What exactly is a High Concept Novel?

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Okay, so I’ve never really understood this term. I could vaguley give you a description, but Beth Revis on the YA Reddit group I am involved in spelled it out SO perfectly that I have to share here:

What is High Concept?

First, what high concept is not: it’s not “high.” This is the thing that throws people off the most. Most people think that “high concept” means something that’s very literary, artistic, and not commercial—and the exact opposite is true.

High concept is something that has immediate commercial appeal.

Typically, the way this is explained is that:

  • You can sum up a high concept idea in a sentence or two
  • It has obvious appeal to the masses—it’s a concept that most people can get with just a sentence
  • It’s a story that you can immediately see what it would be like just from a short description

High concept is hugely important because it’s easy to sell. If you’re querying, a high concept pitch is arguably one of the best things you can have to make your query stand out. If you’re published, a high concept pitch is the hook you use to advertise your book, the way you describe it to hand-sell it, the sentence you use on your swag. If you want to commercially sell your work, having a high concept pitch is one of the best things you can use.

Examples of high concept:

  • A boarding school with wizards
  • An arena where children and teens have to fight to the death
  • A vampire that falls in love with a mortal

Obvious, yeah? High concept sells. If you can sum up your book in one simple phrase or sentence, one that has appeal to a lot of people, then you’re gold. People tend to like the familiar, and they like the concepts they can easily grasp, the stories they know will appeal to them.

The examples above are obvious, but here’s some that aren’t as obvious:

  • A murder mystery in space (My own novel, Across the Universe)
  • A teen who can time travel, stuck in the wrong time (Julie Cross’s Tempest)
  • A world where everyone gets a letter 24 hours before they die (Shaun Hutchinson’s The Deathday Letter)

When summing up high concept, you’re looking to *give the familiar, then give the twist. “A vampire”—a familiar concept many people know and like. “Falls in love with a mortal”—a twist to the story. The typical reader can take the familiar they already know, see the twist that will flesh it into a whole story, and that makes them want to read it.

The discussion that follows is incredibly awesome as well. If you are a writer I would definitely check it out, whether you write YA or not. You can find the thread here.

Oh and HAPPY BIRTHDAY ‘MERICA!

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Although I haven’t consistently lived in America in over four years, I will always be American through and through! We are going to a 4th of July picnic today and a huge Independence Day celebration put on by the US Embassy on Saturday.

Wishing everyone a happy, happy Independence Day!

In the truest sense, freedom cannot be bestowed; it must be achieved.

~Franklin D. Roosevelt

A New Project and Revisions

So I am starting on revisions of my YA thriller and I’ve been having some trouble trying to get into a rhythm. I am a part of an awesome YA Writers Reddit and I posed the question of how people tackle revisions and I got so many great responses! Here is the thread I started if you’re interested. I love this Reddit because it’s such an eclectic mix of publishing professionals, published writers and those in the process of writing their first novel and everyone writes YA.

So my CP Ashley and I have been exchanging a few chapters at a time and helping each other out. Actually, I really should be working on my stuff to send to her instead of writing this blog, but oh well! 🙂

Then to complicate my life to the extreme, I’ve started a new project. It’s a young MG novel about a 9 year old girl who meets a time traveling horse who has been sent back to help her set things back in place.

A new book AND revisions? It sort of makes me go:

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But then I am finding that it is actually inspiring me as well. When I get stuck on revisions, I flip over to my MG book and vice versa. I’ve completed a detailed outline and the first three chapters, so it’s moving right along.

I guess the old mantra is true

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MY NEW BABY!

Well, okay, it’s not “technically” my baby, but I am so excited to announce that my brother and his wife are having a baby!

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Camp NaNoWriMo

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So I have failed the last three NaNoWriMo’s and just in case you fail to catch my abbreviations?

NaNoWriMo is the National Novel Writing Month that takes place every November. The challenge is to write a 50k word novel in thirty days. I have never been able to do it! I get about 5k words in and peeter out.

Well since I am in the middle of revising my current novel, I have all kinds of ideas for other stories, particualarly children’s books.

This led me to decide to give CAMP NaNoWriMo a go! It’s a July “summer camp” version of the challenge in November.

I’ve chosen to write a children’s book ROSIE & PICKLES THE TIME TRAVELING HORSE.

Nine year old Rosie loves horses, in fact, she’s horse crazy. Her backyard looks out onto a big horse ranch and she watches from afar and dreams of how it would feel to gallop through the field or soar over a jump. But here is the problem, Rosie’s mom is scared to death of horses and refuses to let Rosie take lessons.

Everything changes when one day Rosie meets Pickles who tells her he has been sent to give her an opportunity to set things right because she has an important destiny ahead of her.

They travel back through time an Rosie comes face to face with someone she would have never expected. Will she have the courage to do what needs to be done?

Camp begins tomorrow! Wish me luck!

 

Stuff my kids say #1

Me to the kids: “You’re about to cross the line.”
Son #1: “Which line?”
Daughter: “Where is the line?”
Me: “It’s a figurative line.”
Daughter: “Well we need to see it to know if we’re about to cross it.”