Whata say, let's wrap this up? I could go on forever about writing. I love the 'science' of the craft. There is always something new to learn, to experiment with, to take where it has never been taken before - successfully.
The middle is the good stuff; the inside of a jelly donut, of a clam, of a perfectly baked Chicken Kiev (the buttery herb stuff). Take every opportunity to learn the tools of the craft so you reach for them by instinct. When you see a screw you know the tool needed is not a paint brush. You don't even give it a thought, you know. The same is true or can be true with the tools of this trade.
Look out for people who insist on formulas - a chapter is 20 pages long, a paragraph 3-6 sentences, remove all adverbs or adjectives (or both) or words that begin with 'q' (made up that last one). The only genre with a recognized formulamatic style (I know of) is romance writing.
Relax. Let your characters develop and show you who they are (just like your kids do - or pets). Don't sweat the small stuff, that is what rewrites and beta readers and line editors are for.
Be flexible. Trust your ear as Beethoven trusted his. Write your first draft without thought of editing or anything beyond writing from the beginning to the end. You can worry about everything else when the first draft is finished. Savor the moment, play it through.
Be a storyteller more than a writer. I believe in you. Don't work so hard to 'write' the story. Sit with your reader, share a cup of tea and tell them a story as you put it to paper. Make their presence real every time you write. You can do this, I know you can. Look at me, I'm dyslexic.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
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When Paul Fenton stops for breakfast in a small town, he gets more than he bargained for in the process.
When two-hundred-year-old human remains are discovered on one of Neptune's moons, Earth's history falls into question.
Emily's husband persuades her to try thalidomide to ease her symptoms as she is unaware of the devastating effects.
Who is the women's shelter bomber? Melissa Ryan suspects that her husband knows.
Further developments with the Wilder family.
A hidden past shakes the O'Donovan family to its core
A swirl of emotion and choice, set in Cape Town, South Africa
Love is a constant, but it comes at a price.
When the road ahead is unclear, sometimes you have to rely on trust.
The struggle between good and evil is ages old. It gets all the more complicated when the good guys aren't all good and the bad guys have redeeming qualities.
Story of a land mothering two races of people – the light-skinned and the dark-skinned.
A gifted Ukrainian ballerina comes into possession of a mysteriously coded address book.
Six passengers' lives change for better or worse after they arrive in Honiton.
Resilience and love in a harsh and unforgiving age
Kathryn's Beach
High Tide
Storm Surge
Yeh, when you write 'relax be flexible' you are so right. You gotta have a beginning middle and end but as Bob Dylan sang 'Things don't always turn out way the you had 'em planned.'
ReplyDeleteAnd most of all take criticism, if it is well meant and positive (even if it hurts a little) cus then you can only be a better writer.
Glyn, You're right. It isn't any where near ready to query when the first draft is finished and a lot of people [wrongly] think it is, especially if they try to edit during the drafting stage.
ReplyDeleteSuddenly I'm craving KRISPY KREMES!
ReplyDeleteAh, a nice addition to your writer's tool box.
ReplyDelete