Modern Good Reads discussion





I just have to ask, how many of the scribes writing about murder & death have actually killed, lived the experience of an adrenalin filled few minutes. How many watched a person die over a period of a few minutes, how many actually saw a serial killer? In most books I find the scene described far from the reality. I see movies made for the attraction of violence without basic knowledge of the killers mind. If I need more than 2 rounds to put a man down I am usually dead. So I find it very amusing to see a crime thriller written into a fantasy!
Love that line. :)
In the books I read and write, it would be very strange if no one died.
I like worlds with real consequence, where people can and do die.

Love that line. :)
In the books I read and write, it would be very strange if no one died.
I like worlds with real consequence, where people can and do..."
It was the Bishop of Beziers that uttered the words when he ordered the Catholics of Toulouse to kill all the non-believer Cathars & Jews...a genocide ordered by the Church of Rome
Love that line. :)
In the books I read and write, it would be very strange if no one died.
I like worlds with real consequence, where pe..."
While I don't doubt your research is right, I think there has been more than one novel and cheesy action flick that put that line to good use.
Seriously though. In novels where life-threatening situations occur, there needs to be real consequence. Action-thriller-suspense-paranormal-horror-fantasy, people need to die, at least one.
Just one measly death is better than none.

I definitely second that. But what if your character has a no-kill policy?

what are we in, an anime? lol
no seriously, if they have the no kill policy and it's established, the question becomes how do they keep that policy in tact in these types of volatile situations?
I don't think I have ever written a novel where less than two people died.
Wow, I never realized I was so ruthless. LOL.

I like crime thrillers, personally- especially ones centered around revenge. But it'd be boring if every antagonist was taken down by a marksman with 100% accuracy every time. It's amusing as hell to make the bad guys think they have a chance before they end up on the receiving end of an emptied assault rifle.

Something like Batman when it comes to his relationship with the Joker; can't kill, so you inflict injuries that makes him wish for the merciful release of death. I've always had killer protagonists when I was writing stuff growing up; I only asked 'cause I'm considering challenging myself.





Interesting. I read recently that G.R.R. Martin got a lot of grief for some of the characters he killed off. I've killed off a couple that I wished now I had kept alive for a sequel. Well, we must keep on keeping on. Is it working for you?




I killed off some of my characters in the Blood Tithe series. My proofreader complained so much that I rewrote the ending. I'm glad she did now as I have more books to add to the set.

I totally agree. If a main character dies, it must be memorable.

Keep that proofreader. Advice that turns out to be good is hard to find.

Death, I think, should be reserved for serious turns of plot. Except for minions, who can die by the dozens.
I love to kill off minions. They are ripe for it. Its one of the most enjoyable parts of writing, all those disposable minions.
:)

Love that line. :)
In the books I read and write, it would be very strange if no one died.
I like worlds with real consequence, where people can and do..."
If they move ... kill 'em! Wild Bunch - greatest film ever made.

I love to kill off minions. They are ripe for it. Its one of the most..." Oh yeah, I like building up the death scene by killing them off right away, then reintroducing them as they lead up to their gory deaths.


Erich wrote ...how many of the scribes writing about murder & death have actually killed, lived the experience of an adrenalin filled few minutes...
Erich, your question and the gruesome event you recount later in the thread couldn't be more significant. I've lived a few of those adrenaline-filled minutes, and I've seen as much as I care to of violent death and its aftermath.
Anyone who writes about violence as if were an exciting game or a matter of no consequence is either a sociopath or writing from no real-world experience. I am especially disgusted by those hyper-violent 'entertainments' like the Saw movies that present horrors approaching your real-world African event as something to be enjoyed!
There is a good deal of violence in my novel IDIOT'S TALE, but I think my characters respond to it appropriately.


Hey Patrick, thanks for responding. Major wounds would have been welcome in the book I read. So true, a bad wound could reinforce the danger.

I agree Anthony, murder or even causing serious harm to someone comes with a price.

Erich has shown with his true story that real life presents us violence which is so horrific that we do not really need any violence in fiction. And if I understand Erich right, this is what he wanted to demonstrate. I am not sure if everyone caught on to that.
@ Erich: Agreeing with you on this subject does not change that I utterly disagree with you concerning your political views.

My point is most writers haven't experienced these things. Research well. There is a good site I like that also has a Facebook page they post cool things on. It's called forensic outreach http://forensicoutreach.com/ FB https://www.facebook.com/forensicoutr.... They teach forensic science in the UK and share their info.
I got a neat graphic they posted on FB showing the stages of bug activity on a body. It was a drawing, but very helpful for a writer. They had another on different bullets and the marks made on the casings. I would like to be as accurate as possible.

I wrote a very bloody climax to "The Godhead Formula," and I was concerned that it might be too much, especially since the opening chapter was also pretty violent. After reflection, I decided that a satisfyingly gruesome death for a very evil character balanced the bloodshed. But maybe I was wrong, I'll leave it to my readers to decide.

I witnessed the disembowelment, the victim was still alive and screaming. The blade used to cut was red hot and cauterized the wound, there was hardly any blood. I do not know how long the man was alive, by the time we took him down, 3 days later, ants had been Siafu ants had been hacking away on him. It was not (in my opinion) the pain that killed him, the horror was the warlord watched the whole time, he smiled at the screaming man. But that is Africa, where brutality is a tribal tool of war.

Gruesome death in writing is, in my opinion, contextual. Does it have a point? Does it work withing the story (usually horror genre) or is it simply dumped in to shock? In my experience humans are capable of the most horrific actions - sometimes merely for their own amusement, other times, as Erich points out, as a tool. Sometimes, it makes me laugh (bitterly) when people use the word "humane" - as if being human automatically means pure and compassionate. NOT in my experience!
However, I find it almost impossible to harm my younger characters. It feels so wrong. One of my betas is constantly telling me off for bringing my mothering instincts into the plot. Does anyone else have that problem?
My issue is making sure my characters have enough redeeming qualities to maintain likeability. I write some very morally grey characters.
:)

You are so right, 'Human' is just a word we like to use to minimise the atrocious behaviour some of us, creatures walking on two hind legs, use! Most simians use aggression only for defence, we the smartest beast on this planet, supposedly, use it just to fit our purpose. In writing, all writers use a certain amount of liberty, too often making huge mistakes, aberration of the truth, either because it fit their idea of the subject or it sounds taken from TV programs like CSI asf. Killing is a concept, death is a fact, the how - many ways can I describe, is again the fiction.
MGR does not condone personal or discriminatory attacks against other group members.
I understand how some of these discussions can become passionate.
I, myself, am a passionate reader and writer. But there is a certain kind of passion that doesn't translate well in Goodreads, its called intolerance.
That kind of passion has little place in the world of books or bookish discussions.
And Erich, death is a plot device, among many other things. And if used with skill, talent, and a passionate flair, it infuses a writing with many different kinds of emotion.
Most of what I read and all of what I write involves death at one point or another. I guess I like it gritty, a little dark, a little bit of thriller intensity.
Militant/war/action novels aren't really my thing. But I have read some good ones, and I do enjoy them from time to time.
And so I say let there be death, and I will read it. LOL.
:)

MGR does not condone personal or discriminatory attacks against other group members.
I understand how some of these discussions can become passionate.
I, my..."
And there will be death, there will be blood, there will be endings of one kind or the other!
Thank you for maintaining a civil vein throughout !

Travis wrote: "Kill 'em all and let God sort 'em out.
Love that line. :)
In the books I read and write, it would be very strange if no one died.
I like worlds with real consequence, where people can and do..." Classic line - "If they move - kill'em!" The Wild Bunch



You can't possibly be more explicit regarding your mindset than that. This seems to be the subliminal message being delivered in most action-oriented books and movies today.

You can't possibly be more explicit regarding your mindset than that. This seem..."
You are so right. It is more for the ef
