The title of this post is so awesome that I feel like the post itself isn't going to live up to it. I actually thought of saving it for another post on the subject but I'm going to go with it anyway. I'm having issues finding time for this currently, and I 'm not proud of it. I know I’ve been absent lately but I have been doing the job of three people at my day job (literally) and cramming for my Air War College Exam. The good news is we have enough people back at work that I can get back to just doing my own job and I got the results back from my exam, which I passed with an excellent! I’m only one test away from finishing now, so I’m buckling down to get through it and then I can refocus on finishing the edits for Clear Ether and get it out to some beta readers.
Novelist and Aviator
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Monday, March 12, 2012
Writing Advice for the New Novelist (Revisited)
I decided to take a look at this advice to see if it was still valid after more than a year of learning. I tweaked it a little and added a bit here and there. If you have something you think I'm missing I'd love to hear it.
- Choose your voice for the story and be consistent. I think most authors will tell you to avoid present tense, so past tense is the most common method. Third person narrative is the most common, but books are also written in first person, Twilight by Stepanie Meyers is a good example, and second person, Halting State by Charles Stross is a good example of this form, but is fairly rare. There also variations on how to use the third person in the form of omniscient, objective(primarily used for news reporting) and limited, which can lend itself to a narrator that is unreliable. Unreliable just means you only see what the character sees and feel what the character feels, whether it’s a true representation of reality or not. Third person works very well if you are changing the narrator. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative_mode
Friday, March 9, 2012
Feeding the Idea Machine
When someone meets a writer it is a common theme that it goes something like this:
“Oh, you’re a writer? I’ve always wanted to write a book, but I just can’t seem to come up with any original ideas.”
I think most of us can relate to that before we actually took the plunge. Not all, a few of you Stephen King types out there that were born to write probably never questioned the process, but a lot of us have felt that anxiety of coming up with something interesting enough to invest the time in for a novel length book. The funny thing is writers don’t struggle with this at all once they become writers. Most people I have ever talked to or read something they wrote about the subject all have the same theme: coming up with ideas is the easy part.
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