Wednesday, October 27, 2010
I’m a quitter. I’ll admit it. I’ve decided that I don’t have time to finish books I’m not enjoying. Over the last month, I have picked up and almost immediately set down again two novels in particular…
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Tagged Aaron Pogue, Captain Hook, Character Development, Mr. Spock, On Writing -- A Memoir of the Craft, Reading, Star Trek, Stephen King, Unstressed Syllables, WILAWriTWe, Worldbuilding, Writing Rules
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Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Tweet As my sister so kindly pointed out, I’ve fallen a bit behind on the blog posts lately. And that’s after cutting my weekly commitment by half. I still mostly blame schoolwork, but that’s really just my temporary excuse. Give me a week, and I’ll be able to blame NaNoWriMo for a full month. After […]
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Tagged Annabelle Grace, Blogging, Carlos Velez, Creative Writing, Dallas Cowboys, Julie Velez, NaNoWriMo, Plot, Prewriting, Scene List, Shawn McElroy, Storytelling, Synopsis, The Consortium, Toby Nance, Tony Romo, Trish Pogue, Unstressed Syllables, Writing Exercise, Xander Pogue
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Tweet This week we’re talking about narrative scenes — the storytelling elements that clarify your characters and progress your plot. How Scenes Work As I said yesterday, every scene in your story must move your story forward. That can consistent of character-building, occasionally, and really only in the first act, but in most genres you […]
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Tweet This month we’re reviewing all the parts and processes that go into developing a story. Our goal is to put together a complete prewriting package to do some of the heavy lifting for you when it comes time to write a novel in November. So far, if you’ve been following along, you have Characters, […]
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Once upon a time, there was a highly intelligent, gifted young writer who lived in a far away land and didn’t have any writing friends…
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Tweet I’m not at all sure it’s a good idea to tell this story. No one’s ever called me “discerning,” though. So I’m going to tell it anyway. I’ve spent most of my life trying (successfully, for the most part) to win the love of the woman who most loves Gods Tomorrow. That’s a writer’s […]
Tweet Okay, for a week now I’ve been talking about the Conflict Resolution Cycle worksheet. It’s a questionnaire/assignment I cooked up a couple years back to force a writer through the questions necessary to convert a story idea into an actual narrative. Most of the questions explain themselves, so instead of opening with a big […]
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Tweet Earlier this week I told a story. It was one I had to tell, under the circumstances. On the day I launched Gods Tomorrow to the public, you’d better bet I was going to talk about my novel. It works well as an illustration for the writing principles I want to talk about this […]
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
I’ve just returned home from a celebration honoring a guy you might have heard about before. His name is Aaron Pogue, and he is a published author…
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Tweet A week and a half ago — Friday, October 1 — I was at work when I got a call from Trish. She could barely talk, she was so excited. She finally found the words, though. “Aaron…a package just arrived. I think it’s your book.” I wanted to shout, “Well what are you waiting […]
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Tagged Conflict Resolution Cycle, Creative Writing, Document Formatting, Editing, Feedback, Gods Tomorrow, Julie Velez, NaNoWriMo, Publication, Revising, Storytelling, Technical Writing, Trish Pogue
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