Tuesday, December 30, 2025

What Hank's Trying to Write--the very hardest thing!

HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: You know what I’m doing, you all? I am trying to write a synopsis. This is the worst possible project for an author. Especially someone like me who doesn’t really plan or outline or look very far ahead when I’m writing a novel.  It is horrible. A complete slog. 


(How do I know what's going to happen until it happens? And it doesn't happen until I write it in the book.  (And this is a photo of me from a million years  ago, and from the look on my face, I definitely think I am trying to write a synopsis.  Even though I am on obvs on vacation, lookit that tan.)

ANYWAY. But the consensus seems to be that it would be good for me  to have a full idea of the story of my next  novel. And so be it. I am completely certain that it'll be worth it.

But the journey is arduous.

 I have talked to my colleague Sophie Hannah about this, what a genius she is, and she had such a brilliant insight. 

She said she used to feel the same way, that she was “the kind of person who could not write a synopsis. " And then at one point she thought "wait-- if I can think that, why don’t I start thinking about myself as a person who can write a synopsis!" And go from there. 

Her theory was if she tried to do something that she was not comfortable doing, and it didn’t work perfectly, well, at least she made a start, and was getting experience, and was figuring out how to do it. And certainly she was better off when she started, since she had taken the chance to do something new and different.  

And wow, what if it worked? 

So there, Reds and Readers, is where I am now. I am pushing pushing and pushing. And I have to tell you that every day I tell myself: all I need is one more good idea. Just one idea.  

I am telling myself--I can write a synopsis.

I have tried all kinds of things to make myself do this. What seems to be the most successful is I make an appointment with myself. Like: "At 1 PM, I will work for one hour, and come up with one good idea." That’s all I need. And so far, that’s kind of working. I have to be finished by this time next week. 

And what this does, interestingly, is making me think about things I don’t want to put in my novel.

For instance, my husband – – who has recently come to understand that if you don’t like a book you don’t have to finish it, this is my tutelage, and I wonder what you all think about that? But anyway, he closed a book after a few chapters and said "There are way too many characters in this novel, and I can’t keep them straight."

Good point! I said. That's always annoying. 

I remember in my first book, PRIME TIME, in the first draft I had a TV news photographer named Walt, and another news photographer named, I don’t know, let’s say Jimmy, and a third news photographer named let’s say Stan. 

My editor said why do you need three different photographers? Why don’t you make them all one person?  That will make that one character bigger and more solid and more important.  And wow, she was right. And Walt the photographer became a pivotal main character for the entire series. 

And, Jonathan went on to say, there are too many points of view. And multiple timelines. It was all way too complicated.

Yes, that's another synopsis question that must be faced.  A single point of view? Multiple point of view? One timeline, or a dual timeline? I think about the books I love, and there’s no real pattern – – a well-written book with multiple timelines and multiple points of view can be absolutely fabulous! 

As I tell my student students, “Anything can work. You just have to do it well. "

Which sounds really great, and empowering, until you are the one writing the synopsis.  

So while I claw my way through this synopsis, what are your pet peeves? What are the things that will make you put a book down? Or do you slog through to the end no matter what? 

For instance--I know, anything can work. But a prologue all in italics kind of stops me. 

Or a prologue that is completely different in every way from Chapter 1. 

Or when the person I assume is the main character because it is written in their point of view dies at the end of the prologue or chapter one. What a ripoff. 

Or when a character does not ask the question that ANY reasonable person would ask. (Clearly because the author thinks that's suspenseful. It isn't.)

Pages and pages in italics, my brain wants to skip them.

How about you, Reds and Readers? What are your pet peeves? What would make you put a book down?

92 comments:

  1. I am absolutely certain, Hank, that your efforts to write a synopsis will be successful . . . .

    Book pet peeves? When the author doesn't take the time to find out how things really work [for instance, a FBI agent assigned to investigate the murder of a family member] and so the story is completely unbelievable . . . .
    What makes me put the book down? I don't think I've ever put the book down before I finished it, even if I really didn't like it . . . .

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    1. You are loyal Joan! Hank could coach you on leaving a book:)

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    2. Oh, yes, Joan, those ridiculous law enforcement things--Jonathan flips when he reads them, too. ANd oh, dear, Lucy is so right--just...put it down. xxx

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    3. Yes I agree - about the law enforcement things. Decades ago when JAG first started my husband was astonished how they had gotten the Navy protocols, uniforms, insignias, so completely wrong. For example, the Admiral was wearing a hat indicating he was a Commander (Yikes!) - that's two pay grade below an Admiral.

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  2. I almost always finish — but I mostly read things that I know I will like or that are recommended by writers that I like.

    Things that will really bug me? Characters doing stupid things for no reason. I can understand a character making poor choices for a reason — there are only poor choices available, or there is some motivating factor. But just being dumb? Ugh.

    Also, characters churning over the same things in their minds over and over. That may be very realistic, but I’m reading to escape my brain! If I get to the point in the book where the character is having the same thought for the 30th time, I get bored.

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    1. Lisa, THAT is so interesting. My editor once said to me: your character is thinking too much! You are right, it is realistic, but in a book, it can become tedious. Very wise of you, and thank ou!

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  3. For me, what makes a book I am interested in, is the plot and the characters. But, so often famous top writers, NY Times best sellers, classic novels, etc don't resonate with me. So in the end, I think it is a matter of what sparks interest in the individual reader.

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  4. I don't want to throw off your positive thinking, Hank, but I'll start by saying that I, too, hate writing synopses. Bad enough writing one about a book you've finished and know by heart. But a book you haven't written yet? AHHHH!

    I give a book more or less 50 pages, and, if I'm bored, I stop. Occasionally, a year or two later, I give something another chance, and that has sometimes worked (because the boredom problem had to do with my restlessness and not the book.) But that is rare. My philosophy: reading should not be a high-school assignment; it should be a delight. If it isn't, no point in finishing a book.

    One of my pet peeves has been mentioned: a character who is supposed to be intelligent and doesn't ask important questions about an assignment or a key person or make wise decisions. Or a character who takes stupid, unnecessary risks. I will also become bored if there isn't a character in a novel whom I like and identify with. I know many people don't mind reading about unpleasant main characters who remain unlikable from start to finish, but I need at least one "friend."

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    1. Kim you just spoke for me, too. First, the books I enjoy are not assignments. I am not reading to learn how to live my life better or to observe others lives falling apart. I am over that. Spare me the weepy ones, please.
      Secondly, if authors make the main character unlikable, and I don't care what happens to anyone, the book is going back to the library.

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    2. SO smart! it is not an assignment--it is supposed to be fun and entertaining and enlightening. And I love that ida, of having one "friend." Hmmm. That's genius.

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    3. Kim, that is exactly what a friend said about why she quit going to her book club. She actually prefers to read nonfiction, but the fiction the club members chose turned her off because they were so esoteric and high-minded. Or pretended to be. She reads for entertainment and as a break from owning an art gallery, and said she didn't want to feel as if she could write a term paper about the book!

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  5. My mother always gave a book 35 pages, but I'm not that patient. After 10 or 15 pages, I just put down a highly-recommended book I got from the library because it had too many characters to keep straight. (Thanks for empowering me.)
    Also, the story seemed to start out in a positive way, but early on, the author told us that by the end there were going to be so many terrible secrets and tragedies that I did not want to get invested in these characters if such awful fates were in store for them.

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    1. Oh, those are the perils of suspense, right? You have to care about the characters, but then...something bad will certainly happen! It's a balance, that's for sure.

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    2. Balance: exactly. Which is not what that author made it sound like.

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  6. Kim has put it perfectly for me: "reading should not be a high-school assignment." I also agree with all her peeves. I will add another: dialect or slang or detail that I know is wrong. FROZEN RIVER, a popular historical novel, was impossible for me to finish because it put a modern-thinking heroine in reenactor clothes. But above all, along the line of what Kim says, I'm really not interested in the thoughts of unpleasant, immoral people. I'm interested in the thoughts and actions of those who have to cope with them. (Selden)

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    1. p.s. Hank, I'm sure you will be successful with your synopsis. But I'm curious: how many good ideas do you need? And are these ideas for scenes, or basic ideas of who, what, why?

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    2. How many good ideas? Well, at least one plot point a day, which includes, as you say, how the characters cope with it. AND what the plot point means to the story.

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  7. I am right there with you on hating to write a synopsis, Hank! AND my editor always wants one. Ugh. Sigh. Next time maybe I'll also try the Sophie Hannah approach.

    What stops me while reading? Yes, too many characters. Poor writing. A main character I don't like and don't want to spend time with. Superfluous descriptions of clothing and appearance. There are SO many books I do want to read, I don't have time for the ones that aren't worth it.

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    1. Good point! Especially when there are so many good ones. ANd yes, Sophie's attitude makes so much sense. We can always do what we put our mind to. Not always perfectly at first, but better than we did when we didn't try.

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  8. Positive thinking is a thing, Hank. You write synopses for book after book. Take it in one hour bites. You can do it.

    Several things that bother you don't bother me. I am not crazy about reading pages of italics, it's harder on the eyes, but I get it why the author wants to set something apart. As for the prolog, everyone is writing them now, it's okay if that is a different time or place, or if someone dies. But if a prolog is more than a few pages, then there should have been another way to get that story into the book.

    I don't mind if there are lots of characters. But I won't read a whole book with unlikable characters. I won't read a book with a murderer or thief as the narrator. No thanks.
    I almost always finish books but I have set some aside to finish reading after I read something else.

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    1. SO you have to root for someone, yes, I get that! And thank you for the positivity--it really helps! xxx

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    2. Judy, I agree that I don’t like when the murderer/bad guy narrates. I can’t think which author it is who does that, but every few chapters she has the bad (usually really creepy) guy narrating. That’s a little too much for me. — Pat S

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  9. What stops me from finishing a book is more the same as mentioned above, too many characters thrown at me, characters too stupid to live, and I agree, I have to like at least one or two characters.

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    1. Okay, this is a theme. Love this. ANd you should know, Dru! xx

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  10. I generally am a slog until the end reader. Insipid characters are a turnoff as are descriptions of every little movement the character makes…putting the coffee on, pouring the coffee, stirring in the cream and sugar, plating the cookies, passing them around, taking a bite….especially if some of the same actions repeat in subsequent scenes of the book.
    Too many characters to keep straight. It seems there are a glut of dual timeline and multiple viewpoint books. Although they don’t turn me off of a book, I have found it refreshing to read a single viewpoint and one timeline.

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    1. That’s an interesting point too, sometimes that step-by-step process can be used for suspense, you know? Other times it’s to fulfill the writer’s word count :-)
      Sometimes there’s a problem of – – wait, where did they get the coffee? Discussions like this, I just love them! It illustrates how difficult it is to write a book.

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  11. I used to be a stick to it till the end reader, too. Then I discovered the world will not end if I don't get to the end of the book. Now, too many characters that all blend together, poor writing or editing, a plot filled with coincidences, all of those will stop me. BUT if the writing is stellar, I'll usually stick it out for the pleasure the flow of words gives me.

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    1. Yes, lovely writing can forgive the plot errors. But I am a stickler for —something has to happen. What do you think about that?

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  12. I also came to the "the world will not end if I don't finish the book" stage a few years ago. Things that stop me:

    - whiny characters that are the cause of most of their own problems and don't take steps to improve
    - writing law enforcement characters without at least attempting to know how it works (I put a book aside recently because the narrator takes a picture frame from a scene, CLEANS IT, and the LEO merely says, "You really shouldn't do that." Ugh.)
    - thinly developed characters (especially if they all aren't really needed for the story)
    - too many TSTL moments (you get one)
    - characters that don't act the way normal people would - not even close
    - plots that simply don't make sense, not even with a suspension of disbelief

    Hmm, most of my peeves seem to center around characters. I can forgive minor plot points if the author has created characters that capture me.

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    1. I’m so agree! One of the things I always teach my students is that if a regular person would ask a question, have your character ask the question! Otherwise the reader will just yell at them :-)
      The suspense can come in the answer, or the non-answer, or the deflection, or the lie or the interruption. But ask the question so the reader does not get annoyed with the character!

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  13. Life is too short to finish a book I am not enjoying for a variety of reasons, including too many characters whose names start with the same initial. Authors: DON'T DO THIS TO ME! Don't ignore the needs of any pets involved in the story: feed, water and walk them or don't have them! Don't solve everything in the last five pages with information YOU NEVER HINTED AT ON THE PREVIOUS THREE HUNDRED PAGES. I will be MAD ABOUT THAT. And close the book with a thump.

    As for the synopsis: How about you think about the reader of said synopsis being, maybe, five years old. Tell that little person what your book is (going to be) about. They are endlessly curious, totally trusting of you and the tale you are spinning, and really want just the most essential story threads because they want to go outside and play. Get on with it, Aunty. Just tell me what it's about!

    Also, maybe the improv theatre adage of YES, AND could be helpful: Don't edit yourself as you draft. There is a murder, yes, AND the cousin came for Thanksgiving AND the car broke down on the way AND the restaurant sent the wrong dishes...etc. Just keep adding in the plot points and see how it all adds up in the end... Then edit it down to something you can actually write...

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    1. Amanda, I am with you on 'don't name the characters with the same initial' page. Also don't set me up that the main character is a 'senior', and then have have them 60 years old. Not even 65. They should be 70 at least, and not able to leap over tall buildings - age appropriate actions, please.

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    2. So true Margo. Also an older character is a problem because they can't really age or they will become too old to be believable.

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    3. This is honestly the most brilliant thing I have ever read! I am not kidding. Tell it to a five-year-old. Love that. And it is so wise! On my way to try that today! Thank you!

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    4. I'd add, don't describe people as "seniors." So annoying. I'd put a book down for that.

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    5. Oh, no, Debs. What term do you use? I'll never say "senior" again.

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    6. SO AGREE! Many times people have called me at the TV statin, saying I'm 55, I'm a senior, and I'm like, well, I'm 70, and I'm not...:-)

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  14. You all, your comments are so helpful about what stops you reading! I'm going to try to remember this. Hank, no one has asked me for a synopsis because I haven't sold the book I'm trying, but I'm trying to jot down turning points as I write. So, write a couple of pages, think about what will come from this and why it's interesting. what changes in the characters by the end and so on. It's not really a synopsis, but it's crawling in that direction. We know you can do this!!

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    1. Oh that’s great! I do that when I’m writing the actual pages, you know? So I have a nice synopsis like thing when I’m done with the book. But wow, not before I write it! But I can do it! I know I can….-aghhhh

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  15. What makes me put down a book?

    I used to soldier on no matter how much I was not liking a book I was reading. But since the TBR pile has become a corner of the room, if I'm not liking a book I put it down and move on.

    One thing that will make me put a book down...it's a boring story. Yeah, if I think the story is moving too slow or nothing is actually happening for a large chunk of pages, seeya! That's what killed my love of fantasy novels. I was reading a series and read through six rather large page count books. On Book 7, nothing of consequence happened for the first 300 pages. I still had more than 400 pages to go and I just said "Screw it!" and stopped reading the story.

    Another reason to stop reading: A long-running series where three-quarters of the book is practically copy-and-pasted from previous books. You know, stuff that's been mentioned ad nauseum in the first 23 book of a series is yet again regurgitated in book 24 and it finally dawns on you that nothing will ever change.

    This reason to stop reading usually affects cozy mysteries for me: No body for the longest time. Seriously, most cozy mysteries are what, 300 pages or thereabouts. If the dead body takes 1/3 of the way or more to show up, what's the point? For me, the dead body should show up before page 50 AT THE LATEST. And honestly, I'd prefer it if happened in the first couple of chapters so we can spend the rest of the book reading how the butcher, baker, or country store-slash-restaurant owner goes about solving the murder. I want all the character bits that comes with a cozy series but threaded throughout the book, not serving as a delaying action to finding the body!

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    1. Oh absolutely! Something has to happen. And think of it, that’s why there’s a book, or a story, right? You say: “listen to this! You won’t believe what happened…” And that’s what you write.

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  16. You'll get that synopsis done! Starting is half the battle.

    I mostly finish books I've started, even if I don't like them. I don't mind books with a lot of characters, though I gave up on keeping everyone straight when I read the Game of Thrones series, just too many. The repetition of the same words and phrases makes me crazy (50 Shades), I've read some books where I really didn't like the main characters and found it difficult to continue. I do like quirky characters who aren't "normal" but they need to have some redeeming qualities. I find continuity, plot, and grammar errors that should have been caught by an editor very annoying.

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    1. I find these annoying too.

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    2. Continuity! It drives me absolutely crazy, so agree. I was just watching a TV show, no wait, a movie. Where in one scene the outdoors was covered in snow, As we see by looking out the window. And the next scene, the people go outside and there is no snow!

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  17. I just listened to 18 hrs of drivel, and before you ask why didn’t I quit as I should have, it was because I felt obliged. It was a Canadian writer and the third in the series and I felt that I should finish the series. No, for my own sanity, I should have not! There was little plot that I could find, it was boring, it was technical drivel over and over, and I have no idea who the characters were. I gave it a 2/10 and those 2 points were because I prevailed.
    Now I am listening to 14 hours of a Book Club book (Ruth Ozeki). So far, two of the really good readers want to quit – they never do not finish a book. (we three tend to notice and mock those regulars who often do not read the book – “was not feeling well” (for 30 days and every month???), “cat ate the book”, “too much (fill in the blank)”, “read the last chapter”.) The book has 4-5 plot lines – just too many.
    Meanwhile, on the eBook read in bed selection, I just read book 2 of a ‘cozy’ series. Book 1 was iffy and a bit of TSTL, so I gave book 2 a go. It annoyed me as the protagonist abandoned everything in her life to investigate the murder which had little to do with her, and again TSTL. I can’t decide whether to give book 3 a gamble – later. For 2026 I need to get to a good one on my shelf!

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    1. Oh dear. I’ve had this happen too. Now I don’t finish if I encounter problems with the book. I didn’t finish a book that was on the best seller list. I’ve seen some awful cozy mysteries where none of the characters were likable.

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    2. My theory is that happens when the author decides they have a plot. And then they force the characters to do the plot. And that just doesn’t work.

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  18. I remember that when I was in elementary school I could not read [tolerate] the Bobbsey twins, I think mostly because of the dialect the servants spoke in. I was happy when I could move on to Nancy Drew (even if I could read an entire book in an hour).

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    1. Oh, good point! Dialect! The worst.

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  19. I need for the characters to be likable but they don’t have to be perfect. It annoys me when the main character is continually cleaning up the messes of a quirky character or being a doormat. Also main characters who own their own businesses but don’t spend any time there minding the store. One more thing is the balance between showing and telling. That’s a tricky balance—I don’t want the story to drag with too many introspective thoughts and details or too much dialogue, but sometimes those scenes need to be fully elaborated. From Mignonne in Arkansas

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    1. Yes, you have put your finger on one of the main problems! And it’s just different from book to book …

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  20. Hank, thank you for sharing your writing process. I read your books and I think they are wonderful.

    What are my pet peeves? Different names for the same characters. Typos. Seeing the same paragraph in the next chapter ( turns out the ebook pages didn’t turn). Book covers with background colors and the title letter colors blending in, which makes it harder to read the titles.

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    1. Awwwww thank you! And yes, in my synopsis I just realized I had an Annie and a Sallyanne. How does that even happen :-) ??? It’s fixed now.

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  21. A dear friend in my book club famously announced when she had come to realize "I'm a grown-ass woman and if I'm not enjoying a book, I don't HAVE to read it!"

    I am pretty selective about what books I even start, so I don't put many of them down unfinished. But there are a few things that will drive me to it:
    *Like Lisa in Nice, I get impatient with a protagonist who keeps rehashing the clues over and over again in her mind. It always makes me feel the author was getting paid by the word!
    *I need at least a few sympathetic characters. We recently had a book club selection in which I just couldn't find anyone to like. (It was a slightly older, highly acclaimed book.) I struggled through about half of that book hoping it would get better before just quick-skimming the rest so I could discuss it.
    *No serial killers. And more broadly, no books from the point of view of a serial killer/sadist/broadly evil person.
    *I have a low tolerance for cruelty. Occasionally, say in a book set in wartime, I can suffer through one explicit scene of torture or similar if it really, really serves to further the narrative and comes after I am already invested in the characters. Put it too early in the book and I'm out.
    *Manipulative cliffhangers really make me angry. I don't mean loose ends in the characters' backstories, subplots that take multiple books to resolve. I mean where an author wraps up the mystery and it is the natural place to end the book, but instead they introduce some new threat or peril that is obviously intended to force the reader to pick up the next book. I feel like that breaks the implied contract between writer and reader.

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    1. Oh, the scourge! I just read a book that has a cliffhanger ending. and the book had been so good, so good! And when I got to obviously maybe 10 pages to go, it crossed my mind: “There is no way this author is going to wrap this book up in the next 10 pages. What is she going to do?” And then yep, there it was. A cliffhanger. I was so mad.it was a perfectly good book up till then!

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    2. I agree with the no torture. I love Val McDermid, but sometimes skip sections of her books when that is occurring.

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  22. Hank, no help here in writing a synopsis. Even writing one AFTER the book is finished is hard enough!

    What makes me put a book down? Boring, boring, boring. The writing is flat. The characters too dull to catch my interest. The plot too predictable. No depth to characters or setting. Also, nothing gruesome, no serial killers. No hurting animals (often the precursor to a serial killer) or children. Life can be hard, unpleasant, I understand that, I just don't want those images in my head.

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    1. Yes, that is so interesting… I just read a book which I absolutely loved, and I kept thinking: it doesn’t have to be this gruesome. I wonder why it’s so gruesome.
      Is that just me? I think we all have different tolerances… And they change, too.
      I kept thinking how traumatized everyone would be, you know?

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    2. I think our tolerance changes as we move through our lives. I have never been able to tolerate cruelty to animals, but don’t think I minded someone being mean to a child when I was in my teens or twenties. As I got older, especially after I had a child, I would not tolerate any kind of cruelty, even if it was “just” bullying. (As opposed to physical violence, I mean.) — Pat S

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  23. poor research, i.e. major inaccurate information. Also, poor editing with a lot of grammatical and spelling errors. Too much descriptive information such as five ways to describe a characters hair color or style. Lack of continuity such as when the season changes within one or two chapters.
    Most of these would not be a problem if they only occurred once, but usually they tend to be multiple errors. I am willing to make some allowances if I really like the book but when it interferes with my enjoyment of the story, especially the research issue it means I can’t trust the author to be accurate in the information they include in the rest of the book.

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    1. Isn’t it fascinating how one research error can ruin the whole thing? I so agree.

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  24. Hank, I like the Sophie Hannah approach. I think it could work in other areas of life. Let us know if it helps with this, and other synopses! I was too many years old before I gave myself permission to not finish a book I was reading.. Life IS too short! I do try to give the book 35-50 pages. Of course, now that I’m retired and not required to read for work, I mostly read only what I want. And in these troubled times it’s usually mystery ( thank you all!) or science fiction. Happy reading (and writing) you all!

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    1. Yes, absolutely! I once realized that if I made a mistake or forgot something in my general course of life, I would say to myself: Hank, you are so stupid. And then I thought: why am I saying that to myself?

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    2. Suzette, I feel the same way now about not finishing a book! I'll give it about 20% of its page count, and if it hasn't grabbed me by then... on to the next one. Nobody's making write book reports any more ;)

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  25. With historical fiction, I hate anachronisms. I remember when I was an editor being annoyed with an author who had her early 19th century heroine zipping up her dress, for example, or decorating a Christmas tree. I've noticed a lot of bad grammar recently too - "Me and someone" or "Villain came after him and I." I guess fewer copyeditors these or they are just not up to the job. But the worst thing is an illogical plot - you can explain away a lot of things (characters going alone into dangerous situation when they know better or believing someone is telling the truth when they clearly are not) and I'll give you some suspension of disbelief, but if you don't bother to explain that does annoy me. Flashbacks that are not clearly defined can also be annoying, especially in an audio book.

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    1. That is such a pitfall of audiobooks! You almost have to announce a flashback, and that is awkward, too, because you are bringing attention to the fact that it is a book.

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  26. The character(s) are crucial to like a book but the plot has to be believable. Some suspense is needed but the character shouldn't put themselves into situations that wouldn't normally make sense, lack of research on police/medical/education/etc procedures.

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    1. Yes, a character can do something unwise or ill conceived, but the reader must understand why they’re doing it. The motivation, and the stakes.

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  27. I used to finish every book I started, but now that I'm "in my 80s" I close them very quickly if the writing doesn't pull me in. I have a long list of books I want to read and a shorter period of time to do it! Once a good friend recommended "The Road" (it's so good! you have to read it! she said). I spent the entire book adding the capital letters and punctuation in my head that the author chose to eliminate. I was so angry with him--the author--by the end of the book. I only finished it for my friend. Annette

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    1. Yes, sometimes an author’s quirky construction and structure choices can be offputting… I suppose that’s art, but they have to understand not everyone will enjoy it and that many people will simply be annoyed.

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  28. I have gotten so frustrated with multiple characters that I now keep a notebook page just to list them all as I begin to read a novel as I got tired of trying to remember the role of each.
    My biggest pet peeve is when the author changes a name part way through a book and even the editors missed this.
    On the book jacket, just tell me who the main characters are and keep me guessing as to the rest as that is why you need strong cover art!

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    1. Oh gosh, I always think when I get confused with too many characters I think – – well, the author will tell me soon what I’m supposed to remember. I don’t keep track of characters in my real life, you know? So I figure I won’t do it in a book either. I love that you found something that works for you!

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  29. Alicia, I keep a running list of the characters too. I don't like it when a character is referred to by their first names then at some point they are referred to by their last names which is confusing as to which character with the first name now is id by their last name. If it was just one character that'd be okay but often it is all the characters.

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    1. Keeping a list of characters! Wow. This is a new one. Is that a sign of an annoyance with the author? I suppose some books have the cast of characters at the beginning, and anticipation of knowing that they have many people on the pages..

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    2. Not an annoyance with the author at all Hank!! Haha. It's just my way of remembering characters. Sometimes I put a book down for a couple of days and it refreshes my memory when I resume reading. Some characters are introduced early on and then aren't mentioned again until much later so it helps in that regard.

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  30. Good luck with the synopsis, Hank!!! You've got this! What stops me in my tracks is when there is a one or two page -- all italics -- section from the POV of the unnamed bad guy. AS you say, the author thinks this is suspenseful but it just annoys me to no end.

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    1. Oh, yes, among the very worst! And thank you for your enthusiasm ….xxxxxxx

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  31. Hank, I hate writing synopses, and I've never had to do more than a couple of pages. How long does yours have to be? And do you have to acutally resolve the plot, or just set it up?

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    1. Oh, who knows..I already have like, 10 pages. And yes, apparently it's very key that I resolve the plot. I must think of the ending. Before I write the book. This, I know, might be quite wonderful, and helpful, but I bet the real book will not be the same. But who knows! It could be miraculous. (HA HA HA)

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  32. Just about what everyone has said. And as for prologues...No prologues. To me, it signals that the author could not decide how to start the story, so they did it twice.

    Okay, the prologue might not make me stop cold. But this will:
    Meeting a different set of characters, in a different setting, in a different time frame...in each of the first three chapters. No connections between them. That's when I decide there will be no fourth chapter for me.

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  33. Everyone else has covered most of my pet peeves. Thanks, guys!

    But I will say this about the process of writing synopses: don't beat yourself up about "not being good at it". It's like anything else: the more you practice/work on a skill, the better you get at it. It's impossible, as you know, to do things perfectly the first time, the second time, or the 10th time, but you get a little closer to perfection--or at least good enough--every time.

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    1. PS I am taking a little break from shopping for sale audiobooks on Libro.fm Right now there's a sale, with lots of titles under $5. And members get an additional 30% off. The tiny independent bookstore I have chosen to get the commission is close to my neighborhood, and they so appreciate the income!

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    2. Karen, thank you. This is so smart of you..yes, it is practicing. xx

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  34. I feel Hank's pain. So here's the problem--I wrote a synopsis for my next book and the editor said she liked it so I got busy writing the book only to realize that I didn't like the story line. So while my synopsis is sitting there on my editor's computer, the book on my computer is significantly different. So now what? I've decided to forge forward and then take the coward's way out--ask my agent to resubmit unless you all have a better idea! I like all the lists--what the Reds dislike. I think I have too many plots going on at once (although if I get rid of one of them, that too has to come back out of the synopsis.). Sigh! Oh wait, someone in my bookclub said she hated when characters "sighed." She didn't say what they could do instead, though. As for finishing a book, I usually finish, unless I'm writing it! I don't like it when a character has the same thought over and over throughout the book--I mean how many times do I have to hear that she can't tell the truth because no-one will believe her.

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    1. SIghing, yes, that's a bit of a shortcut. I guess iit could be fixed by saying what makes them sigh. "Really?" She sighed. "Again?"
      OR
      "Really?" He always stalled, just like that. Did he think she was that clueless?

      ANd oh yes, I have it on good authority that the synopsis is just so they see you have a cohesive idea for a story. It's fine if the final story is different. I remind myself of this every day.

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  35. Late to the party, but I do have a few comments. Many times I will pick up a book or put one on hold because the synopsis sounds interesting. That being said, if I open the book and find that 1) I'm not the target audience based on the writing style - it is driving me to distraction - 2) I'm not in the right frame of mind to do justice to the author's efforts or 3) I'm in 50 pages and I'm thinking this is really drivel and do I want to spend my time reading drivel when I have one of my favorite author'
    s newest book waving at me from my TBR - for any of those scenarios I will not finish that book.

    As far as things that really drive me insane besides poor copy editing are: continuity, number of characters and "good" and "bad" characters that have names that start with the same two letters and sound alike. I barely finished a book by one of my favorite authors because of this very issue. I kept having to go back an forth (I refuse to keep a character list - they should be distinct entities with different sounding names) to make sure I'm reading about the correct guy/gal. Makes me insane! -- Victoria

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    1. You'd think it would be top of mind for authors to make sure their readers are having a pleasant and non-confusing experience, right? I sometimes try to read my book as if it was not me reading, but a completely new person. That can really work. (As in when just yesterday I realized I had Annie and Sallyanne.)

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  36. Oh man I try so hard to not -not finish- a book! But I did very recently and it was mainly for 2 reasons: too many characters and I just didn’t really care what happened to any of them… it was hard to not finish because I loved the setting (Antarctica!), and the premise was pretty good (and IMO could have been much better… I was hoping it would get better with every chapter…) but I have since started a new book and it has completely captured me because I know enough about each character to be intrigued by them and I am beginning to care about what happens to them…

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