Archive for the ‘Writing Tips’ Category

Usuing Random Plot Points to Move Your Story Along

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

This is an Idea that I had a while ago. Find a Pen and Some Paper. You are going to need a little time to get started but once the initial setup is complete, this little project will give you all kinds of new places to go.

On One Page write down as many types of people as you can think of. What do I mean? White Man, Asian Woman, African American baby girl, and so on. If you are writing a fantasy novel, you get to add all kinds of other creatures like centaurs and fairies and giants and hobbits. Get creative.

On the second page write down as many verbs as you can think of. Feel free to go to the dictionary if you like. Fill up that page. The more you have the better results you will end up with.

On the third page write down as many objects as you can think of. The same thing goes for this page. The more objects that you can think of and place on the page, the better this little project is going to work.

Now… for each page, take a pen or pencil, close your eyes and point at one random person, one random verb and one random object. Now you have a new plot point for your novel. Introduce the new character and see where it will take you. Whenever you need a new idea, pick another random person, verb and object and take off writing again.

See More Writing Tips.

If you have other ideas on how to find story ideas, write a comment. I would love to hear how you are inspired.

Please take a moment to link to My Weblog
from your website or blog. Thank You

How to Use the Internet to Help Write Your Story

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

No… I’m not talking about plagerism. I’m talking about research. I’m talking about networking. I’m talking about finding the resources that you need to write the best novel that you can.

There are so many resources out there. Usually my first line of defence is Google.com or Wikipedia.com. Just about anything that you want to learn about from military subs to the speghetti monster you can find information on it all.

Names are a very important part of your story or novel. There are many resources about names. Infact, I have already written a post about Names. Read it here. There are many places that you can go to find support from other fellow writers. a couple of my favorites are National Novel Writing Month and Writing.com. Both of these website have great forums. Search them, you are sure to find the information you are looking for.

My family no longer owns a Dictionary or a thesaurus. There is no reason to have those large heavy (not to mention difficult to use) books in the house when I can use Websters online.

It is so crazy how much information is actually out there about writing. Just type in How to Write on google. I got over eight and a half million pages about how to write. You will never run out of information to read about writing. The only problem will be putting aside the internet and opening your word processor to actually write.

See More Writing Tips.

If you have other ideas on how to find story ideas, write a comment. I would love to hear how you are inspired.

Please take a moment to link to My Weblog
from your website or blog. Thank You

Writing Tips: How to Write a Great Ending

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

When it comes to endings, I have found that a lot of people don’t bring things to a close in a fantastic way. People want to walk away from a book feeling like they read something that was enlightening, exciting and brought all their questions to a close. There are so many books that I have read that had several chapters that were just there to bring thoughts to a close. They were boring.

What do you do to write a great ending? In My Opinion:

  1. End your story with the climax, or at least move the closing chapter(s) to the epilogue so people know they are an afterthought or just a way to give the readers a little more for their buck.
  2. End the story with a cliffhanger or a lead-in to the sequal.
  3. Satify the reader with something they didn’t expect.
  4. Make sure it ends. There have been a number of books that I have read that ubruptly stop. The writer thinks that he/she is leaving a cliffhanger when they are just leaving more questions in the readers mind than needed.

See More Writing Tips.

If you have other ideas on how to find story ideas, write a comment. I would love to hear how you are inspired.

Please take a moment to link to My Weblog
from your website or blog. Thank You

Writing Tips: Doing Your Research

Friday, November 30th, 2007

Research is important when you are writing, but is can also become an ever growing time waster. If you are like me, when you want to learn about something, you look it up on the internet. Before you know it, you have spent an hour reading page after page about rock gardens and how to build them. This is an hour that you could have spent writing your novel. This is time that could have been spent creating something that could be researched and edited later.

If you know a little about what you are researching, just write through it. Make a Note in red in the area where you know that you are going to have to come back and add to. This way you will be able to continue writing that first draft and won’t loose the precious time you need to get that first draft finished.

If you absolutely need to know something to move your plot forward, by all means look it up. I would suggest that you look it up at Wikipedia.com, find the quick and dirty information and continue writing your novel. Keep to the one source. This will minimize the amount of time you are doing your research and get you right back on to that first draft. Again, leave yourself a note in another color to come back later and expand on this thought, when you have the time to go back and do more research.

Remember, it does not matter how bad your first draft is. All you want to do is get the story down on paper. Once that is done, you can go back and make the changes you know are needed and add the researched information that will give adequate depth to your novel.

See More Writing Tips.

If you have other ideas on how to find story ideas, write a comment. I would love to hear how you are inspired.

Please take a moment to link to My Weblog
from your website or blog. Thank You

Writing Tips: Maps in Your Novel

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

Everyone has seen the fantasy novels that have the world map on the inside front cover or right before the first chapter. Believe it or not, these maps can help you write that novel. It is extremely important to know where everything is in the world you are creating. If you provide a location that contradicts another location, your readers will pick it out every time.

Drawing out a map is extremely simple and indispensable as you create your world. This map can be as vast as an entire world or continent, complete with mountain ranges, valleys, rivers, cities, haunted regions and caverns, etc. It can also be as simple as a building that your characters are trying to navigate to get away from your villain. This map will be just for your visual needs, but can be adapted to print in your final book like so many fantasy books before you.

I think the more information you can provide on a map, the better. Include regional names, city names, ocean, lake and river names as well as the home place of your hero and villain. You will want to mark all the places that your characters visit. Draw in the mountains and maybe simple illustrations of the buildings that can be found in that region of the map.

As you write your story, your map will most likely mutate and evolve. Let those natural changes happen. It will only make your map and your story better.

See More Writing Tips.

If you have other ideas on how to find story ideas, write a comment. I would love to hear how you are inspired.

Please take a moment to link to My Weblog
from your website or blog. Thank You

Writing Tips: Keeping a Writing Notebook

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

I find that most of my ideas come to me at the most inopportune time. I may be driving on the highway at 70 miles per hour or sitting in a movie theater or having dinner with someone. Whatever the case may be, I am never sitting at a computer when I have these flashes of genius. These are the times when a writing notebook comes in handy.

I started this practice when I was in college studying art. I needed a way to keep track of everything while having a place to draw and write. I found a blank sketchbook at my local Borders Bookstore. It contained nearly 200 pages of blank space. I just started writing or drawing. Anything that came to my mind I would write down or illustrate. I filled that one notebook in six months. I bought another one and filled that one in another six. Today there are eight of these sketchbooks full of my wandering thoughts, notes, shopping lists, doodles, prose and poetry that I started and all kind of other crazy things.

The last sketchbook that I found was over 400 pages. This one has lasted more than a year. The binding on it has started to wear out and fall off, but that is what happens when I take it everywhere with me. I keep pictures, birthday and Christmas cards taped on various pages throughout the book. It has become almost a journal of a sort. I just don’t always talk about my life.

Tips on keeping a writing/drawing notebook:

  1. Write the date on the page when you write on it. You never know when you are going to need to know when you created a certain idea.
  2. Keep the taping of cards to a minimum. The extra cards will thicken the book, making it burst its binding.
  3. When people ask to look at it, say no. It contains your private thoughts and ideas. You don’t want everyone looking at them. If you do let people read it from time to time, you won’t be as honest in your writing because you will always be afraid that someone is going to read it.
  4. Start from page one and fill up page after page as you need it. You will be surprised at how fast those pages fill up.
  5. I found that keeping a phone list and maybe a calendar in the back of the book very useful.

See More Writing Tips.

If you have other ideas on how to find story ideas, write a comment. I would love to hear how you are inspired.

Please take a moment to link to My Weblog
from your website or blog. Thank You

Writing Tips: Focus Your Writing

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

Second to procrastination, Focus is a big problem for people when it comes to writing. It always seems that when you sit down to write, there are ten other things that try to steal your attention away from what you want to be doing… writing.

There are several things you can do to remedy this problem.

First: go somewhere where the distractions will not tempt you. I will sometimes go to the library or the bookstore and sit at a table and start writing. Sit outside in the backyard, especially if your backyard is fenced in. You can leave all the distractions inside the house.

Second: I know that some people cannot leave the house. This is when you have to put everything away that will distract you. Sometimes distractions like the kids cannot be easily put away, but when they are taking their naps, that would be the time to find your seat and start writing… even if it only for twenty minutes.

Third: I like to write in spurts between my chores. I will clean the bathroom, then sit down and write for fifteen to twenty minutes. Then I will do the dishes and write for another fifteen. Then empty out all the trash cans in the house and write another fifteen. When my chores are done, I will find that I have written about 1,500-2,000 words.

See More Writing Tips.

If you have other ideas on how to find story ideas, write a comment. I would love to hear how you are inspired.

Please take a moment to link to My Weblog
from your website or blog. Thank You