Glue your ass to the chair and write.
Yes, I do tell myself this, frequently. I listen to myself far less frequently, more's the pity.
'Serenity'
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Glue your ass to the chair and write.
Yes, I do tell myself this, frequently. I listen to myself far less frequently, more's the pity.
Rejection? It's all in the game. (I stole "It's all in the game," from West Baltimore though. In that game people die more often than in our game.)
Ooh, death, nuts, and what I like to put in my mouth...How long till I'm LKH?
Never? Does never work for you?
Say you're sitting high atop Writers' Mountain, being the guru. Students of writing toil up the hillside, to ask you for the One True Pearl of Wisdom that will shine the glow of enlightment on their labours.
One line, and one line only. Distill, please. What would you tell them?
Since Amy beat me to "write what you want to read," I'll say, "Create good characters--particularly an engaging, intriguing, and believable protagonist or two--and the readers will come."
At least this reader would.
And brownies and chocolate chip cookies shouldn't be mucked up with nuts. Nuts have their proper times and places, but not there.
Susan, as you know, I'm a humongous fan of characters with voices.
But you don't think there needs to be a road for them to travel? Would a corollary be in order?
It's all about the journey?
Oh, definitely, but you said, "one line." And caught me on a week where I've been reading contest entry after contest entry with oodles of plot, but wooden, lifeless characters composed of stereotypes straight out of Romance Central Casting.
So maybe I'd amend it to, "Before you worry about the journey, make sure the travelers are worthy of your readers' attention."
"Everyone has a story. It's up to you to find it."
I think this is where erika's one-liner fits in -- if you've got a compelling character, finding the story he or she needs to tell, or journey to take, is the important thing.
But I also believe that most characters become interesting if they're on the right journey, so there's that, too.
Heh. Yep - I'm doing a sort of cross-stitching of how writers take on their inspiration.
I mean, I'm getting fascinated by the wide range of answers, that really aren't that wide-ranging at all. For me, it's really dead simple: I'm pure Lewis Carroll. Start at the beginning and go on until you reach the end. I am all about the "Once upon a time..."
So it fascinates me to get the quickie distillations, and to try and parse them. Like Susan, I'm fierce about characters the reader will care about, but I've never in my life created a character and then created a journey for them. Mine tend to happen simultaneously.
I've never in my life created a character and then created a journey for them
Pretty much it's look at the road, see who's walking it.