ADVICE TO WRITERS

In 2005, Robert J. Firth first revealed the advice he’s about to share with you here and the tools he used to create his ground-breaking book, The Battle of Tours, that has so dramatically impacted the western view of Islam, and The Enemy Within, which exposes the left’s previously hidden and nefarious objectives.

This information is taken from time-tested methodologies used by all political exposés and historical books such as The Battle of Tours, which may be turned into a powerful, earth-shattering and iconoclastic movie.


Here’s what you need to know

The object of any book (fiction or non-fiction):

  • To keep the reader on edge

  • To keep him spellbound at the new information

  • To make him wonder why he hadn’t known all this before

The rules are flexible. The professional writer learns the rules in order to know how and when to follow them—and when to break them.


Start with the principal action and detail it later

An extension of Firth’s dictum:
When things slow down, bring in an army or an indisputable but unknown fact to bolster your thesis.

To encourage the reader to continue:

  • Give conflict, trouble, fear, or violence on page 1.


Make it tough for your protagonist

  • Give him a worthy antagonist.

  • Make the odds impossible.

  • No convenient solutions.

  • The tougher the opposition, the better.


Plant it early; pay it off later

  • Do not introduce new characters or facts at the end to solve the problem.

  • No deus ex machina.


Give the protagonist the initiative

He should take active steps to achieve a goal against impossible odds.


Give the protagonist a personal stake

  • His own life

  • The lives of his men

  • His values and principles

The more intimate and dangerous, the better.


Give the protagonist a tight time limit—and then shorten it

Use only if it fits the logic of the story.


Choose your character according to your capacities

  • Research carefully.

  • Do not change historical facts to improve the story.

  • Research, research, research.

If you don’t do your homework, readers will catch every mistake.


Know your destination before you start

  • Weak endings ruin books.

  • Resolve the principal conflict.

  • History’s ending is already known—use that.

Mickey Spillane:
“The first chapter sells the book; the last chapter sells the next book.”


Don’t rush in where angels fear to tread

  • Observe what pros do—and avoid doing what they avoid.

  • Don’t join bandwagons; build new ones.

  • No genre is ever “dead.”

  • The only question:
    “Is this idea strong enough and important enough to stand out?”


Don’t write anything you wouldn’t want to read

Write in genres you love. Enthusiasm shows.


High Stakes

The danger must be monumental—for a person, a family, a city, or a civilization.


Larger-than-life characters

Characters are defined by what they do. In big nonfiction, they must perform extraordinary actions.


A clear-cut dramatic question

This is the “spine” of the book.


High Concept

Radical or outlandish premises that shock readers into attention.


Multiple points of view

Essential for emotional involvement.


Setting

Readers want to enter unfamiliar or exotic worlds—international or mysterious landscapes.

Avoid boring settings unless the story uniquely requires them.


Recap — Ask yourself:

  • Is what’s at stake monumental?

  • Is my character extraordinary?

  • Is the dramatic question strong and clear?

  • Is the story built around a high-concept conflict?

  • Am I developing emotionally engaging characters?

  • Is the setting exciting, unusual, or immersive?


Agents & Query Letters

Guide to Literary Agents is a top resource.

Agents say “submit to one agent at a time.”
Firth disagrees:

  • At 4 weeks per response × 24 agents = 2 years wasted.

  • Use the shotgun approach: submit widely.

  • May the best (and fastest) agent win.