31 Day Writing Tips - Day 25

@just4him (305417)
Green Bay, Wisconsin
May 25, 2019 1:03pm CST
Welcome to day 25 of writing tips for any kind of writing - novel, short story, poetry, blog. I've discussed many different areas important to writing, and my ideas are starting to peter out as the days come to an end. If there is anything you want to see addressed, let me know. Looking through the material I received from the recent UntitledTown conference last month, I find another gem. Shortcuts. Don't take them. The idea is to be creative, not a duplicate of someone else's writing. As I've seen here on many occasions, people are inspired by posts and ideas come forth and become new posts. Some are answers to questions in posts, some go off in a completely different direction from what the person wrote. We have many people here who inspire us to write further on a topic or create a spinoff on the same topic. In the same way, novelists can use or leverage what others have written to create something new and vital, breathing life into what might have been a dead subject. You can glean ideas from a myriad of places, not only in books you've read but in news stories, conversations you have with friends, or people in general. Ideas as discussed in an earlier discussion, are everywhere. Ideas lead to creativity, and creativity leads to a finished story. As you're expounding on what others have written, don't take shortcuts. Don't plagiarize. Make it your own. We all have opinions on what we read or hear. Great conversations come about from a single thought or idea. The same is true in writing. Opinions matter. Don't take shortcuts by making what someone else wrote a template for your writing. Make the story new and genuine. You know what a template is. It's a basic form that follows a pattern. Romance books are good examples of template writing. The template is the same for every book. The only difference is the names of the characters and their locations. There's no imagination in that kind of writing, and very little research either for that matter. Throw the template away. Don't take shortcuts with your writing. You have an idea, so find out everything you can about your idea. Don't expect that someone else's legwork, research, is the unvarnished truth in the matter. Search it out yourself. In a book I've written and am currently working on, I relied on a movie I saw as total truth with the information provided in the movie. That is, until I did my own research and found out the animal in the movie for that location wasn't native to that location and isn't found there. No shortcuts. Do your own legwork and be creative. That's what writing is all about. When you do the work, and you know you've done it well, you can sit back satisfied your reader will appreciate the work you did when he or she reads it and then recommends it to others. You might even find good reviews of your work. When you do, you know you've passed the test and your reader will look for more of your books because they trust the one you wrote. Have you read books that look like the author took a shortcut, used a template, and fell short of your expectations on the topic? Or have you read books where you know the author did their best to create a good story and got all their facts right? Have you recommended books, given reviews on books, or passed those books to other readers? If you have, the author did a good job with the subject. Thanks for reading. Image courtesy of Pixabay.
7 people like this
6 responses
• United States
25 May 19
These are great tips! As for me, I was inspired to become a writer at the age of 9. The great poets of the past were my greatest inspiration as their work seem to often reflect my own life and feelings. Emily Dickinson was my favorite if all and her life was so tragic. Maya Angelou became my present day inspiration. I read of her life and all of her works before she passed away. I have my own form of writing. I write what I feel or experience. I write simply without fancy words so that everyone can understand. I've read works of authors before that used so many fancy long words that most people don't use in everyday language. Those lose my interest quite quickly. I like being different and unique in both my writing and my art. They are a reflection of my own uniqueness in a world where so many are striving to be like others rather than themselves.
2 people like this
@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
25 May 19
Those are great poets and a wonderful role model. It's good to run across poetry that reflects your life. I've never read either poet as I'm not a poet, not in the classical sense. I write it. However, I'm a novelist. My role models are in the books I read. It's always best to write so others understand. That's how I write also. I don't use those big fancy words. I probably don't know what they mean. Are you published?
1 person likes this
@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
25 May 19
@MistyckMoon That was my fear as well until I read a great book called Chicken Soup for the Writer's Soul. It gave me enough confidence to get my first book published. I self-published, and I've gotten good reviews on that first book, which is a good confidence builder. If you're getting good feedback. Take the next step.
1 person likes this
• United States
25 May 19
@just4him No, not yet although I have enough material to put a book together. I think fear of not being good enough keeps me procrastinating even though I have always received positive feedback on the things I have shared.
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@ptrikha_2 (45419)
• India
25 May 19
Well I have seen run-of-the-mill sort of books, and books that looked quite original. I too try to be original, but already written material does influence me. For e.g- Sydney Sheldon's thriller and crime scenes approach, or approach of Dr.Watson-Sherlock Holmes(Sir Arthur Conan Doyle) and Chetan Bhagat- an Indian writer. But the thoughts and imagination is mine only.
2 people like this
@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
25 May 19
I agree. I've seen and used knowledge from other books I've read, the leverage, and I've taken that leverage to create my own. It's good you do too.
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@snowy22315 (169576)
• United States
25 May 19
Very good tips there. I think I have mentioned this before, but one book I have always wanted to read is White Oleander. I saw the author on Oprah one time. She said that she took pains to make her writing original and refused to use cliches or any descriptions of situations or events she had read before. Now, that is dedication!
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@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
25 May 19
Yes, it is. I hope you get a chance to read it. Thank you.
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@xander6464 (40825)
• Wapello, Iowa
26 May 19
Originality is very important. It is possible to make a quick buck with a cookie cutter imitation but one quick buck is all it amounts to for most. Even if they do manage to come up with something original because they've been typecast as an imitator. Unless they do it under a well-protected pseudonym---which is a topic you haven't covered yet. As long as you're taking requests, I'd like to see you tackle the unreliable narrator.
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@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
26 May 19
Unreliable narrator? Okay, I'll bite. What is an unreliable narrator? Pseudonyms I can handle.
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@xander6464 (40825)
• Wapello, Iowa
26 May 19
@just4him It's just what it sounds like. Here's the capsule Wikipedia definition: ~~~ Unreliable narrator Unreliable narrator An unreliable narrator is a narrator, whether in literature, film, or theatre, whose credibility has been seriously compromised. The term was coined in 1961 by Wayne C. Booth in The Rhetoric of Fiction. ~~~ It's been around for a long time, the Greeks used it in some of their plays but it still isn't used a whole lot in modern fiction. At least not in popular fiction. It's a fascinating technique and that Wiki article is a great place to start learning about it.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search Illustration by Gustave Doré of Baron Munchausen's tale of being swallowed by a whale. Tall tales, such as those of the Baron, often feature unreliable narrators. An unreliable narrato
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@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
26 May 19
@xander6464 Thanks, I'll look at it.
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@ShifaLk (17817)
• India
26 May 19
Yes and it is not everyone's cup of tea to be a writer I am a very bad writer
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@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
26 May 19
Writer's need people to read their work too.
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@ShifaLk (17817)
• India
27 May 19
@just4him yes right .... The key More of hardwork..
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@dya80dya (33354)
26 May 19
I read books where I know the author did his best to create a good story. I recommended some books.
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@just4him (305417)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
26 May 19
That's the best way when you can trust your author.