Sometimes the hardest thing in writing a story is where to start. You don’t need to have a great idea, you just have to put pen to paper. Start with a bad idea, start with the wrong direction, start with a character you don’t like, something positive will come out of it. – Marion Deuchars
short story
📖 Writer’s Tip: Writing a Sentence
The first thing to ask when writing a sentence is ‘What am I trying to do?’ ~ Stanley Fish
📖 Writer’s Tip ~ Gaining Inspiration
“I need only walk for 15 minutes or so and in that space, I will likely discover something. I just have to be looking and listening.” ~ Kayo Chingony
Writer’s Tip: Don’t Lose a Creative Thought
Write down ideas, all the time. Keep a little notebook handy (Nabokov carried around index cards) and write down ideas for stories or articles or novels or characters. Write down snippets of conversation that you hear. Write down plot twists and visual details and fragments of song lyrics or poems that move you. Having these ideas written down helps, because they can inspire you or actually go directly into your writing. I like to keep a list of post ideas for my blog, and I continually add to it.
📖 Writer’s Tip: Being a Better Writer
Becoming the best writer you can be isn’t easy, I won’t lie to you.
It takes hard work. But it’s worth the effort. And if it seems like an insurmountable task, there are some concrete things you can do today that will get you on the road to improvement.
Personally, I’ve been a fiction, newspaper, magazine and blog writer for 17 years now, writing for a variety of publications … and I’m still trying to improve. Every writer can get better, and no writer is perfect. I think I’ve grown tremendously as a writer over the last couple of decades, but it has been a painful journey. Let me share some of what I’ve learned.
📖 Writer’s Tip: Create Real Characters
Create real characters. Make your characters human—give them nervous tics, phobias, a funny way of messing up clichés. Some of the most memorable stories have three-dimensional characters that readers can feel strongly about in some way. For example: A heroine who has to overcome her deep-seated fears before she can get what she wants is much more appealing than one who just breezes through without struggle. The former’s conflict is relatable (who isn’t held back by their fears?), therefore her victory will be that much more satisfying.
📖 Writer’s Tip: A Writer’s Essential Tool
“Always carry a note-book. And I mean always. The short-term memory only retains information for three minutes; unless it is committed to paper you can lose an idea for ever.” — Will Self
📖 Writer’s Tip ~ Structure of a Novel
“Introduce your main characters and themes in the first third of your novel. If you are writing a plot-driven genre novel make sure all your major themes/plot elements are introduced in the first third, which you can call the introduction. Develop your themes and characters in your second third, the development. Resolve your themes, mysteries and so on in the final third, the resolution.” — Michael Moorcock
Writer’s Tip: Questions to Create Great Characters
A good way to help bring your characters to life and to establish a back story for them is to develop answers to a set of questions about them.
Where is your character from?
How old is your character?
What is your character called?
What does your character look like?
What kind of childhood did your character have?
What does your character do for a living?
How does your character deal with conflict and change?
Who else is in your character’s life?
How does your character deal with conflict and change?
What is your character’s goal or motivation in this story?
📖 Writer’s Tip: What Does Your Character Want?
Know what your characters’ wants are
Interesting stories come from characters who want something. Romeo and Juliet want each other. Harry Potter wants to beat Draco Malfoy and Slytherin in Quidditch. Hannah Baker wants the people who led her to commit suicide know how they hurt her. Writing a fiction book requires that you have compelling characters, and characters who have strong wants and desires are the most compelling kind there are.
Source: WritersDigest