Jan 22
Posted: under Craft.
Tags: craft of writing, research January 22nd, 2014
Every writer needs to do research at one time or another, but it doesn’t have to be (should not be!) just hours in a library or staring at the computer. In both fiction and nonfiction, vivid writing that brings the reader the next best thing to “being there” requires research done right…from the best available […] [...more]
Every writer needs to do research at one time or another, but it doesn’t have to be (should not be!) just hours in a library or staring at the computer. In both fiction and nonfiction, vivid writing that brings the reader the next best thing to “being there” requires research done right…from the best available sources, in the most hands-on way possible. But most of us (nearly all) don’t have unlimited time and funds to spend on research. How can we use the resources we can afford in the best way? How should a writer tackle the research mountain when all he or she has is sneakers and day-pack?
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Jan 20
Posted: under Craft.
Tags: craft of writing January 20th, 2014
Since there’s interest, here’s another post on writing stories. One perennial question (less here than elsewhere) is “Which came first, plot or character?” It also emerges as “Is this plot-driven or character-driven?” Another variation is “Do you get the idea first, or a character?” In other words, “We know you can’t get a chicken from […] [...more]
Since there’s interest, here’s another post on writing stories. One perennial question (less here than elsewhere) is “Which came first, plot or character?” It also emerges as “Is this plot-driven or character-driven?” Another variation is “Do you get the idea first, or a character?” In other words, “We know you can’t get a chicken from an omelet, but did this omelet start with the egg or the chicken that laid it? And what part does the heat play, and the frying pan?”
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Jan 15
Posted: under Craft.
Tags: craft of writing January 15th, 2014
No, this isn’t about backing up your work on another device or keeping a printout. (Though that kind of backup is vital if you work on a computer.) This is about one way to diagnose and fix a problem you have while writing, and it’s related (no surprise) to the problem you might have untangling […] [...more]
No, this isn’t about backing up your work on another device or keeping a printout. (Though that kind of backup is vital if you work on a computer.) This is about one way to diagnose and fix a problem you have while writing, and it’s related (no surprise) to the problem you might have untangling yarn.
When your yarn (or story) has gotten itself in a tangle, you can either keep pulling forward, on the grounds that it will sort itself out (and sometimes it does, when you’re pulling yarn from the inside of a ball–the entire guts of the ball may come out, or just a small bit that the yarn has looped around) or you can work backwards from the tangle to find that loop or knot and pick it loose. This post is about the backing-up kind of fix. Read the rest of this entry »
Dec 16
Posted: under Craft.
Tags: craft of writing December 16th, 2013
Periodically there are online discussions (and arguments) about what constitutes epic fantasy, who can and can’t write epic fantasy, which books are or are not epic fantasy, why someone should (or should not) write or try to write epic fantasy, what settings work or don’t work for epic fantasy, etc. Given my writing schedule, I […] [...more]
Periodically there are online discussions (and arguments) about what constitutes epic fantasy, who can and can’t write epic fantasy, which books are or are not epic fantasy, why someone should (or should not) write or try to write epic fantasy, what settings work or don’t work for epic fantasy, etc. Given my writing schedule, I usually hear about these weeks to months after they appear and far too late to add my two (hundred and thirty seven) cents to the discussion. But a recent one (October of this year) in another venue, that I happened across by following links on Twitter about something else (you know how Twitter links jump topics, right? It’s how I ended up following a bunch of shepherds in the UK) drove me to comment even though I was very late to the party. It was a sensible, thoughtful, interesting discussion, and I thought I had something to add to it.
It also led me to think more analytically about my own thoughts on epic fantasy. And here they are. Read the rest of this entry »
Oct 27
Posted: under Craft, Story.
Tags: craft of writing, story October 27th, 2013
The current story’s day or two in structural revision has made huge changes in its organization and now has it on an open track to completion as a story of approximately (after some cutting) the right length. It’s an interesting example of the kinds of decisions writers make when something doesn’t run easily the first […] [...more]
The current story’s day or two in structural revision has made huge changes in its organization and now has it on an open track to completion as a story of approximately (after some cutting) the right length. It’s an interesting example of the kinds of decisions writers make when something doesn’t run easily the first time. Read the rest of this entry »
Aug 23
Posted: under Craft, Good News, Life beyond writing, the writing life.
Tags: craft of writing, Life beyond writing, the writing life August 23rd, 2013
I may have mentioned in some comment or other that I had an Incident With Bicycle and Pickup last weekend. I am lucky to be a) alive and b) whole and–barring a somewhat unhappy neck and some fairly impressive bruises–recovered. The incident was my fault; though I knew that was an almost-blind turn into a […] [...more]
I may have mentioned in some comment or other that I had an Incident With Bicycle and Pickup last weekend. I am lucky to be a) alive and b) whole and–barring a somewhat unhappy neck and some fairly impressive bruises–recovered. The incident was my fault; though I knew that was an almost-blind turn into a very narrow lane, and that large pickups lived on the connecting street, I failed to adhere to the ABCs of safety: ALWAYS Be Careful, not “Nearly Always Be Careful…” Read the rest of this entry »
Aug 17
Posted: under Craft, the writing life.
Tags: Background, characters, craft of writing, the writing life August 17th, 2013
Story #2, of the new Paksworld stories, the “lightning strikes” post, is one of those “out of the blue/accidental hits” stories. Here’s the article I found that started it all: “The Ghost Cavalry of Gondole.” Right off the bat, the title begs for a story. Reading the article and bring up all the pictures…skin-tingling […] [...more]
Story #2, of the new Paksworld stories, the “lightning strikes” post, is one of those “out of the blue/accidental hits” stories. Here’s the article I found that started it all: “The Ghost Cavalry of Gondole.” Right off the bat, the title begs for a story. Reading the article and bring up all the pictures…skin-tingling stuff. It belonged in Paksworld. It felt right for Paksworld. But right as background does not make a story…a big fancy gravesite (a real one) is a fact, not a story.
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Aug 08
Posted: under Background, Crown of Renewal, Life beyond writing, the writing life.
Tags: Background, characters, craft of writing, Life beyond writing, the writing life August 8th, 2013
In the gap between sending off the revisions and hearing reactions to them, I thought I’d discuss a few more things about Paksworld and the series you’ve been reading. Still no spoilers for Crown of Renewal, though, I hope. As I mentioned in a comment yesterday, the series shifted from my original plan for a […] [...more]
In the gap between sending off the revisions and hearing reactions to them, I thought I’d discuss a few more things about Paksworld and the series you’ve been reading. Still no spoilers for Crown of Renewal, though, I hope.
As I mentioned in a comment yesterday, the series shifted from my original plan for a long story about Kieri Phelan to a consideration of how forced change affects people in midlife. I began it after we’d had one, and as friends had lost or were losing their jobs (again!, and several years after they’d just begun a recovery from the previous downturn, at a lower level) in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. So I had a lot of direct knowledge of how forced change–even good forced change (because that happens to some)–plays out in real peoples’ lives. But at the same time, the invented universe I now call “Paksworld” has its own set of rules and logic–and stories do too. Read the rest of this entry »
Jun 14
Posted: under Interview, Limits of Power.
Tags: craft of writing, the writing life June 14th, 2013
Lytherus.com chose me for a Featured Author Week, and the interview and blog post are now up–with a contest for copies of Limits of Power. The interview’s fairly serious; the blog post is about the fun and the possibilities for humor while writing. [correction of title & link, thanks to Sue] [...more]
Lytherus.com chose me for a Featured Author Week, and the interview and blog post are now up–with a contest for copies of Limits of Power.
The interview’s fairly serious; the blog post is about the fun and the possibilities for humor while writing.
[correction of title & link, thanks to Sue]
May 16
Posted: under Craft, Crown of Renewal.
Tags: craft of writing, research May 16th, 2013
The hierarchy of writing-research starts with personal experience. If you have ever cooked a meal, mucked out a stall, driven a car, or fallen out of a tree, you have a wealth of sensory inputs as well as intellectual understanding of those experiences available to use in a story. You know, in the most direct […] [...more]
The hierarchy of writing-research starts with personal experience. If you have ever cooked a meal, mucked out a stall, driven a car, or fallen out of a tree, you have a wealth of sensory inputs as well as intellectual understanding of those experiences available to use in a story. You know, in the most direct way, what it’s like.
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