Saturday, October 26, 2024
6 Ways Your Setting Can Create Conflict
Setting can play a much bigger role in your story’s conflict that you might realize.
No matter what form it takes, conflict is at the core of every story. It’s part of what drives the plot, and it’s what makes readers eager to read on to see if the protagonist succeeds. Characters face problem after problem, and with each trouble found, they’re forced to make tough decisions about what to do next. It’s this constant flow of dealing with problems that keeps the story moving.
But conflict also exists in the world around the characters which has nothing to do with them personally—it’s just the inherent conflict of the world. The setting can be rife with problems that prevent your protagonist from solving their problems and even add to their internal conflicts.
Saturday, October 19, 2024
A Step-By-Step Plan to Create Compelling Characters
Strong characters are vital to a strong story, so don't scrimp on their development.
Developing characters is one of those things where everyone has their own method (which is totally fine). But it also often takes a writer multiple tries to find that perfect process that works for you. No matter what you might read out there, there's no right or wrong way to do it.
Some folks love to interview their characters, others make lists of key traits, some fill out pre-designed forms with a variety of details, and even find photos online of what they look like (I find this photo bit particularly useful).
One friend of mine creates collages that represent that character, letting her mind find images that feel right to her, then thinks about the kind of person who'd create that collage. Another friend dives deep into the emotional states of the characters and needs to understand how they tick before she can do much with them. And me? I only know the bare bones going in.
Saturday, October 05, 2024
4 Tips on Writing Action Scenes
A good action scene starts with the character. Seriously.
At this point in my career, writing action comes pretty easily to me, but that wasn't always the case. My early work was way too descriptive in how my fight scenes played out—I explained every detail, I created special names for fighting styles and whatnot. It took longer to read the action that it did to actually perform the action.
Saturday, September 28, 2024
How Do You Know if Your Writing is Getting Better?
Almost every writer at some point has wondered, "Is my writing getting any better?" I've wondered about it, many writers I know have wondered about it, and odds are good you have, too. It's a normal question when what you're doing is so subjective.
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Stepping Out: A Look at Point of View Shifts
Slipping out of your point-of-view-character's head can jar a reader right out of the story.
Years ago, I started a book and set it down before I'd finished the first chapter. The precise moment, was when a paragraph began in one character's head, and ended in another character's head. Even worse, those two characters were in different countries, so it wasn't as if it was an omniscient narrator with characters in the same scene.
Saturday, September 14, 2024
4 Must-Ask Questions Before You Start Your Novel
By Janice Hardy, @Janice_Hardy
A little thinking before you start writing can make a huge difference in how easy that story is to write.
For some writers, a blank page is a scary thing to face. For
others, they see all that white space as an opportunity, and can't wait to dive
in and tell their story. The vast majority of us probably fall somewhere in
between, with some ideas making us eager to write, and some fighting us for
every word.
I've discovered through (often painful) trial and error, that my novels go smoother when I spend some time planning them before I write them. I don't have to figure everything out, but knowing what my core conflict is, what my protagonist needs to do, and who my antagonist is makes it a lot easier to write the first draft. I struggle less, my plot comes together more quickly, and the manuscript turns out much cleaner.
Saturday, September 07, 2024
You Can Fight Mama Nature: What to do When Your Antagonist is Nature Herself
Some antagonists can't be fought—they can only be survived.
A great example of a nature antagonist is a traditional disaster movie like Volcano.
Saturday, August 24, 2024
An Easy Tip for Tightening Your Novel’s Plot
A loose plot can easily unravel, but tying up the threads strengthens the entire novel.
One of my favorite things when writing is when I make an accidental connection that fits so well it looks like I’d planned it all along. It’s my subconscious working in the background.
One day, it dawned on me that I didn’t have to wait for my inner writer to clue me in—I could consciously look for those connections.
Once I started looking, I found multiple “hidden connections” per book that deepened the plot and made it more unpredictable. The obvious characters became red herrings for the more subtle characters lurking in the background doing “plot things” and making the story work.
Plus, it’s a ton of fun.
Saturday, August 17, 2024
Broken, but Still Good: 3 Ways to Create Character Flaws
Choose the right flaws and weaknesses to round out your characters.
There's an old saying: "I'm not looking for the perfect man, just one with faults I like." No clue where I heard this, but it always stuck with me, because it’s so true. Everyone has faults, and some are more palatable than others.
This is true for our characters, too. Their flaws and weaknesses make them three-dimensional people readers can relate to and root for. They also allow our characters to make the mistakes and bad choices that lead to compelling plots.
But picking any old flaw isn't going to cut it. Who cares if the protagonist can't cook if cooking never matters to the story? So what if they can’t commit if they’re never asked to? It's important to choose flaws and weaknesses that add to the overall novel.
Saturday, August 10, 2024
Why You Should Write a Novel "Just for Fun"
Not everything you write needs to be published—or even publishable.
A few years after I published my third novel (Darkfall), I fell into a dark time with my writing. I was drafting a novel that did not want to work the way I wanted it to, and I dreaded sitting down at the keyboard every day. Writing was no longer fun.
With sad relief, I set the manuscript aside and worked on a non-fiction project I'd been wanting to do (my very first writing book, Plotting Your Novel: Ideas and Structure). I fully intended to return to fiction afterward, expecting my dread of the novel to have passed by then.
It hadn't.
I'll be honest—it was terrifying.