Thank you to all the veterans of the Vietnam War.
Stuff that interests me about writing military thrillers set during World War II: The Sgt. Dunn series.
www.ronnmunsterman.com
Tuesday, March 29, 2022
Saturday, March 26, 2022
National Medal of Honor Day - 25 March 2022
Let's honor the courage U.S. servicemen and servicewomen displayed in the face of danger to themselves and others.
Read the fascinating history of the Medal of Honor here. There have been 3,511 recipients. There is a new Medal of Honor Museum opening late 2024 in Arlington, TX. Groundbreaking was fittingly on 25 March 2022.
Here are the three different medals awarded by service.
Saturday, March 12, 2022
Weird fact about Hitler's SA brownshirts
I'm reading volume 1 of John Toland's outstanding books on Adolf Hitler. My copies were published in 1976 and are First Editions. The first volume covers the evil man's childhood (born 1889) through October 1938, right after the Munich deception regarding Czechoslovakia. Volume 2 goes from there to the end of the war.
I'm at the point when 1926 is closing out. Hitler is out of Landsberg Prison, which was like a vacation for him to write his unbelievable Mein Kampf. He has decided the Nazi party would no longer use illegal tactics to gain power and his speeches reflect "saving" Germany.
We are all familiar with the Nazis' Brownshirts, led first by Ernst Röhm, and their violent street attacks.
The actual shirts they became known for came about due to . . . simply price. These were shirts intended for German troops in East Africa, but there was a surplus, so they were on sale at wholesale prices! So the Nazis bought them cheap.
No special or superior reason for the brown shirts. Just got a great price on them.
Thursday, February 3, 2022
Fiction becomes reality?
In my second book, Behind German Lines, the main story line is about the Nazis building and deploying an Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) weapon. The effects were devastating on equipment and humans. Whether an EMP would actually harm humans was my fiction of the story; we all know electric equipment is ruined by one.
Fast forward to the present. The U.S. Intelligence community says the "Havana Syndrome" you may have heard about could be the result of an EMP. A frightening prospect in the real world.
Science fiction writers often predict the future. I sure wasn't expecting to do that with a WWII novel.
Thursday, January 27, 2022
2022 International Holocaust Remembrance Day
Today is International Holocaust Remembrance Day. Please take a moment to remember the victims, and the survivors.
Thursday, January 20, 2022
How I plot my Sgt. Dunn Novels - writer's advice
When I decided to write my first novel, Operation Devil's Fire, I knew I had only a vague understanding of plotting. I had been writing short stories for years, but had never tackled a novel. To help myself, I bought a copy of Ken Follet's excellent WWII novel Hornet Flight, read it, then sat down and plotted it using Excel. I entered the name of the point of view (POV) character and a one-sentence description of the chapter. Next, using Excel's formulas, I counted the number of times each character appeared and calculated the percentage of "screen time" they each had. Side note: I have no idea how Mr. Follet writes his books.
For my next step, I bought two books on writing by literary agent Evan Marshall: The Marshall Plan for Novel Writing and the companion workbook The Marshall Plan Workbook.
I read them cover to cover and still have them in my home library. Mr. Marshall laid out a logical approach to plotting, which I converted to Excel using a pattern of appearances by each of my POV characters. I saved the file as ODF Story Plan.xls and used that same naming convention for all of my books. In case you’re wondering, as an IT professional, I used Excel on a daily basis so it was familiar territory for me.
Because my books are thrillers (I call them WWII action thrillers), my chapters tend to get my characters into trouble, then end. The next chapter switches POV, often to the bad guys whose chapter then ends with a new threat that the reader knows about but the main character doesn't. This doesn't occur all the time, but I use when needed. Remember, the writer wants the reader to worry about the characters and wonder how in the world he or she is going to get out this jam.
Using Marshall's general POV pattern, but modifying it for MY story, I ended up with a spreadsheet for Operation Devil’s Fire whose first ten chapter’s POV column looked like this:
Here's how each character's appearances add up as a percent of the total chapters.
My main characters in bold, take up 82% of the total, with the minor characters taking the rest.
My latest book, Disrupt and Destroy, has the POV characters appearing this often:
Our three favorite main characters in bold make up 91% of the total. Notice the smaller number of POVs (5), but notice how much more Saunders gets than in book one. That started in book three, Brutal Enemy.
Confession: I often plot one POV character’s entire arc at one time. I also often write the books that way.
The key advice I can give you is: if you decide to plot your book in a similar fashion, always remember that the story is the boss. Don't just put a POV chapter in a certain place just because the spreadsheet pattern says to; you have to adjust all the time so the story stays tight, tense, and true.
Help your readers come to love your characters, care about whether they survive, and cheer for them when they do.
Thanks for stopping by today.
Monday, January 10, 2022
Why I write about WWII
The first World War II book I ever read was Up Periscope by Robb White. It was first published in 1956 and was later made into a great movie starring James Garner. Raise your hand if you know who Garner is. It was a Scholastic Reader book I bought with my allowance in the fifth grade (about 1962). No snickering, please. A couple of years ago, I was able to find a copy on Amazon and I reread it. It was quite fun.
Other things that I loved were the TV shows Combat! and 12 O'clock High. Occasionally, on Saturday morning, one of the Kansas City stations showed WWII movies, not all of them with John Wayne, but many were. The land battles, especially those with tanks, were exhilarating, the submarine movies tense, the dogfights incredible. I was always awed by the credits scrolling by at the end thanking the Department of the Navy, or the US. Army, etc. Wow! They approved this movie! Finally, let's not forget the Rat Patrol!
On top of all that, there were two fabulous comic books about WWII: Sgt.
Rock and Sgt.
Fury. A few blocks from my apartment was a used comic book and record shop.
Most of my meager weekly allowance was spent there, handed over with glee to
the small, dark-haired man behind the counter. If I had to choose between a
comic book or a Coke (a real green-glass bottle), the comic book won.
We're all products of our past. So is my writing. My fascination with WWII had
its genesis as shown above. As I grew older, the fascination didn't abate, I
just changed sources. In high school and college I studied some history and
military history. In 1977, at age 25, I first read The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William L. Shirer. I own the 1960
version, not the abridged version. I have subsequently read it twice more, all
1,242 pages of a view into utter evil. This is a must-read for
anyone wanting to learn more about WWII.
Fast forward a few years:
In late 2001, Band of Brothers appeared on TV for the first time. I watched every episode, entranced by the story, but completely enthralled and impressed by the interviews of the men. To hear their own words gave me a deeper insight into soldiers.
A couple of months before my first short story sale, He
Wasn’t Always Old, I knew, instinctively, that I would write about
WWII. This was in the fall of 2003. I'd been mulling over ideas and settled on
a character who would be in the army. My original plan was to then follow his
life throughout the war, then on to the postwar years. The question arose as to
who this guy would be, and I chose to make him a sergeant and a member of the
new U.S. Army Rangers.
Once I had that information, the rest came down to building his background, and
then creating the story line, also known as the plot. When I'm working on a
book, I use Excel to build the plot as opposed to a narrative outline. This
works for me.
Some writers swear they don't plot, and I'll take them at their word, but for
me, I have to know where the book is going. This doesn't mean I don't change
the plot because I always do; that's the creative part of writing, but without
the plot in Excel, I can't keep track of who's where and when, etc.
I wrote the first 125 words of what would become Operation Devil’s Fire on
November 11, 2003 (Veteran’s Day). Now, here we are 18 plus years and 15 books
later.
It's my goal to provide my readers with several things in each book:
- a fast-paced book with lots of battle action.
- characters you can love (and care what happens to them) and others you can hate and want them to get their just rewards.
- tidbits of facts interwoven within the story.
From the feedback I receive from readers, it seems I'm on target.
Today, I'm working on the 16th Sgt. Dunn novel, which is untitled (as they always are early on, but to which I refer as sd16). I didn't set out to recreate Sgt. Rock and Sgt. Fury. Our Sgt. Dunn is clearly defined in my head and in the books, and while I owe part of my WWII fascination to Sgts. Rock and Fury, Sgt. Dunn is his own man.
Thanks for stopping by today.