Louisa May Alcott

Louisa May Alcott
An American writer

Sunday, October 30, 2011

The Inside Story

I'm reading a FANTASTIC book on writing.  INSIDE STORY: The Power of the Transformational Arc by Dara Marks is written primarily for screenwriters, but everything in it applies to fiction.  Absolutely fanstastic book that's bringing a lot of good information to me in a way my little pea brain can handle. 

She breaks a story--any story--down into bite-sized pieces, explains each piece, and then demonstrates through famous movies exactly how they can be pieced back together.  Even though there's structure, those of us who break out in hives at the very thought of being 'told' how their book 'should' flow can get through this because the structure, as she explains it, is no more than a general frame on which you can hang anything.  Action/adventure, romance, romp, mystery, thriller. . . so long as whatever you're writing has guts, or an inside story, you can go anywhere with the exterior. 

I'm seeing so many ways this book can apply to my writing and make it better. 

Anyone else read this book?  Have you applied the concepts?  What do you think of it?

Friday, October 28, 2011

What Drives You Nuts?

A lively discussion with some writing friends got me to thinking about what makes us love or hate a book, or drives us nutty about the story.  For me, head-hopping will turn the book into a wall-banger very quickly.  If you can't figure out how to tell the story without constantly jumping from head to head, I don't want to invest the effort into trying to follow the storyline. But for other people, that doesn't bother them. 

Weak characterization is another thing that drives me nuts.  Characters who are TSTL (too stupid to live), or who do things with no motivation whatsoever are another bugaboo for me.  But my critique partners and other writing friends have lists of other things like historical mistakes, occasional flaws in the story logic, and other items that they can't forgive while I can. 

On the other hand, strong storylines and characters with deep motivation and strong goals will bring me in every time. 

So the writer in me wants to know. . . what drives you batty when reading fiction? 

Friday, October 14, 2011

Contests--what's in them for you?

I used to be a contest junkie, but haven't entered any writing contest in years.  Now I'm considering the Golden Heart because, well, because I have a completed manuscript that I'm working on.  I think it would give me another reason to keep forging ahead with these edits.  But I'm wondering if it's worth the effort and cost.  It's a non-traditional book, and I'm not sure how much contests have changed over the past several years.  It used to be that non-traditional books not entered in the Fantasy category rarely did well.  However, the rise of e-publishing and a wider variety of stories could bode well--or not. 

Should I throw my $50 into the fray? What do you look to get out of a contest entry?  Fame?  Glory?  An editor's eye?

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Did computers change our content?

Bummed about the fact that Steve Jobs died, but that got me thinking.  The personal computer re-defined the way we write.  No more pen to paper for most of us; instead, we sat before an empty screen and blinking cursor.  But since the computer revolution, it seems to me that fiction has changed.  Books are shorter, as are chapters.  I remember when a 20-page chapter was the norm.  I don't think that's the case any more.  The books I'm reading today have shorter chapters, and most open in media reas, in the middle of the action. 


I'm not saying this is better or worse than the way things used to be; just different.  Or am I imagining things?  I think back to the Brontes and even Pat Conroy and the beautiful, lyrical phrases and descriptions they could weave, and I don't think that style of writing is as prevalent today.  Did the computer have anything to do with it?  Are we losing our ability to live in the moment?  For the moment?  Must everything be rapid-fire, goal-oriented, make-every-second-count?  Just because we can do things faster with a computer, must we?

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Wine, Women, and Creativity

Having just returned from a lovely dinner out with most of my critique group, I have to say that a) they're the best group around, and b)we got some awesome brainstorming done.

I do need to finish revising the current book.
I do need to finish writing the next book.

But wow, got some awesome plot ideas for the one after that. Perhaps it was the wine (both at the restaurant and then after we got back to the house) but the ideas were really being generated.

What sparks your creativity?  A walk in the woods or through an art museum? Wine? <g>  A critique session?  Observing humans in their natural environment?

I'm wondering how people can get good results from this when they're sober!