a preference? Do you get mail or have people contact either like, I want more of Jane.

Tess: Yes, you can't keep the balance. There are some books that are very more eccentric, and there are some books that really focus on Jane. Trying to keep the balance, to me, feels like turning it into a scientific equation. That's not really art because, as we know, our lives, sometimes one family is having a drama while the other one's relatively serene. So that's the way I've been handling it. This, I like to focus on one character's particular crisis. My book, Ice Cold, where Maura gets stranded in an abandoned town in Wyoming. Obviously that's gonna be Maura's story because she's the one who is facing the danger. And Jane's part in that that is, "How do I rescue Maura?" This particular book, it's more focused on Jane and her mother, Angela, because the theme has to do with mothers and daughters. When do we stop listening to our mothers? Maybe we shouldn't stop listening to our mothers, and I wanted to really focus on that relationship. Now Maura does have a role in it, and I know I'm gonna be getting letters from readers going, I want more Maura. You can't always make that balance happen.

Mindy: I agree. One of my favorite duos of all time, I love The X-Files. I never missed an episode. And there were great episodes that would focus more on Scully or more on Mulder. And I remember one in particular where Mulder is in the field and he's entirely alone and he keeps calling Scully, and she's like on vacation or something. And it's just her answering the phone every now and then. And then she's like, "Do you need me there?" And he's like, "No, no, it's okay." And it was really just kind of wonderful to see each of them developing apart from one another.

Tess: Yeah, right, I know. And the thing is, you can't write to please your fans because there will always be people who want more Jane, people want more Maura. And you can't please them both.

Mindy: I agree, and as a consumer in the world where we have instant feedback on social media, I have become in frustrated watching TV shows, in particular, but watching fan catering. I think about the writers, especially in a TV room, who probably wanna tear their hair out because I want things to be organic. I want things to happen as they, quote/unquote, should naturally. And I want the story to follow the path that is best for the story. And if I had feedback from 8 million people every week that I was being asked to take into consideration or do some bowing to certain elements that fans want to see, I know that, especially in any ensemble TV show, if there's a character that people universally disliked, you can count on them dying. And I don't like knowing that, because as a consumer, I don't get that surprise anymore.

Tess: Yeah, well, that's a big stress of working in entertainment today, is that you do get that instant feedback and it can be brutal. Before we used to have to deal with critics and that was bad too. But now you get nasty emails, you get all kinds of - reader reviews can be pretty bad as well. I try to avoid going on Goodreads because I find that those reviews sometimes are pretty awful. It can get into a writer's headspace and make it difficult to keep on working. That's something we all have to learn to, I guess adjust to, is instant feedback and instant criticism.

Mindy: Speaking of fans, what is up next for you?

Tess: Oh, I'm doing a book that's not a Rizzoli & Isles book. I live in a little village in Maine that's about 5,000 people. I became aware of the fact that there were a lot of retired CIA agents here. What do retired spies get up to? And so the story came to me of one woman who was retired, who finds a body, a dead woman on her driveway, and doesn't know whether this is related to her past work overseas. And she has to call for help from her former colleagues to help her solve this crime. It became fun because it's not just the world of espionage, it's also the world of retirees. It's the world of people who have all this experience under their belt, but have been sent out to pasture.

Mindy: Awesome, that sounds exciting. Why don't you let listeners know where they can find you online and where they can find the new book, Listen to Me, which goes on sale July 5th.

Tess: Yes, you can find me on my website at Tess Gerritsen dot com. I am on Twitter at at Tess Gerritsen, and you can buy Listen to Me, number 13 in the Rizzoli & Isles book, pretty much everywhere.

Mindy:            Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.