Lucy V. Hay's Blog, page 45

January 8, 2016

Free Writers' Resources & More

Happy New Year

GOT A WRITING QUESTION?

There are now multiple ways to send your writing questions via social media:

Tweet me with it as @Bang2write

Leave it in The B2W Facebook group, HERE, or on the wall of the FB page, HERE

Leave it on my page at B2W's Quora page

Leave it on the B2W Ask.FM page anonymously

Email me

FREE STUFF!!!

I've updated the 3 most popular PDF downloads on B2W - The 1 Page Pitch Reference Guide; The Last Minute Submissions Checklist; plus The 1 Page Screenplay Format Reference Guide.

You'll also find links to various free ebooks, cheat sheets and a .doc version of the B2W novel writing pitch template. GET THEM ALL, HERE or click the pic below.

CONNECT WITH OTHER WRITERS

Also, if you're wanting to connect with your fellow writers and creatives, be sure to join the new Facebook group, Bang2writers. Since its launch in September, it's grown to 800+ members ALREADY and it's full to the brim with lively chat about writing, not to mention links and leads and Bang2writers all helping one another. JOIN HERE.

See you there!
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Published on January 08, 2016 08:39 Tags: amwriting, free, novels, pitches, resources, screenplays, writing

December 24, 2015

Merry Christmas!!

MERRY XMAS
Still writing or obsessing about writing over Christmas?
The Bang2writers are too! Join The B2W Facebook group, HERE or click the pic above.
See you there!
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Published on December 24, 2015 02:56 Tags: happy-holidays, merry-christmas, reading, social-media

November 1, 2015

FREE this All Saints Day!!

Lizzies_Story_Kindle_JPEG DYK? You can get a free book today (Nov 1st only) - My novel, The Decision: Lizzie's Story. The Decision Book Series confronts a female protagonist with ALL the potential outcomes of a single dilemma. Want it? THEN GET IT NOW, HERE or click the pic on the left.
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Published on November 01, 2015 03:09 Tags: ebook, free, kindle, ya, yalit, young-adult

October 26, 2015

10 Tips For Writing Inspiration

Even in this age of social media, link sharing and shout outs, Google and other search engines are STILL the biggest bringer of Bang2writers to this blog!

"Writing inspiration" and "writing success" are key searchwords that generate traffic to B2W, so I love  Stephanie's fab, informative and frank post on finding one's way out of the writing doldrums. Enjoy!

idea-605766_1280

Writers never expect to face lack of inspiration. Unfortunately, the reality is harsh. No matter how enthusiastic you are about the new project, you’ll inevitably come to a point where you struggle. That's just the way it is!

Every writer needs to renew the initial inspiration that drives him or her towards its completion. There are different methods you can implement, but we collected the most successful ones. So here's 10 tips that will help you discover - or recover! - your inspiration for writing.

READ MORE:

http://www.bang2write.com/2015/10/top...
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Published on October 26, 2015 06:06 Tags: amwriting, books, inspiration, novels, tips, writing

August 12, 2015

Check out B2W's writing infographics

Check out the B2W infographics for tips on ‪writing‬ tools, jobs & more! http://www.bang2write.com/category/infographic.

Don't forget you can see all my books, HERE.

infographic
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Published on August 12, 2015 00:52 Tags: home-office, infographic, information, jobs, tools, writing

August 11, 2015

2 Things ALL Writers Get Wrong In Early Drafts

k-bigpic


Yep: Not. Even. Kidding. We're talking novelists AND screenwriters, plus pro writers JUST AS MUCH as the seasoned and newbies too ! Just about every single writer IN THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE including aliens (and why wouldn't *they* write?) get these two things wrong in their early drafts. And NO it's not hyperbole either!

Bang2writers might come to me and ask, "What are the most likely things writers get wrong in early drafts?" I suspect this is because they want to try and avoid said mistakes and go straight to the good stuff. And c'mon, who wouldn't?

BUT YOU CAN'T. Because unfortunately it's not *just* (!) a question of using perfect craft, fancying up that format or polishing that dialogue 'til it shines ... It's a question of REACHING INSIDE YOURSELF and pulling out your writing GUTS and then SPLASHING THE GORE ALL OVER THE PAGE. A bit like this, in fact:

freedom_1164175... Really. (What?! Quit whining ... As a writer, you get to SOAR as well).


So, yeah. ALL WRITERS have problems with these two things in early drafts ... and if they say they don't? THEIR PANTS ARE ON ACTUAL FIRE. But what are these two problematic areas, that have readers and editors reaching for the red pen?



1. Characterisation

I got 99 problems but a script ain't one. OK it is - and it's 'cos your characters SUCK. Are you trying to kill readers and editors the world over? BECAUSE YOU JUST MIGHT. Here's why:

i) Too many characters.

It's very simple, homies. You just DON'T NEED a billion named characters in your screenplay! 6-8 main roles MAXIMUM is *about* right, depending on what story you're telling and whether it's for film or TV. In novels you have more leeway sure, but don't forget that you don't want to confuse the reader either, so think very long and hard before introducing a new named character. Instead, think about character role function and what that character contributes to the STORY. Boom!

ii) Clichéd characters.

You know how someone writes something really FRESH and ORIGINAL and then everyone else imitates it until we all become SICK to the back teeth of it? THAT. Don't do it. Always, always innovate. Also: Maverick Cop with a dead wife/girlf: get outta my sight! You were cool in 1987. Now you're stinking the place out with your psychotic rage and Mullet. Begone! Same goes for you too, Stock Characters - boooooo!

iii) Bizarre characters.

"You know those boring clichéd or stock characters? I want something that's the EXACT OPPOSITE and what's more, I want those characters to be TOTALLY UNRECOGNISEABLE."

Said by no reader, editor, agent, producer, publisher or audience member EVER. Balance, my friends! Give us something new, but don't take us to the other end of the scale, FFS.

iv) Un/Likeable characters.

NEWSFLASH: Your characters don't need to be "likeable". This is bullshit. But equally if they're SO obnoxious they have no redeeming features whatsoever (even if that's just being brilliantly humourous with their obnoxiousness), then we can't get behind them EITHER. Because characters need to be RELATABLE.

vi) Characters without a clear motivation.

Sure the objectives of various stories differ, but if I grind your story up into the basics, what do we get? Using a character that wants or needs something. So if I don't know what your character wants, why s/he wants it, how s/he proposes to get it and when by, then what am I signing up for exactly? Sure, a novel may tend more towards the psychological here, but still there is the question: Why have we dropped into these characters' lives AT THIS POINT? If you can't answer, then neither will the reader.

vii) Characters doing what we expect.
A lot of writers don't believe that characters may do EXACTLY THE SAME THINGS in various stories, regardless of genre. On this basis then, go read your nearest spec pile of novels and screenplays. Seriously. OFF YOU GO. See you in 5 years ...

... 2019 UPDATE: Oh hai! You're back. Told you, didn't I?!?!

vi) Characters doing something completely out of the left field.

Aaaaand we're back to point iii). Seriously, DON'T take us from "samey" to OTT. This writing shit is about BALANCE, innit. Tattoo it on your forehead (only do it backwards, so you can read it in a mirror).

THE LESSON HERE:

Good characterisation is not about being "the same", but it's not about being completely off the wall, either. Audiences want to recognise **something** of themselves - whoever they are - in your characters, so make sure you are authentic and don't EVER write clichés or stereotypes. Last of all: ensure your characters know what they're doing, else you will give your audience NO REASON to get on board their journey with them.

2. Structure

Listen carefully: I SHALL SAY THIS ONLY ONCE (bonus cookie to whomever gets that 80s TV reference).

i) The First Ten Pages.

Novelists: don't make the reader "wait" for something to happen while you spend the first thirty or forty pages setting up your characters and storyworld, seriously. Your readers are the most media literate they've ever been! So hit the ground running, they can take it. More: 8 Ways To Jump Start Your Description.

Screenwriters: make sure you have an OPENING IMAGE. Make sure your first page rocks. Don't start with clichés. Let us know who the characters are and state your story's intent. End with a page 10 that MAKES the reader want to read more. Here's 10 further Questions For Your First Ten Pages.

ii) What the hell are you using, here?

Non linearity, non linearity, non linearity ... Guaranteed to make a script reader's brain EXPLODE for a multitude of reasons! Usually because the writer doesn't know what s/he's doing. (And yes, this applies to novels as well as screenplays).

First of all, does your story NEED to be non linear? If it does, then you need to RE-structure your structure!!! So first, know what you're doing structure-wise, before you re-arrange stuff.

When it comes to novels, your story may well be psychological and time may well be more "fluid", but that doesn't mean you can jump all over the shop: readers still have to be able to FOLLOW. You need to indicate this in the description clearly and preferably "anchor" the reader in the "present" somehow. You can do this any way you want, but in addition there needs to be a "point" to that "present" - if you've just got a character sitting there and thinking/remembering stuff, then why not actually have the story IN the "past", since it's obviously more interesting?

Screenwriting-wise, when it comes to storytelling devices like intercuts, flashbacks, framing stories, dream sequences, montages etc, first ask yourself: are they "fillers" -- does the story warrant them a) at all? b) at this particular place in the narrative? More: Good Examples of Storytelling Devices.

Secondly, ask yourself: can the reader FOLLOW what you're doing? Have you indicated where we are time-wise ON THE PAGE, using clear formatting techniques? More: Format One Stop Shop.

iii) Jeopardy vs. Lethargy.
Are your scenes, chapters or moments too long? Be honest with yourself. When I read early drafts of screenplays or novels, often characters will talk for pages and pages. As a result, the work becomes rather theatrical and play-like, so dialogue "leads" the story. Remember, we want to read novels or see movies about characters DOING stuff. If you ever feel compelled to write a long conversation in your screenplay or novel, then ask yourself if you could turn it into ACTIONS instead. Bet you can.

iv) Treading Water vs. Climbing Walls.
Thanks to all the first ten page advice on the web, very often screenplays will hit the ground running now, then slow down and tread water from p 10 or 20 onwards.

Novels will frequently have the opposite problem: they will spend an aaaaaaaaage painstakingly setting up the entire storyworld,  and everything about its characters before actually kicking off.

So envisage Yves Lavandier's great advice: your character wants/needs something, but is encountering obstacles in his/her way, so is having to "climb walls, each one bigger than the last".

So what's in your character's WAY and HOW will s/he defeat it (or not)?

And last of all:
v) Page count and you're DEAD!

There is nothing more dull than a spec screenplay or novel where the writer has CLEARLY said, "Well I need to ensure [THIS] happens on [THAT] page to keep my audience interested."

No. It is NOT interesting. It is TICK THE BOX WRITING. And yes, it is completely and utterly OBVIOUS. Have faith in your characters, your writing and in your story. Be intuitive. Don't let structural methods or formulas dictate what you write and where.

THE LESSON HERE: 

Use all the structure advice on the internet and in books to your best advantage, but there is NO SUBSTITUTE for using your own intuition and having faith in your characters, your story and own writing. It's this that will showcase your voice, ultimately. Now -- go start that redraft!!!

LIKE THIS POST??
PsulitHy Then check out my screenwriting books, available in eBook and paperback from Amazon and all good book stores. Click the pics or to look inside Writing & Selling Drama Screenplays, CLICK HERE.

 

thriller

CLICK HERE to read an excerpt from Writing & Selling Thriller Screenplays about the iconic character of Driver in the movie DRIVE, courtesy of B2W friends Film Doctor. Click on the pic or HERE, to look inside in the front of the book.
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Published on August 11, 2015 09:34 Tags: amwriting, drafts, madness, rewriting, writing

July 29, 2015

Quotes For Writing Success

success-1
1) Pablo Picasso
Action is the foundational key to all success.

2) Emily Dickinson
Success is counted sweetest by those who never succeed.

3) Somerset W. Maugham
The common idea that success spoils people by making them vain, egotistic and self-complacent is erroneous; on the contrary it makes them, for the most part, humble, tolerant and kind.

4) Ellen DeGeneres
It's failure that gives you the proper perspective on success.

5) Arnold H. Glasgow 
Success isn't a result of spontaneous combustion. You must set yourself on fire.

6) Bruce Lee
Always be yourself, express yourself, have faith in yourself, do not go out and look for a successful personality and duplicate it.

READ MORE SUCCESS QUOTES at:
http://www.bang2write.com/2015/05/top...
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Published on July 29, 2015 02:37 Tags: authors, famous, quotes, success, writing

July 15, 2015

Writing Secrets Of Famous Authors

top-secret

1) Stephen King

If you want to be a writer, you must do two things above all others: read a lot and write a lot. There's no way around these two things that I'm aware of, no shortcut.

2) Suzanne Collins

All the writing elements are the same. You need to tell a good story... You've got good characters... People think there's some dramatic difference between writing 'Little Bear' and the 'Hunger Games,' and as a writer, for me, there isn't.

3) George Orwell

For a creative writer possession of the 'truth' is less important than emotional sincerity.

4) John Steinbeck 

The writer must believe that what he is doing is the most important thing in the world. And he must hold to this illusion even when he knows it is not true.

READ MORE:
http://www.bang2write.com/2015/07/25-...
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Published on July 15, 2015 01:20 Tags: authors, quotes, reading, screenwriting, writer, writing

July 14, 2015

Best Screenwriting Software (Paid-For & Free)

courier Michelle asks:

I've heard mixed advice from everyone on the screenwriting software issue... Some advise getting it, others say there's no need for expensive software. What's your take ?

Well, obviously: end of the day, it's your choice. Some people like screenwriting software; others see it as an excuse for a company to make shedloads of cash. That disclaimer aside however, I think you're a mentalist if you don't use *some sort* of screenwriting software. For one thing, it looks better on the page than manually formatted MS Word. It also takes a hell of a lot less time to hit "return" than it does to go back and painstakingly move the text about the page into the right place. What's more, a script in MS Word is often that bit longer than your automatically-formatted screenplay, so your page count may go up and give you essentially a false reading of how long it really is.

So I'm a fan of screenwriting software, defo. But which one? Well again, that's totally up to you. Here's an overview of those software packages that have crossed the B2W desktop in the past ten years ...

READ MORE:
http://www.bang2write.com/2009/09/scr...
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Published on July 14, 2015 06:04 Tags: screenplays, screenwriting, scriptwriting, software, writing

July 13, 2015

If you like MEAN GIRLS ... love this

Jasmine's_Story_KINDLE_23_May_2014 2 copy

"I don't mean it horribly, but she's got a reputation ..."

Like MEAN GIRLS? Love THE DECISION: JASMINE'S STORY. CLICK HERE or on the pic. Enjoy!
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Published on July 13, 2015 07:07 Tags: amreading, teenagers, ya, yalit

Lucy V. Hay's Blog

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