Meredith: Look at any forum devoted to writing and you’ll find a few topics dedicated to the “standard questions” that writers get asked: Where do you get your ideas? How do you find the time? How do you figure out what happens next? How do you manage to actually finish a story?
These questions may be standard, but the answers are anything but. Every writer seems to have a slightly (or drastically) different way of working.
Some of the methods I’ve come across make me white with terror. For example, covering my entire living room wall with color-coded 8×6 Post It notes. Or outlining. Others turn me green with jealousy (ahem: the Shitty First Draft). All of them fascinate me. There may, in fact, be something a bit neurotic about the avidity with which I read explanations of methods that I know won’t work for me. It reminds me of that phase in eighth grade when my friends and I used to get together to bake brownies, drink milkshakes, and watch exercise videos.
Anyway, there’s a specific reason that craft — and in particular, craftly excellence — is on my mind. I’ve just reread Sherry’s new release, Not Quite a Husband. NQAH effortlessly blends superb prose, incredibly nuanced characterization, sizzling chemistry, very hot sex, and other manner of high drama (rebellions! potentially fatal illnesses! death-defying treks! many whizzing bullets!) into a moving, dare I say epic romance that traverses a not-so-familiar but altogether fascinating part of the world. It’s a tour de force, and since I share a blog with her, I get to ask how she does it. Sherry, brace yourself for interrogation!
(Sherry: When I first joined RWA–after finishing the first draft of PRIVATE ARRANGEMENTS–and heard people mention the RWA craft-loop, I used to think it was women more dexterous than me talking about their macramé. That should tell you how much I know about craft. So read at your own peril!)
Sherry, I understand that the idea for NQAH was sparked by a viewing of The Painted Veil. How do you proceed once you’ve got the seedling of an idea? Do you outline, do you daydream, or do you simply begin to write?




