Writers talk a lot about viewpoint characters. The story is told from her viewpoint. Or his viewpoint. Or both their viewpoints. Sometimes we become so focused on maintaining a strict viewpoint, we forget that narrative is about relationships. Relationships. Interactions. Exchanges. Collisions. Between people. And between a person and her world. When you write your next scene imagine an energy field or aura surrounding each of your characters. As you write, put your attention in the space where these energy fields collide. Now imagine an energy field (or a thousand different fields) coming from the physical world–the birds singing …
Sarah’s & Cynde’s Blog
MANTRA FOR PERFECTIONISTS
CONNECTION THROUGH IMPERFECTION
SECRETS & LIES – Daily Writing
If you are writing fiction and you want to spark a two-character scene and/or a short story, endow one character with a secret and the other with a lie. Now let them interact without either one revealing the truth. Too lazy or virtuous to come up with something juicy? Visit the Post Secret website for inspiration. It’s one of my favorite “writerly” sites online.
CREATIVE BANKING
Last week, in the midst of a busy coaching schedule, a busy writing schedule, and my always busy family life, I took time out for some creative banking. I don’t mean I did some funny business with my income tax prep. I do mean I took stock of past, present, and future writing projects, and I discovered how much I have in my creative “bank”. If you’ve been writing for any length of time, you have projects you’ve left simmering on the back-burner and projects you’ve just plain left behind because it was time to move on. Those that are …
WOOING YOU BACK
One of the best essays I’ve read about reconnecting to your novel and moving past “stuckness” was penned by Gail Godwin and published in The Writer. Godwin suggests that a creative work in progress may react to the fear of abandonment like an aggrieved pet, giving you, the author, the cold shoulder or even turning its back on you completely. The provocation of this punishment may be as slight as a busy weekend you spent with your family or a missed writing session. It may be more dramatic–weeks of putting your manuscript on the back-burner. When disconnect occurs, you the writer …
A Tip for the Day–AHA!
Today’s writing tip is a simple way to avoid “math anxiety” when it comes to reviewing scenes: Remember that your primary character has an objective in each scene. That goes for other characters who are active in the scene. Objectives change–and they may begin as reactive (as in your character reacting to something that happens) but ultimately that reaction translates into action, subtle or profound. These are also called scene goals–each character has her own goal in each scene, and those goals are most often in conflict because we want conflict in story. When it comes to opening scenes, another …
GUNG HAY FAT CHOY–HAPPY YEAR OF THE OX!
The start of each new year offers us the chance to begin again, at least in heart and spirit. It is a time to celebrate renewal and rebirth; a time to initiate new projects and to set new goals. We may also need to restate our commitment to ongoing projects at this time. If you weren’t ready to fully embrace the “new” on January 1st, tomorrow offers a second chance. This Chinese New Year–the Year of the Ox–begins on January 26th, and it is the year’s biggest celebration in China and much of Asia. Also called the Lunar New Year …
WELCOMING SILENCE
Weeks into this new year I’m coming out of a silence. Don’t misunderstand. I have been writing and working. And through the holidays–which extend through Chinese New Year in our household–I’ve been social. But I’ve also felt the desire and the need to retreat into reflection whenever possible. At this darkest time of the year, just past the winter solstice, this yearning for silence makes sense on many levels. It represents the time and space to let my creative spirit rest. It is a necessary and welcome element of replenishment, healing, and rejuvenation. It is the white space on the …
THOUGHTS ON CREATIVITY AS THE YEAR TURNS
“The role of the writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say.” ~Anais Nin “I’m a terrible cook, but if I could cook, I would see that as art as well, it’s how much creative energy you put into something.” ~Tracey Emin “Write while the heat is in you. The writer who postpones the recording of his thoughts uses an iron which as cooled to burn a hole with. He cannot inflame the minds of his audience.” ~Henry David Thoreau “If there is a book you really want to read, but …
TREBLE THE TROUBLE
Writing fiction? Then Les Edgerton’s nifty book, HOOKED, is a great choice for your holiday gift list. (If you’re like me, you play secret Santa and buy yourself a few pounds of libros for the holidays.) Edgerton covers well-traveled ground when it comes to the how-to of structure. But he does it by focusing intensely on the basics of story setup–the opening hooks and problems–that directly connect to deep story structure. Edgerton defines the Inciting Incident–a term often used in the language of screenplays–as something that “happens to the protagonist that creates his surface problem and introduces the first indications …