Sarah Barra's Blog, page 8

December 7, 2014

midenianscholar:

10 Writing Resources: Characters
From the...



midenianscholar:



10 Writing Resources: Characters


From the basics to the very in-depth, these are some of the resources I go to when I’m developing new characters. Have a look at my favorites, and add your own!



1. 25 Things About Creating Characters


As a writer, creating characters is probably the most important thing you do. Get it wrong, and the story will be wrong no matter how well plotted.


2. Lessons From James Scott Bell: Characters That Jump Off The Page  


Readers are engaged by characters who do not always act in a predictable way. Think of how to have your character make decisions or respond in ways the reader won’t see coming.


3. Crafting Memorable Characters  


Successful main characters are the agents of their own destiny, they are someone we root for, and they grow or change during the course of the novel.


4. 6 Must-Know Tricks for Getting to Know Your Characters    


Most of us don’t start writing until we’ve come up with a character we just adore. But how can we make sure this character will also be adored by our readers?


5. Creating Your Hero’s Fatal Flaw


The most intriguing conflicts are the ones that come from within people’s own personalities.


6. Five Unrealistic Character Traits    


These characters have traits that are so unrealistic, the audience starts thinking about the author’s intention rather than the story at hand.


7. 100 Character Development Questions for Writers  


Answer these in character, but only in a situation where your character would be 100% honest with themselves and with the person asking the question.


8. Writing Crutches: Gestures  


What are gesture crutches, and why should we avoid them?


9. The Path to Deepening Your Protagonist


 Protagonists don’t write themselves. No character does. So why leave trait-choice up to the character?


10. Nine Kick-Ass Excercises to Find Your Character’s Voice  


Creating unique voices for each viewpoint character is essential in creating fiction readers want to read over and over.



What about you? What are your favorite blog posts about creating characters?


(cross posted over here)


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Published on December 07, 2014 16:51

mazerunnermovie:

What is WCKD?



mazerunnermovie:



What is WCKD?

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Published on December 07, 2014 16:50

cassandraclare:

ligtwood:

Shadowhunter Families 2/?: The...





cassandraclare:



ligtwood:



Shadowhunter Families 2/?: The Herondales

The symbol of the family is a bird called the heron. Their ring, in particular, has a pattern of the birds in flight.



pic cred (x), The Lightwoods



Ooh. I like when people do these things so I don’t have to :)

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Published on December 07, 2014 16:50

peridotpirate:

Some of the very best subtitles





















peridotpirate:



Some of the very best subtitles


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Published on December 07, 2014 16:49

"It’s not how great the ideas are. It’s about how you write them, to make them great."

“It’s not how great the ideas are. It’s about how you write them, to make them great.”

- Primadonna Angela (via maxkirin)
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Published on December 07, 2014 16:46

jaclcfrost:

"you use too many commas in your writing" you gonna comma over here and stop me

jaclcfrost:



"you use too many commas in your writing" you gonna comma over here and stop me


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Published on December 07, 2014 16:45

"I write because I write - as anyone in the arts does. You’re a painter because you feel you have no..."

“I write because I write - as anyone in the arts does. You’re a painter because you feel you have no choice but to paint. You’re a writer because this is what you do.”

- Richard Price
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Published on December 07, 2014 16:45

December 3, 2014

"I dream too much, work too little."

“I dream too much, work too little.”

- Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath  (via wordsnquotes)
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Published on December 03, 2014 18:49

"Better to write for yourself and have no public than to write for the public and have no self."

“"Better to write for yourself and have no public than to write for the public and have no self."”

- Cyril Connolly, The New Statesman, 1933 (via meaganspooner)
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Published on December 03, 2014 18:47