Julie Duffy's Blog, page 80

April 4, 2020

Episode 162 – Premee Mohamed Writes Too Much

StoryADay Podcast episode 162 Cover Image Premee Mohamed






Premee Mohamed is an Indo-Caribbean scientist and speculative fiction writer whose first novel, “Beneath The Rising” has just been released. But I discovered her through her wonderful short stories.


In this conversation we talk about what a good writing day looks like (and what to do on those other days), the inspiration for some of her stories, her writing process and how she organizes her ideas, why short stories are like tattoos, and how the phrase “it’s just photons” makes writing easier.


LINKS


Twitter: @premeesaurus

Curious Fictions: https://stada.me/cfpm

Buy Her Book: https://stada.me/bkpm


Ready to write today, not “some day”?


The post Episode 162 – Premee Mohamed Writes Too Much appeared first on StoryADay.



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Published on April 04, 2020 02:10

April 3, 2020

Why You (Still) Don’t Have Time To Write

Even in this time when it seems like you ought to have more time to write, you probably aren’t finding it.





That’s because nobody ever FINDS time to write. You have to MAKE it.









But before you can make it, you need to know where the time is going. So, Step 1: track your time for a few days and see where it’s all going. Download a tracker from the web and write down your activities, or try this simple printable tracker to assess your time honestly.





Step 2, is to take a little chunk of time and build a fence around it, for writing. It can be small, but put it on your calendar and DO NOT VIOLATE that time. No social media, no interruptions, no list-making. Just write.





Step 3, once you’ve had your first success is to CELEBRATE. Seriously, it will reinforce the good behaviour in your brain, and make you want to do it again.





Step 4, is to build on that success. Perhaps you’d like to hear about the three-legged stool of writing success, and build your own?






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Published on April 03, 2020 07:00

April 2, 2020

Don’t Let Shame Kill Your Creativity

In this video post I talk about how shame shuts down the exact processes we need for creativity and what you can do about it.





Spoiler alert: I talk about reducing your expectations, celebrating every single tiny thing you do that contributes to your writing life, and collecting Story Sparks.





Find out more about Story Sparks here


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Published on April 02, 2020 02:00

April 1, 2020

SWAGr for April 2020

Welcome to the Serious Writers’ Accountability Group!





Post your goals for this month and let us know how you got on with last month’s goals.





SWAGr logo



Leave a comment below telling us how you got on last month, and what you plan to do next month, then check back in on the first of each month, to see how everyone’s doing.





(It doesn’t have to be fiction. Feel free to use this group to push you in whatever creative direction you need.)





Did you live up to your commitment from last month? Don’t remember what you promised to do? Check out the comments from last month.





And don’t forget to celebrate with/encourage your fellow SWAGr-ers on their progress!





Download your SWAGr Tracking Sheet now, to keep track of your commitments this month





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Examples of Goals Set By SWAGr-ers in previous months





Finish first draft of story and write 3 articles for my school paper. – CourtneyWrite on seven days this month – ClareExtend my reading and to read with a ‘writers eye’- Wendywrite 10,000 words – Mary Lou



 So, what will you accomplish this month? Leave your comment below (use the drop-down option to subscribe to the comments and receive lovely, encouraging notifications from fellow StADa SWAGr-ers!)





(Next check-in, 1st of the month. Tell your friends!)


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Published on April 01, 2020 07:08

[Write On Wednesday] Flexing Your Writing Muscles

We are one month away from StoryADay May, people! This is not a drill.





Actually, yes, it kind of is.





This is THE PERFECT TIME TO WARM UP your writing (take it from someone who didn’t, the very first year I ran this thing. I thought it would be smart to save all my ideas until May. Um, wrong!)





Photo by Eugene Chystiakov on Unsplash



One of the easiest ways to get into the flow of writing is to minimize the amount of stuff you have to invent. So today I have two prompts for you, from the archives, which help you take that ‘write what you know’ thing and have a little more fun with it than if you were simply journaling.





The Prompt



Read through these two prompts from the archives and decide which one is most interesting to you.





When Your Character Is Like You





When Your Character Is Not Like You.





Tips



Pull out your Short Story Framework and brainstorm that story. Then: write!





Try to get to the end of the story today. Bonus points: write to the other prompt tomorrow!





Remember, if the story is getting away from you, to limit it only to the essential characters, settings and details. Just enough to paint a picture for yourself.





Also: don’t worry if this story is not ‘good’. It’s only a draft.









If you share you story somewhere (and here’s why you might not want to) post a link here so we can come and read it.





Leave a comment to let us know what you wrote about today, and how it went!














Ready For More?



Take The 3-Day Challenge





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Published on April 01, 2020 06:23

March 30, 2020

Look To The Artists

What is giving people pleasure right now, in this time of crisis? Stories. On screens, on paper, through speakers, in videos. Stories will save us.





And you, as a writer, have a part to play in that salvation.








The post Look To The Artists appeared first on StoryADay.



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Published on March 30, 2020 15:58

March 25, 2020

[Write On Wednesday] Speak, Don’t Tell

Continuing this month’s theme of Show, Don’t Tell, today I want you to focus on how you can do that in dialogue. 





Missed the first prompt on this month’s theme? Find it here.





Couple holding hands, imagePhoto by Yoann Boyer on Unsplash



The Prompt



Write a story set in a particular time or place and use dialogue to show us where we are, rather than telling us.





Suggested scenario: two characters who know each other well, but one is keeping a secret.





Tips



Don’t simply have characters say “In olden days people didn’t even drive electric cars” to show that we’re in the future. Look at this example from “The Era” by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah.





We’re in HowItWas class

“Well,” Mr Harper said, twisting is ugly body towards us. “You should shut your mouth because you’re a youth-teen who doesn’t know sh*t about Sh*t and I’m a full-middler who’s been teaching this stuff for more years than I’m proud of.”

The Era, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah




You KNOW we’re not in a modern day school, right? The attitudes, the name of the class, the way description of ages…so much “show” and very little “tell”, even though we literally have characters telling each other stuff!





Or in this story when the main character has seen a photograph of her deceased mother in a museum and calls her dad to ask about it.





“She was a looker, wasn’t she? What is it, some kind of—do they call it street photography?”

“No,” I said. I described in euphemism what was occurring int he photo.

“There’s been some mistake,” my father answered, finally, resolutely. “That’s your eyes playing tricks on you.”

Natural Light, Kathleen Alcott




Watch how the father goes from open and generous to shut-down and in denial, without the author have to tell us any of that.





Or in this one, what do you infer about the setting, just from the dialogue?





“Y’all put that gator right back where you found him or I’ll pepper your asses with 177s.”

Hellion, Julia Elliot




Pay attention to how you can use dialogue to tell us things other that what the character mean to tell us.





If you share you story somewhere (and here’s why you might not want to) post a link here so we can come and read it.





Leave a comment to let us know what you wrote about today, and how it went!














Ready For More?



Take The 3-Day Challenge





The post [Write On Wednesday] Speak, Don’t Tell appeared first on StoryADay.



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Published on March 25, 2020 04:01

March 21, 2020

161 – Come and write with me

In which I talk about the live writing sprints I’ve been running and the importance of stories in times of stress.


Ready to write today, not “some day”?


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Published on March 21, 2020 03:10

March 19, 2020

Resources for Being At Home

lazy dog lounging on a couchPhoto by Paolo Nicolello on Unsplash



If you have resources for storytellers, writers, parents, teachers, bored adults, in this time of house-bound-ness, please share them in the comments.





Me? I’m watching a lot of zoo and aquarium live feeds

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Published on March 19, 2020 07:09

March 18, 2020

[Write On Wed] The Stories The Books Tell

This post came from my local independent bookstore yesterday, closed for the moment, but imagining wonderful things. (You can support Reads & Co while they’re closed by ordering from them here)





Reads & Company bookstore image Reposted with permission from bookstore owner and writer Robb Cadigan. He says “Hope people have fun with it”, but reserves first dibs on the idea as kids’ book or published story…



The Prompt



What stories do the books tell each other?









Alternate Prompt



If you’re having trouble actually writing stories at the moment, here’s a writing exercise to help you get started writing something





Write down five things you can feel (physically touch) right now.Write down five things you can hear right now.Write down five things you can smell right now.Write down five things you’ve tasted in the past 24 hoursWrite down five things you can see right now.



And yes, I intentionally put sight last, because we tend to default to that, and it’s perhaps the least immersive of the sense in a story.





This exercise should pay off next time you have to write a scene and want to slow the action down or give the reader a moment to understand that something important is happening.


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Published on March 18, 2020 05:52