Showing posts with label #NationalBookAward nominee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #NationalBookAward nominee. Show all posts

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Motivating your Characters By Connie Vines #Writing #Storytelling #Hero #Tropes

 The Art of Motivation 😕



Motivation (According to Wikipedia) is an internal state that propels individuals to engage in goal-directed behavior. It is often understood as a force that explains why people or other animals initiate, maintain, or terminate a particular behavior at a given time.  It is a complex phenomenon, and its precise definition is disputed...


In Connie's world, it means sitting down at her computer with a thermos filled with coffee...and talking to herself.

Every writer has his/her own system for producing a novel.

Some have grafts, charts posted on a wall, detailed notes, etc.

I have a tendency to become fixated on details (which is fine during revisions, but a problem during the first draft). 

Now, I interview my main characters. 

Lynx Maddox was a Texan and a bullrider. Q&A is like a radio/online format.

I ask questions, and fornatuely, Lynx had ready answers for me in his deep Texas dawl.

In Lynx's case, it was simple: Win a Rodeo Buckle, and because it's a contemporary romance, Win the Girl.

However, motivation, goal, and conflict are also part of a story...

Why is he motivated? What keeps his goal out of reach? And what about the girl? 

According to Debra Dixon (Goal, Motivation & Conflict), Goals should not be subtle. Get out the two-by-four and start wacking your reader over the head.

Since we are all familiar with the Wizard of OzDorothy must get to the Emerald City. Second, she must get in to see the Wizard. Third, a broomstick.

I have notebooks and favorite pens. Before setting down to write my first draft, I conducted research. I have handwritten notes, dialogue, and scenes. The act of writing in cursive activates a creative area of the brain (the same area activated when playing a musical instrument). 

My notebook info and sensory details, etc., are not included until after I've completed my rough draft.  

When I first sit down, it's nuts-and-bolts.  

When my rough draft is completed, the characters begin to 'talk to me".

Reveal bits of their past. 

Some of my characters are sassy (Charlene/ Meredith). Others have overcome hardship (Rachel/Tay), and some are sexy heroes (Lynx, Brede, Vicktor, etc.). 

Goals: also motivate your characters.  

You can run, but you can't hide from goals.

Each character has a goal.

Goals must be important and urgent. 

Goals must be internal and external. (win the buckle/win the girl).

Character decisions must drive the plot.

Goals must be achieved by characters. (No magic wands, or it just happens.)  Yes, I know many popular books were based on coincidences.

 I, however, subscribe to Joseph Campbell's "Call to Adventure" (Hero with a Thousand Faces) and Christopher Vogler's "The Writer's Journey".

We all have our favorite reads :)

Name your favorite Hero/Heroine, your favorite book, and why you still remember the story.




Happy Reading!

Connie


Where to shop for my books/ ebooks?

There's a glitch in Amazon at the moment (Only my audio version of "Lynx" is available :( 

Barns & Noble, Apple Books, or your fave online book store.

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/brede-connie-vines/1115934010



















 

Sunday, December 28, 2025

New Year's Celebration , 1920s Style with The Louisiana Five and Anton Lada, By Connie Vines

 We all have an interesting relative or two in the family tree...

If we are lucky, that person is "famous" rather than "infamous" :)

New Year's Eve is our next worldwide celebration.  And every celebration features a band and lively music.

Let's travel back in time to the Roaring '20s and Jazz Bands.

(All photos are from my family's personal collection.)


Louisiana Five,  Anton (Tony) Lada. Far left/back row


 Anton (Tony) Lada. My grand-uncle (My maternal grandmother was his "baby' Sister. 

He was a composer, musician, performer, and a founding member of the musicians' guild, which is now merged with SAG. 

While all the promo material stated he was a Chicago native, he was actually from Prague, Czechoslovakia. He immigrated with his parents and siblings (except my grandmother, who was born in Chicago) as a young child. 

His family, though immigrants, opened a small business in Chicago and provided music lessons for all six of their children.

Tony was classically trained and a member of the Wisconsin orchestra at age 16.  

  

 Drummer and bandleader Anton Lada's 1918 recordings with the Louisiana Five were among the very first commercial releases of music considered to be jazz. Lada had also drummed in an early version of the Original Dixieland "Jass" Band (later renamed the Jazz Band).

Jazz recording history in early 1917

Also of note: with a personnel consisting of Alcide "Yellow" Nunez on clarinet, Charlie Panelli on trombone, Karl Burger on banjo, Joe Cawley on piano, and Lada on drums, the band's style was unique among the now-considered standard "jass" bands of the time. 

Whereas most featured a cornet as the lead voice, the Louisiana Five featured Nunez himself on clarinet, leading the tunes. While this comes as a shock to many listeners of this pivotal group, one must remember that at the time, there were no official guidelines for how jazz ensembles should be composed. 

Their records for Edison, Columbia, Emerson, and Okeh are a treat to hear. While the original combo broke up in the early 1920s, Lada continued to record under the Louisiana Five name for a few years after that, even relocating to California, recording there too around 1925. The Sunset label promoted the ensemble as Anton Lada's Louisiana Lads. 


https://secondhandsongs.com/work/137494/all

 According to discographers, Lada's final recordings were made in the mid-'20s; however, his popular groups continued performing live. In 1941, Lada relocated to Hollywood, scoring motion pictures and developing into a similar style and status as Raymond Scott.

A devout Christian Scientist, Tony Lada refused medical aid when he suffered from a ruptured appendix, passing away in his early 50s.

Anton (Tony) Lada co-wrote jazz and ragtime numbers with pianist Spencer Williams, notably "Arkansas Blues" and "Barcelona."




His signature on a Christmas card, 1936
I hope you've enjoyed my bit of family history.

My grandmother was very proud of her brother (as was the entire family). She loved to tell stories and share the fashion trends and "Hollywood gossip" from times gone by.

From the YouTube video link: Sadly, very little has been written about this important group, and even less has been reissued, and even less has been played in its original style. In fact, the only major recreation that has occurred recently of this group's style was done by Dan Levinson's Roof Garden Jass Orchestra. Now,  for the first time in 98 years, David Jellema, Colin Hancock, Westen Borghesi, Dan Walton, and Ryan Neubauer recreate the sounds and style of the Louisiana Five before the recording horn, in their rendition of the popular period tune, which is almost guaranteed the band played, "Ja Da (Ja Da Ja Da Jing Jing Jing)".

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsLgNthetVU

Thanks to the members of the band, as well as Jim Cartwright (of Immortal Performances...not Dynamic Systems [sorry, typo]!), John Knox, Benjamin Canaday, Tim Knapp, John Levin, the Hogan Jazz Archive, the Nunez Family, and the Louisiana Five for the fantastic music!



  • The First American Band to tour Europe
  • Performed at the famed Troubadour         https://www.troubadourlondon.com/
  • SAG card and his friends: Bing Cosby and Jimmy Durante
Wishing everyone a joyful 2026!


Happy Reading, 
Connie

Where to shop:


Or at your favorite online Book Store/ Vendor

Popular Posts

Books We Love Insider Blog

Blog Archive