Lucy V. Hay's Blog, page 51
April 7, 2014
The Writing Café
Another great Tumblr blog, The Writing Café, has published my latest B2W post about being your own worst enemy as a writer. Are you on Tumblr? It's a great resource for writers, check it out
April 6, 2014
Character Development
The fantastic Tumblr Blog, FuckYeahCharacterDevelopment has published one of my most hit B2W articles on characterisation, "5 Ways Writers Screw Up Their Characters". In the article I break down how writers often booby trap their own writing (especially plotting) by trying to make us "care" about their characters. Enjoy!
Published on April 06, 2014 08:05
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Tags:
amwriting, characterisation, novels, writing, writing-problems
April 4, 2014
All About Me & My Writing!
Many thanks to Rob Stickler for tagging me in this blog tour about my writing. Everyone gets the same 4 questions, so here are my 4 answers!
1) What Am I Working On?
I'm currently working on my second non fiction book, which as the name suggests is about drama screenplays. This time, the book will be rather different to WRITING AND SELLING THRILLER SCREENPLAYS, because whilst drama might have certain sub categories, a drama **can** literally be ANYTHING. So I'm approaching the notion of what *makes* drama "satisfying" in terms of storytelling, using detailed case studies and for which I'm thrilled to announce I have "behind the scenes" insights from Kelly Marcel, co-writer on SAVING MR BANKS and Eric Heisserer, who wrote and directed HOURS, starring the late Paul Walker. There's also case studies on Brit faves like DEAR FRANKIE (2004) and BEAUTIFUL THING (1996), too! Read more about it, HERE.
2) How Does My Work Differ From Others Of Its Genre?
Non Fiction-wise, my writing on film in both my books is not academic in tone and I hope, informative, helpful and ultimately, fun to read, basically! :D
Fiction-wise, I write Young Adult fiction (YA) about social issues, always using female protagonists, for a predominantly female audience of approximately 14-20 years old; what's unusual about it is I do not try to "lecture" my target audience, but present the MANY different ways and choices a given situation - like teen pregnancy, in LIZZIE'S STORY - *could* play out. I do this by trying to ensure I never present the "right" way to approach an issue, plus I also try and engage my target audience via transmedia online, such as via LIZZIE'S DIARY (which details the backstory leading to the events in the novel, read instalments 1-4 HERE) and sharing links, quotes, articles and so on via The Decision Facebook page and via @LizziesDecision on Twitter.
3) Why Do I Write What I Do?

In terms of my non fiction, I think films - and storytelling - should be for EVERYONE, not just those who do expensive screenwriting and filmmaking MAs; I want to be accessible to as many people as possible, so I hope my screenwriting books are especially inspiring to those who maybe would not have thought they *could* be writers. What's more, I don't believe in over analysis either: sure, stories are open to interpretation and media imagery means different things to different people, but at the same time I think it's desirable to temper that with the knowledge that film is a visual medium created by MANY people, thus we cannot *just* say "what you see is what you get". No one person is the authority on what is a collaboratively created medium.
In terms of my YA fiction for teens and young people, I've blogged before in detail that I was "written off" by society as a teenage single mother, yet it was actually the making of me and INSPIRED me to achieve, rather than fail. I've also met many former teen Mums the same as me and felt frustrated that so many young women are asked to apologise for their success and even collude in their own shaming. Society represents us all as "Vicky Pollards" and enough is ENOUGH. Also, as a trained teacher I've been privileged to be party to so many young people's stories that don't necessarily get the attention they deserve. Being marginalised like this and seeing others marginalised too for a variety of different reasons made me want to write The Decision Book Series, of which Lizzie's is just the first. The next book, JASMINE'S STORY will follow soon, which will be about depression, self esteem and self harm.
4) How Does My Writing Process Work?
My writing process goes something like this:
i) Think about writing / do other stuff
ii) Read stuff about writing / do other stuff / maybe write a plan
iii) Twat around on social media / do other stuff
vi) PANIC
v) THEN write like the wind. For days and days and weeks and weeks. Act weird. Freak out some more.
vi) COLLAPSE having finished.
There's got to be better ways of doing it, of course … And every time I think, "I really oughtn't do it like that next time."
1) What Am I Working On?
I'm currently working on my second non fiction book, which as the name suggests is about drama screenplays. This time, the book will be rather different to WRITING AND SELLING THRILLER SCREENPLAYS, because whilst drama might have certain sub categories, a drama **can** literally be ANYTHING. So I'm approaching the notion of what *makes* drama "satisfying" in terms of storytelling, using detailed case studies and for which I'm thrilled to announce I have "behind the scenes" insights from Kelly Marcel, co-writer on SAVING MR BANKS and Eric Heisserer, who wrote and directed HOURS, starring the late Paul Walker. There's also case studies on Brit faves like DEAR FRANKIE (2004) and BEAUTIFUL THING (1996), too! Read more about it, HERE.
2) How Does My Work Differ From Others Of Its Genre?
Non Fiction-wise, my writing on film in both my books is not academic in tone and I hope, informative, helpful and ultimately, fun to read, basically! :D
Fiction-wise, I write Young Adult fiction (YA) about social issues, always using female protagonists, for a predominantly female audience of approximately 14-20 years old; what's unusual about it is I do not try to "lecture" my target audience, but present the MANY different ways and choices a given situation - like teen pregnancy, in LIZZIE'S STORY - *could* play out. I do this by trying to ensure I never present the "right" way to approach an issue, plus I also try and engage my target audience via transmedia online, such as via LIZZIE'S DIARY (which details the backstory leading to the events in the novel, read instalments 1-4 HERE) and sharing links, quotes, articles and so on via The Decision Facebook page and via @LizziesDecision on Twitter.
3) Why Do I Write What I Do?

In terms of my non fiction, I think films - and storytelling - should be for EVERYONE, not just those who do expensive screenwriting and filmmaking MAs; I want to be accessible to as many people as possible, so I hope my screenwriting books are especially inspiring to those who maybe would not have thought they *could* be writers. What's more, I don't believe in over analysis either: sure, stories are open to interpretation and media imagery means different things to different people, but at the same time I think it's desirable to temper that with the knowledge that film is a visual medium created by MANY people, thus we cannot *just* say "what you see is what you get". No one person is the authority on what is a collaboratively created medium.
In terms of my YA fiction for teens and young people, I've blogged before in detail that I was "written off" by society as a teenage single mother, yet it was actually the making of me and INSPIRED me to achieve, rather than fail. I've also met many former teen Mums the same as me and felt frustrated that so many young women are asked to apologise for their success and even collude in their own shaming. Society represents us all as "Vicky Pollards" and enough is ENOUGH. Also, as a trained teacher I've been privileged to be party to so many young people's stories that don't necessarily get the attention they deserve. Being marginalised like this and seeing others marginalised too for a variety of different reasons made me want to write The Decision Book Series, of which Lizzie's is just the first. The next book, JASMINE'S STORY will follow soon, which will be about depression, self esteem and self harm.4) How Does My Writing Process Work?
My writing process goes something like this:
i) Think about writing / do other stuff
ii) Read stuff about writing / do other stuff / maybe write a plan

iii) Twat around on social media / do other stuff
vi) PANIC
v) THEN write like the wind. For days and days and weeks and weeks. Act weird. Freak out some more.
vi) COLLAPSE having finished.
There's got to be better ways of doing it, of course … And every time I think, "I really oughtn't do it like that next time."
Published on April 04, 2014 08:34
•
Tags:
amwriting, author, novels, screenwriting, scriptchat, writing
April 3, 2014
Save Yourself!
Hey I know how to use Good Reads now, that must mean you HAVE to read my books. It's like, the law. So I don't care if you're not a screenwriter or a 14 year old girl with some sort of social issue, bloody read them. Or I'm warning you, some sort of cyber monster will get you in the night like that demon in PARANORMAL ACTIVITY and drag you screaming and clawing, into the airing cupboard of DOOM. Pass it on. I want to save as many of you as I can.
Published on April 03, 2014 08:38
Lizzie's Decision - Save 33%
The Decision: Lizzie's Story
My YA novel, THE DECISION: LIZZIE'S STORY is the first in "The Decision Books Series" - search on Facebook for links, articles, quotes, humour & chat for and about teenagers and follow @LizziesDecision on Twitter. Lizzie's tale is about teen pregnancy and all the outcomes it *could* have, rather than the tired old stereotypes we so frequently see. Currently it's 33% off on the Amazon Kindle Countdown deal, but the deal is in its final hours and it returns to its normal price later on tonight - just a few hours to go. Hurry hurry - and hope you enjoy it! :) http://ow.ly/vo0VC
My YA novel, THE DECISION: LIZZIE'S STORY is the first in "The Decision Books Series" - search on Facebook for links, articles, quotes, humour & chat for and about teenagers and follow @LizziesDecision on Twitter. Lizzie's tale is about teen pregnancy and all the outcomes it *could* have, rather than the tired old stereotypes we so frequently see. Currently it's 33% off on the Amazon Kindle Countdown deal, but the deal is in its final hours and it returns to its normal price later on tonight - just a few hours to go. Hurry hurry - and hope you enjoy it! :) http://ow.ly/vo0VC
Published on April 03, 2014 06:39
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Tags:
kindle, lizzie-s-story, novel, the-decision-series, writing
Lucy V. Hay's Blog
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