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Writing with the Master: How One of the World?s Bestselling Authors Fixed My Book and Changed My Life

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
With seven unpublished novels wasting away on his hard drive, Tony Vanderwarker is astonished when John Grisham offers to take him under his wing and teach him the secrets of thriller writing. “The beginning and the end are easy," Grisham tells him. “It's the three hundred pages in the middle that's the hard part."
To ensure his plot doesn't run out of gas, Grisham puts Tony though his outline process. Tony does one, and then Grisham asks for another ... and another ... and another. As they work together, Grisham reveals the techniques that have helped him create compelling bestsellers for more than two decades—for instance, “You've got to hook your reader in the first forty pages or you'll lose them." After a year of constructing outlines, Grisham finally gives Tony the go-ahead to start writing.
Writing with the Master immerses the reader in the creative process as Tony struggles to produce a successful thriller. It's a roller coaster ride, sometimes hilarious, and often full of ups and downs. Grisham's critiques and margin notes to Tony reveal his nimble imagination and plot development genius. For Grisham fans, Vanderwarker's memoir pulls back the curtain on his writing secrets, and for aspiring writers, it's a master class in thriller writing.
In the end, Tony resolves to take Grisham's teachings to heart and eventually decides to write what he thinks he was meant to: a book about the creative process and his incredible two years working with John Grisham.
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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2014
      An aspiring author discovers that writing a novel is hard work, even harder when his taskmaster mentor is his friend John Grisham. Even with the best-selling Grisham's encouragement, advice and painstaking edits, Vanderwarker couldn't sell his novel. A former adman who moved to Virginia around the same time as Grisham and who shared with the novelist environmental activism and a love of sports, Vanderwarker had long wanted to channel his creativity into a book, though a bunch of unpublished manuscripts were the only results. At lunch one day, he received a surprising offer from his friend Grisham: "Look, I'd be willing to help you if you'd like. Kind of mentor you through the novel-writing process. Something I've never done before--not that plenty of people haven't asked." Grisham would later remark of the manuscript that the "dialogue doesn't sound real." Neither does it here, as Vanderwarker purports to remember paragraphs of conversation from a time that he wouldn't have been taking notes. He ultimately found his mentor criticizing his characters, plotting, organization and pretty much everything else about a novel that is presented here in chunks of various drafts, with Grisham's notes, and then revisions, with notes. "What happened to the vision of novel writing as a glorious act of creation with rays of light streaming down from on high and a string section playing in accompaniment?" he wonders. "It's been replaced by the mundane piecework of tedious and time-consuming revision." If nothing else, the book convinces readers that the prolific Grisham works methodically on his fiction, as the author's experience confirms that it isn't as easy to write a best-seller as some might think. Not only did the collaboration result in this, the author's first published book, but the same publisher has agreed to issue the novel that had been rejected, for which this how-to guide serves as an extended promotion.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2014
      Perhaps every budding writer fantasizes about having a successful veteran author looking over his or her shoulder, offering warnings to help avoid the pitfalls of composing and submitting a first novel. Imagine, for instance, penning a crime thriller while John Grisham offers you advice on building suspense. For Vanderwarker, a former ad-agency owner who cashed in to focus on writing, this proved to be no idle fantasy; Grisham actually did help him pen his debut novel, the soon-to-be-released Sleeping Dogs. Since both were already friends and neighbors in Charlottesville, Virginia, some form of mentoring was perhaps inevitable, but Vanderwarker wisely waited until Grisham offered. Although this short but captivating story of their collaboration sometimes feels like a rushed, albeit unique, accompaniment to the novel, it's brimming with invaluable literary lessons and amusing anecdotes, such as Vanderwarker's wry descriptions of the ego bruising he endured from Grisham's blunt criticism and prodding to construct a whopping seven outlines for his novel before he actually began writing it. Must reading for both aspiring thriller authors and die-hard Grisham fans.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)

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