Difference between revisions of "Writer's School"
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{{ws/table row odd|[[Writing in Groups]]|Success and failure about writing groups formed to write co-authored novels|[[User:Michael_Bard|Michael Bard]]}} | {{ws/table row odd|[[Writing in Groups]]|Success and failure about writing groups formed to write co-authored novels|[[User:Michael_Bard|Michael Bard]]}} | ||
{{ws/table row even|[[Writing in the TBP universe]]|Important things you should be aware of before writing a story set in :"Tales From The Blind Pig"|[[User:Michael_Bard|Michael Bard]]}} | {{ws/table row even|[[Writing in the TBP universe]]|Important things you should be aware of before writing a story set in :"Tales From The Blind Pig"|[[User:Michael_Bard|Michael Bard]]}} | ||
− | + | {{ws/table row odd|[[Writing Organization]]|Different methods of writing work for different folks. Outlines, sequential/non-sequential writing, etc.|[[User:Michael_Bard|Michael Bard]]}} | |
+ | {{ws/table row even|[[The Writers Life]]||[[User:Rabbit|Rabbit]]}} | ||
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Revision as of 00:02, 9 January 2008
Writing is one of the oldest artforms, but writing fiction is one of the newest. Like any other artform it looks deceptively easy to get into, but once you start the hidden troubles show up. The best authors will tell you that you can't just learn how to write, but this is only partially true. There is a facet to writing that is a learned skill and a facet that you have to be born with.
To the layperson writing is simply stringing words together into a coherent whole. And, to an extent, that is the truth—it's also the part of the art that can be taught. Anyone can learn how to string words together into a coherent sentence and string hundreds of those sentences into a coherent story, but unless you are born with the gift of knowing how to tell a story the end product is, more often than not, bland and built of tiresome cliches and rehashed plots. But if you have been born a storyteller the end product shines, what cliches and rehashed plots it may contain used and retold in such a manner that they seem new again.
This “Writers School” is an attempt to break that mold. Not only is it going to try and teach those people who are born storytellers ways to improve their skills, but it is going to try and teach people how to tell the stories. In here you can find articles on creating believable characters and worlds, tips about how to escape many common pitfalls that snare many writers.
Contents
Before Writing
Title | Description | Author |
Making Miracles | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
The Message at the Center of the Novel | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Pigging Out | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
The Pornography Trap | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Putting First Things First | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Title Stolen by Evil, Inc. | Creating and writing villains | Rabbit |
The Tail Tale | Avoiding cliches and common pitfalls of TF fiction | Rabbit |
Writing Fantasy | Tips about writing good fantasy | Rabbit |
Learning from the Masters | Some recommended Science Fiction TF novels to read and take notes from | Michael Bard |
Research:It's not just for School anymore | Getting your facts straight! | Michael Bard |
Character | Some basics about where characters come from, how and when to describe them, and what kind of characters you really need | Fish |
Dialog | Punctuating dialog properly and making it sound real, but not too real | Fish |
Syntax | Everything you needed to know about grammar and punctuation and then some | Fish |
Word Choice | Choosing the right words for your story | Fish |
Writing the Story
Title | Description | Author |
How's This For Openers | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Lights, Camera, Action! | Tips about writing good action sequences | Rabbit |
SF101: Writing Technological SF | An introduction to writing technological or "hard" SF explaining that it's not really as tough as it sounds | Michael Bard |
SF102: Learning the Basics | Recommended SF reading to see what's been done in the genre and how things work | Michael Bard |
Thinking Things Through | If you want to toss in a neat technology or ability into a story, think about what else could be done with it before actually inserting it | Michael Bard |
Uses Your Senses Dammit! | Don't just describe things visually in your writing | Michael Bard |
After Writing
Title | Description | Author |
The E-Publishing Dilemma | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Getting Published | Tips and Tricks for those people wishing to get published | Rabbit |
The Letter | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
General Advice
Title | Description | Author |
Beating Block | Different Methods of Beating Writers Block | Rabbit |
Getting Small | Age Regression and the world through a childs eyes | Rabbit |
Going Soft | Through the eyes of a member of the opposite sex | Rabbit |
The Horror, the Horror | Writing Horror Stories | Rabbit |
The Proper Tool | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Experience | Personal adventures and experience breeds better stories | Rabbit |
Why We Write | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Writers Groups And Other Support Mechanisms | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
As you and I both know | What is "infodump" in fiction and how to avoid it | Michael Bard |
Creating Worlds to Share | An examination of why some shared universes are successful, and why others aren't | Michael Bard |
Keeping the Editor Happy | Three common errors I see in fiction submitted to TSAT: Repetitive Sentence Structure, Narrator Changes, Unnatural Sounding Speech | Michael Bard |
Technological Transformation Methodology | Some technological methods of inducing transformations | Michael Bard |
Writing in Groups | Success and failure about writing groups formed to write co-authored novels | Michael Bard |
Writing in the TBP universe | Important things you should be aware of before writing a story set in :"Tales From The Blind Pig" | Michael Bard |
Writing Organization | Different methods of writing work for different folks. Outlines, sequential/non-sequential writing, etc. | Michael Bard |
The Writers Life | <<Needs a blurb>> | Rabbit |
Article Series
The Five C's by Rabbit