Castle

Oct 19, 2009 23:39

I'll admit it.

I helped Heat Wave hit the New York Times bestseller list. (It was at 26 last week when we checked; this week it's at 28. I'm curious where it placed its premier week, but I thought, tie-in mystery novel for a TV show? How could that hit the New York Times? Silly me underestimating the power of the media ( Read more... )

seanan mcguire, castle, stacy whitman

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Comments 18

bccreations October 20 2009, 10:49:29 UTC
I've heard that criticism elsewhere, about needing to watch the show to really get the book.

If I recall correctly, it premiered at 16, but I could be wrong.

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alanajoli October 20 2009, 22:56:26 UTC
I don't think you have to watch the show to get the book -- the book makes sense and is cohesive as a story without it. But I think all of the references back to the show and the characters we know from watching them on TV is where a lot of the fun of the novel comes from. Without those, it might just be sort of... meh.

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caitrin October 20 2009, 11:25:16 UTC
Okay, I'll admit I went so far as to preorder it from Amazon, although I haven't actually had a chance to read it yet. :)

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alanajoli October 20 2009, 22:57:05 UTC
*laugh* We had a bunch of people who wanted to borrow our copy, so I had a very short window of reading opportunity before it started circulating. :)

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asakiyume October 20 2009, 11:32:55 UTC
So who actually wrote the book? Not the actor, surely?

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alanajoli October 20 2009, 22:59:18 UTC
We can't find out -- and believe me, the Browncoats are looking. If someone knew, there'd be news. I'm sure it's not the actor, and while I'm vaguely guessing it might be one of the screen writers for the show (due to the intense familiarity with the show shown in the novel, in throw away details), I've got no evidence to support that. (And one presumes that they're busy writing, you know, the episode scripts.) There are rumors that one of the blurbers is actually the ghost writer, but again, I'm not sure I buy into that.

The Library of Congress lists the author as Richard Castle. So, for now, the world has no idea. ;)

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writing instruction anonymous October 20 2009, 12:04:41 UTC
was there ever a writer who hasn't toyed with the idea of writing a mystery? have you? i think of it once in a while but don't think i've quite the mind for it. think of the outlining and scaffolding needed. the tv show sounds like a painless way of getting instruction, very entertaining. i'd watch it!--if we had a tv.

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Re: writing instruction notadoor October 20 2009, 12:37:48 UTC
I've just been watching it on Hulu. No tv necessary!

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Re: writing instruction bccreations October 20 2009, 13:50:37 UTC
Agreed. I don't watch any "television" on television. I stream it all through my computer (either watching on screen or hooking it up with the HDMI cable to my tv). I am the future of television watching.

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Re: writing instruction alanajoli October 20 2009, 23:00:21 UTC
I think if I were to write a mystery, it would probably have so many paranormal elements that it would get shelved somewhere else. :) I suppose the YA that's currently my WIP has mystery elements to it -- and I could probably use some of the storyboard ideas they discuss in the show! :)

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stargatedragon October 20 2009, 12:59:01 UTC
I bought off the shelf of my local Borders - giggling like a schoolgirl the entire time!

Totally good read to boot - and it's just plain old fun!

(did you read pg 150! w00t!)

*snickers*

Best. Marketing. Plan. Ever.

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alanajoli October 20 2009, 23:01:25 UTC
Crap, I don't remember what was on page 150! (I did love that they referenced page 105 in the show -- and that is, in fact, where the "action" takes place. Tee hee.)

Our copy's out with various friends now, circulating from the Abbott library, so I can't even check. *sigh*

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stargatedragon October 20 2009, 23:12:47 UTC
150 *was* the "action" scene, IIRC...

or maybe it's all 45!

LOL!

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