Courtney Wendleton's Blog, page 5
January 11, 2021
Catch Up
As it has been two years, let’s play a quick game of catching up.
The next couple of posts will cover the three books I have published: A Ninja in Time, Finding Santa and The Beta and Me.
Aside from the new ones, Naturally Luna has been re-edited.
Currently only six of ten books can be purchased on Amazon in paperback form as well as ebook.
Personal wise, I am well. Meds have everything under control, for the most part. We moved into a bigger house. I braved the traveling brouhaha and took a trip to Missouri last October. Saw my mom and dad. Loved it, miss them terribly. It was my first trip home in nine years.
In the future I have many books planned and in progress, just don’t know what I’m going to do next. I am working on the third installment of the Legend series, but it’s moving slowly. Naturally Luna is being looked at for a possible sequel as many fans seem to be requesting it.
Until next time, have fun and good luck.
Try, Try, Again.
Sorry it’s been two years since my last post. A lot has happened, and once again I’m going to try and keep up with my blog posts. Right now I’m going to start slow, one post a week and see how that works. If well, I will up it. Until then good luck and have fun!
January 10, 2021
Chinese Webnovel Categories (rehosted)
I recently noticed that an excellent article on Chinese webnovel categories disappeared from the internet. It turns out that the author (named “Epithetic”) deleted their blog at some point. It would be a shame if it was gone for good. Thankfully, I managed to find this forum thread along with an old google doc where […]
Chinese Webnovel Categories (rehosted)
April 7, 2020
I Did a Thing!
We discussed my one of my new books, A Ninja in Time!
May 18, 2018
Behind the Trend of Huge Eyes in Japanese Anime
by Yukako Ikezoe
There have been controversial debates going on about why characters in Japanese manga have huge eyes. Do such huge eyes in Manga mean that Japanese people are craving for them?
Having read Terry Kawashima’s piece, “Seeing Faces, Making Races: Challenging Visual tropes of Racial Differences”, I also started wondering why the eyes of characters in Japanese manga are big, even though I had never strongly questioned that before. Readers from Western countries might have wondered about the looks of characters in Manga because the characters’ features are similar to the features Caucasians have, including round eyes or blond hair.
Thinking about the real purpose of this kind of trend from the perspective of Japanese myself, I would say that is not because Japanese strongly desire to get big eyes like Caucasians, but rather because big eyes are one of the most important techniques to express characters’…
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May 7, 2018
On Writing Multiple POVs
by Lizard is Writing
Anonymous asked: “Hi Lizard! I have an idea for a writing piece I want to do. I have characters, a majority of the plot, and a brief outline of the ending. The only thing is, I don’t know how to begin in a way that isn’t overwhelming to the reader. I have a bunch of different characters who all need to be in the same place at the same time. I don’t know how to write in multiple perspectives in a way that doesn’t drag on or go too quickly. Any advice?”
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March 7, 2018
Top Ten Favorite Book Quotes
Happy TTT everyone!
I have been out of blogging for some time due to personal and health issues, I gotta admit missed the Top Ten Tuesday the most.
Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly blog meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl and this week’s theme is favorite book quotes. Here goes my top ten:
“Memories are dangerous things. You turn them over and over, until you know every touch and corner, but still you’ll find an edge to cut you.”
“I remember… I remember asking a wise man, once… though whether it was last year or a thousand years ago I cannot tell. I asked him, ‘Why do Men fear the dark?’ I could tell he thought the question wise, though I felt no wisdom in asking it. ‘Because darkness,’ he told me, ‘is ignorance made visible.’ ‘And do Men despise ignorance?’ I asked. ‘No,’ he said, ‘they prize…
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March 6, 2018
Don’t Erase, Highlight
I go back and forth on how I wish sentences to be worded, but the second I choose one way I decide I want to go back or a few days later I think I want to change it back. If I’m lucky to make that choice a second later, I can hit the undo button but if it is a few days later (as is often the case with me) I can’t quite remember how it was previously worded before and the undo button is useless.
Now the easiest way to do this would probably be to use the strike-through feature in Word or Google docs (the two I use, but whichever platform you use probably has one as well), but seeing the word(s) there bug me. They distract me when I’m reading through it and makes a few minutes of reading into a longer period of time. I have taken a leaf out of the FBI’s playbook and highlight the non-used words in black.
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Here, I have left the redacted words because this story is obviously still in it’s first draft and still deciding if I want to reword the sentences or not.
This method also helps when I work through my notes or “outline” like I mentioned in Different Outlines.
March 5, 2018
Different Outlines
In school you probably learned an outline structure similar to this one:
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But that’s not the only way to outline. Unless this method works for you, it doesn’t need to be that structured or you can use other templates that are the same just different starting letters and numbers.
Personally, I am not as structured in my outlines as above. That just happened because I copied those rules from a webpage (https://en.japantravel.com/guide/shrine-temple-etiquette/20924 ) as a quick reference. Most of the time my outline just looks like this:
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Each line starting with a capital letter is a different thought. It is just a rough sketch of what I want/need to happen in that chapter without being fleshed out. These quick notes are faster to write so I don’t forget anything. I also don’t have to worry about if I’m putting things in the right level of the outline structure or agonize over where it needs to go if it can fit into two or more categories.
Then it’s right below the words I’m typing and can see where I am headed with the story and the notes change into an actual story. The words above have been fleshed out from other notes, and those below are still needing to be applied.
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Then because I am very forgetful, instead of deleting the notes I’ve used I highlight them in black and move them to the end of the chapter’s notes. So if I need to go back and look at them, they are still there.
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This is just a trick that helps my writing process go smoother than keeping thousands of notebooks stashed all over the house (admittedly still have those too) and keeps my thoughts better organized than I have been able to do with pen and paper (probably because I use pen and hate pencils with a passion). You can use any color you want, I just chose yellow for notes and black for redacted because I use other colors for other color coding that I tend to do to help remember different characters.
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March 4, 2018
#BookReview: The Favor (Settling the Score #1) by Josh Hunter
4 out of 5 Stars
Good but too short. I think part one and two could be out together to make it longer and better.


