Fran Shaff's Blog - Posts Tagged "how-to-write"
Flash Blogging and Characters
Stories consisting of a few hundred words, maybe a thousand words are referred to as "flash fiction."
I've been thinking about brevity in writing, and I've decided to start "flash" blogging. We're all too busy to read long posts, no matter how much we may enjoy taking in a well developed column. So, starting this week, as I resume my blogs on writing technique, for the most part, I'm going to keep my posts brief, but highly informative (hopefully).
CHARACTER CREATION is challenging for beginning writers. They wonder, how can I make the people in my stories as real as possible?
Here are two easy ways to jump start creative juices when inventing believable fictional characters.
1. Let your character emulate a real person you know or let him be a composite of two or more people you know (know personally or through the media, etc) Write a complete description of these real people, embellishing where you see fit in order to create the character you envision for your story.
2. Let your character emulate a fictional character you see as very real, someone who is as messed up, evil, good or heroic as you want your fictional character to be. Write a complete description using this fictional character and embellish as liberally as you need to in order to create the character you want.
Naturally, character development is much more complicated than this, but these two starting points are excellent places to begin to get the creative juices flowing.
Try it!
Fran
Fran Shaff, Award-Winning Author
http://sites.google.com/site/fshaff
I've been thinking about brevity in writing, and I've decided to start "flash" blogging. We're all too busy to read long posts, no matter how much we may enjoy taking in a well developed column. So, starting this week, as I resume my blogs on writing technique, for the most part, I'm going to keep my posts brief, but highly informative (hopefully).
CHARACTER CREATION is challenging for beginning writers. They wonder, how can I make the people in my stories as real as possible?
Here are two easy ways to jump start creative juices when inventing believable fictional characters.
1. Let your character emulate a real person you know or let him be a composite of two or more people you know (know personally or through the media, etc) Write a complete description of these real people, embellishing where you see fit in order to create the character you envision for your story.
2. Let your character emulate a fictional character you see as very real, someone who is as messed up, evil, good or heroic as you want your fictional character to be. Write a complete description using this fictional character and embellish as liberally as you need to in order to create the character you want.
Naturally, character development is much more complicated than this, but these two starting points are excellent places to begin to get the creative juices flowing.
Try it!
Fran
Fran Shaff, Award-Winning Author
http://sites.google.com/site/fshaff
Published on January 17, 2011 12:07
•
Tags:
creating-characters, how-to-write, writing-tips
Rewrites and Edits Step by Step
Completing a first draft to a novel is a huge relief. By the time an author has reached this milestone, she's spent quite a bit of effort on research, character and plot development and tons of little things which go into completing a novel. She may have spent weeks, months or even years on her first draft.
Unfortunately, the relief of first draft completion is often short lived because the savvy author knows rewrites and edits to a manuscript can take as long as it took to put together the first draft.
In order to minimize the time necessary to make a manuscript just right, it sometimes helps to follow a few organizational steps which can make rewrites and edits a bit less overwhelming.
1. Let the manuscript set for at least a month. Two months would be even better. Putting time between the completion of the first draft and the beginning of first rewrites can give an author better perspective toward his project.
2. When picking up the manuscript to give it a good read through, it can be helpful for the author to look at it as though it were the work of someone else. The more objective and critical he is of the book, the better he'll do in finding flaws and areas which need further work.
3. To keep things as simple as possible it helps to examine scenes one at a time. Does each scene have a goal? Does each scene drive the plot forward? Does each scene end in a way which compels the reader to want to read more?
4. It is important to notice the way characters behave in each and every scene. Are they being true to whom they are?
5. Do turning points, the dark moment and the climax come at appropriate points in the plot?
These are a few suggestions which may help in the initial read through and rewrites.
Later, after the rewrites of plot/character are finished, come the edits. Here the writer notices such things as:
1. Character inconsistencies (Joe's blue eyes on p. 25 and green ones on p. 152).
2. Poorly written sentences or paragraphs.
3. Redundancies--overusing a word.
4. Repetition of circumstances, words, phrases.
5. Any overlooked English errors (their for they're, two for too, etc)
It's a good idea to let time lapse between rewrites and edits so the author can maintain a high level of objectivity each time she reviews her project.
Completing a first draft does have its moment of bliss, but it is soon followed by the reality of the hard work it takes to get a novel into first-rate condition.
And nothing short of our best book is owed to our readers.
Happy spring!
Fran
Fran Shaff, Award-Winning Author
http://sites.google.com/site/fshaff
Unfortunately, the relief of first draft completion is often short lived because the savvy author knows rewrites and edits to a manuscript can take as long as it took to put together the first draft.
In order to minimize the time necessary to make a manuscript just right, it sometimes helps to follow a few organizational steps which can make rewrites and edits a bit less overwhelming.
1. Let the manuscript set for at least a month. Two months would be even better. Putting time between the completion of the first draft and the beginning of first rewrites can give an author better perspective toward his project.
2. When picking up the manuscript to give it a good read through, it can be helpful for the author to look at it as though it were the work of someone else. The more objective and critical he is of the book, the better he'll do in finding flaws and areas which need further work.
3. To keep things as simple as possible it helps to examine scenes one at a time. Does each scene have a goal? Does each scene drive the plot forward? Does each scene end in a way which compels the reader to want to read more?
4. It is important to notice the way characters behave in each and every scene. Are they being true to whom they are?
5. Do turning points, the dark moment and the climax come at appropriate points in the plot?
These are a few suggestions which may help in the initial read through and rewrites.
Later, after the rewrites of plot/character are finished, come the edits. Here the writer notices such things as:
1. Character inconsistencies (Joe's blue eyes on p. 25 and green ones on p. 152).
2. Poorly written sentences or paragraphs.
3. Redundancies--overusing a word.
4. Repetition of circumstances, words, phrases.
5. Any overlooked English errors (their for they're, two for too, etc)
It's a good idea to let time lapse between rewrites and edits so the author can maintain a high level of objectivity each time she reviews her project.
Completing a first draft does have its moment of bliss, but it is soon followed by the reality of the hard work it takes to get a novel into first-rate condition.
And nothing short of our best book is owed to our readers.
Happy spring!
Fran
Fran Shaff, Award-Winning Author
http://sites.google.com/site/fshaff
Published on March 21, 2011 14:02
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Tags:
edits, how-to-write, rewrites, writing-tips