I write what I see; I document what I hear; I talk when I’m listened to; I listen when talking in need to be heard.

Showing posts with label Story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Story. Show all posts

Friday, May 08, 2020


Stolen Truth
By
Henya Drescher


My novel, Stolen Truth, will be published on March 18, 2021, by Black Rose Writing.

The writing process was a time-travel adventure. The pace of my journey was slow and fraught, with many difficulties. At times, it seemed as if I had a more fulfilling relationship with my characters than with life itself. And beyond that, trying to pull off the perfect, satisfying twists that should look seamless. But I learned the hard way. In one draft, I introduced several scenes just for the sake of bringing in incidents that meandered nowhere. My editor politely asked why they existed. What would happen if we just deleted them? The answer was ‘nothing.’ It had zero effect on the plot other than lazy, gimmicky devices.

Stolen Truth captures the fraught frustrations of Bree, who may or may not have been the mother of a kidnapped newborn, as she plunges into her quest, facing many internal and external uncertainties. Bree bears the history of being a troubled woman, yet she is passionately determined. The complexities of her character drive the story through accumulating dead ends and detours.

To those of you who shared in my journey, please accept my sincere thanks for believing in me.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Prologue - What Do You think?

Confusing, to say the least, this Prologue thing.


Some say that prologue is completely unnecessary, that the story should begin somewhere in the middle. You could say that there is a place within the story itself that you could position the same information to allow for a slower progression of facts. Some even say that a prologue serves more like an information dump.

What do you think?

Should the narrative not be front-loaded, for running the danger of giving away too much?

Talk about feeling cheated. I don’t have the answers for these questions. But what I do know is that you don’t want your prologue to be too obvious.

You want to leave some room for guessing!

What do you think?