Ren Diller

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Navigate the menu for blogs and bonus content from Ren Diller's debut novel, The Fracture of a Dream

Writer Versus Himself

I know the feeling of unwillingness to bend to someone else's will.  I know the feeling of total rebellion in the form of apathy:  "Who cares?  I'm doing it my way!"  In my most recent situation, I've been fighting the edict that I must rewrite my first chapter entirely.

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When We Click

Click, by Ori and Rom Brafman, got me thinking about those special people we have in our lives -- the ones we take a shine to right away, the ones we know will be our best friends as soon as we meet.  These are the friends we can fill hours with, chatting away, the ones we trust with our spare keys and secrets, the ones with whom we can pick up where we left off after years of separation,

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The Ties That Bind Us

As a writer with a psychological bent, I often examine my own interactions with the people around me, probing the boundaries, fingering the threads and knots. I've done this since I was prepubescent, working out who got along well with whom, how to diffuse tense situations, how to tailor my approach to a person when I wanted to ask a favor. I'd like to say the ability comes naturally, but it doesn't.

I'm still the master of social gaffes. I sometimes work against myself.

But there's a beauty in the way people are connected -- some bonds stronger, taut, steady...others thin, wispy, barely sustained. Complicated. There's the mother who would sacrifice anything for her child, yet she hardens her heart with jealousy, eyeing her thriving child, born into privileges she herself was not fortunate enough to have. There's the broken criminal, brusquely keeping the other inmates in line with threats and muscle, but whose thoughts turn to the younger brother he left on the outside, barely a teen and now fending for himself and their younger siblings.

A story can take place anywhere, any time, in any setting. But it's the relationships between the characters that draw me in. So I don't rule out any particular genre. I'll read mysteries, sci-fi, fantasy...anything, if the author catches me with some good relationship tension. So how are your characters connected? Are the ties overt, simple? Or hidden, snarled?

Sure, I love a good relationship. Does that mean I write romance? No. In fact, I find relationships that are barbed with awkwardness, conflicted feelings, and hardships to be the most interesting.

I also love to get deep down into a character's biggest soft spot. His or her true devotion, whatever he or she most wants to protect. Whom does Dek Sundowner most want to protect? The answer may not be so obvious...

Keep loving,
Ren D.

A story of life, death, and everything in between.
— Ren Diller