Sunday, December 12, 2010

Most loved character

I have talked about Dexter the serial killer as a lovable character, but now who do you think is a lovable or memorable character, and what makes a character's qualities like that?

A tragic hero perhaps, like Macbeth, Oedipus, Hamlet, or Othello. Those are memorable characters because they fall from so far up.

The characters who are most real - Catcher in the Rye kid, because we can relate to them. Or maybe they were real people.

The characters with the righteous personality- who cannot do any evil... cough Harry Potter, ahem.

The characters who are inhuman- animals, or monsters like Edward Cullen- because they present the human extremes of perfections, or horror, (or resemble humans- like in satires...Animal Farm or Gulliver's travels).

The wise characters who teach us life lessons. Like the books by Mitch Albom.

Or the antagonist, because they are just so dynamic and interesting. And fun. Sometimes. Like Voldemort, he's a riot.

Or the character who turns evil. Plot twists are fun.

Some of my favorite books are Archangel, Harry Potter, Pride and Prejudice, The Mediator, Ice, The Golden Compass series, Watership Down, the Silver Chalice, and the Giver. And I definitely need to read more. Now favorite character is harder, especially most memorable. And I would have to say...hmm...thinking....so difficult...it is...Is there even the most perfect character, who is so memorable? Is it Gatsby? Boo Radley? Does Jesus count? Dang...I guess it depends if its fiction or not. Or how powerful their voice is, even when the book ends.

The artist reflected within their work

Do you believe that an artist's work is a reflection of them? I was at the Metropolitan museum on Friday (and walked over 150 blocks in NYC) and it is so amazing seeing all of the art styles and art pieces. And each artists does have their own style, but can we see part of them in their work? I think that we can tell part of their life, like Pablo Picasso's periods. Their creativity, their imagination. What you think is who you are, so art is the tangible reflection of your thoughts. And this definitely includes writing! Because writing is a reflection of someones thoughts, creativity, and beliefs. And it can be so personal like a dairy. So who do you think is the greatest artist who ever existed? And their work?

A different style of writing

So I am reading a book over this weekend called The Witness by Sandra Brown, and not only did it make me procrastinate with my work, but it also forced me to read through all 430 pages. I picked this up at the library entrance where they have free books to read on the bus home. And I was like, dang! Because the story started out in the middle of the story, and had two stories going on. After each chapter there would be a cliff hanger, and then it would move to a different time of the story and it would end in suspense, and it would just keep on going like that. And when the two stories converged was close to the climax ending, and it was so crazy. And sometimes it would go to a different character viewpoint, and the tension would just build.

The story starts with her in a car crash, and she saves her baby, and pulls out an unconscious man as well. At the hospital she claims that he is her husband, and he has amnesia. She is a wanted woman, and plans her escape. And its just crazy.

These stories are difficult to work correctly, but if they are, it works very powerfully. Ever read a book that started from the back to the beginning? I never have, so maybe I should search. What is your favorite type of writing style? First person, or something out of the ordinary?

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Good writing excersizes

During NaNoWriMo, there is a wedsite called writeordie.com by "Dr. Whicked" and basically you have to type fast enough or else words will start to get deleted, and the screen will flash red, and I'm pretty sure daunting music is played in the background. Its pretty funny.

Other ways to improve writing: keep a journal, read more - that's a big one, learn 'big' words, work on spelling and grammer. And so on. A journal will be fun to read when your older, just so long as no one reads it. It might help with all of that pent up aggression. Hahaha, any way. Question of the day: Why is writing/ and or books important anyway?

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

People on the bus

Sources of inspiration. When I am on the bus, I get really bored, so I begin to look around. And I find so many interesting faces. The other day I saw a guy with a wedding ring that was total bling bling. Its fun to wonder who they are and what kind of person they are. And no, I do not creep around staring people down. But I do sometimes listen to conversations that people have, or the way that they talk. Because I remember thinking that it is strange how there are so many people, and that I only know a hand full of them. I am always interested to listen to people, or ask about their life if I don't try to guess it. I also find it strange when no one is talking on the bus, because there are so many people.

But if I am not reading, studying, or texting then I am thinking. Another good source of information besides observing people are dreams. I know that there are people i my dreams who i don't think that I met. Which reminds me, last night I dreamed I was driving a bus, and I didn't know how to so I was driving like a crazy person. It was kind of like Grad Theft Auto. Any way, it is good to activly remember your dreams. I'm starting a dream note book, and I want to see if I can start controlling what happens in my dream. I think that it would be awesome to fly, so that is one of my goals.

So, where do you get inspiration while writing?

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Hooking them in

It wasn't the lack of oxygen, making him see black clouds, that pinched at his eyes.

What is a hook sentence? It is one which hooks in a reader's attention and compels them to read on. But does the intensity of the line end with the hook. It should extend, or else the entire piece will fall a part. The hook's job is to set the tone, and then to follow through for the sake of the story.

Dialogue openings are tricky and melodramatic, unless used correctly. And having no hook at all will not have enough punch to it. You can usually tell if you will like a book based on the first few pages. Many times I have picked up a book, read the first five pages, then skipped to a page in the middle, and finally read the last few pages. It saves me a lot of time if the book is a bore.

Why not try writing a hook the next time you have to write something. You might catch someone.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Profile Character

Writing a profile based on someone you do not know.

We have all done it, but now what? We have only gotten the tiniest glimpse into somebody's life. And that excersize can help us create a character based on that, if you want to stray away from only a biography work. But the challenge with making a character interesting is to make them more real than real people. more something! Okay so I want everybody to imagine who they wrote about, and put them in the weridest situations you can think. extra points if they develop a super power! Maybe you will get a inspiration to write a story! And change the name and other things, and now you got a character just waiting to go through perils and unspeakable dangers! I'll post mine soon!

homo fictus vs. homo sapien

Characters are the components to a novel. You won't get very far in a story without one. Fictional characters are homo fictus, they are not of flesh like a homo sapien. Because readers demand "that homo fictus be more handsome or ugly, ruthless or noble, vengful or forgiving, brave or cowardly, and so on than real people are. Homo fictus has hotter passions and colder anger; he travels more, fights more, loves more, changes more, has more sex. Lots more sex. Homo fictus has more of everything. Even if he is plain, dull, and boreing, he will be more extrodanary in his plainess, dullness, and boreingness than his real-life counterparts." - James N. Frey

Now creating your own homo fictus, and playing God. What is their background, their physical traits, their foil, their biography, and so on. What makes them dynamic? Interesting? Lovable?

Getting to know your character:

1. Interview them

2. Get under their skin

3. What is the conflict he has

4. Draw them

5. What is different about them

6. or create a scene and figure out how they would react

Have you ever made a memorable character? If so,  describe them.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Dexter

My sister came home today dropping off a book. One that is a well known TV series called Dexter. I am also a fan, having watched many of the videos, but I marvel at the character. Those who are not familiar with the series it is about a serial killer who only kills other serial killers. But how can we come to love a character who is a murderer, where we are cheering for him? He is a lovable monster, and his character is so dynamic. We can not help but fall into his own trap, and begin to love him. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ej8-Rqo-VT4

Thursday, December 2, 2010

 This is one of the NaNoWriMo pep talks. A pep talk is to inspire the writer to keep writing, to push on through. This one by lemony Snicket, what do you make out of it?

Lemony Snicket's pep talk

Dear Cohort,
Struggling with your novel? Paralyzed by the fear that it's nowhere near good enough? Feeling caught in a trap of your own devising? You should probably give up.
For one thing, writing is a dying form. One reads of this every day. Every magazine and newspaper, every hardcover and paperback, every website and most walls near the freeway trumpet the news that nobody reads anymore, and everyone has read these statements and felt their powerful effects. The authors of all those articles and editorials, all those manifestos and essays, all those exclamations and eulogies - what would they say if they knew you were writing something? They would urge you, in bold-faced print, to stop.
Clearly, the future is moving us proudly and zippily away from the written word, so writing a novel is actually interfering with the natural progress of modern society. It is old-fashioned and fuddy-duddy, a relic of a time when people took artistic expression seriously and found solace in a good story told well. We are in the process of disentangling ourselves from that kind of peace of mind, so it is rude for you to hinder the world by insisting on adhering to the beloved paradigms of the past. It is like sitting in a gondola, listening to the water carry you across the water, while everyone else is zooming over you in jetpacks, belching smoke into the sky. Stop it, is what the jet-packers would say to you. Stop it this instant, you in that beautiful craft of intricately-carved wood that is giving you such a pleasant journey.
Besides, there are already plenty of novels. There is no need for a new one. One could devote one's entire life to reading the work of Henry James, for instance, and never touch another novel by any other author, and never be hungry for anything else, the way one could live on nothing but multivitamin tablets and pureed root vegetables and never find oneself craving wild mushroom soup or linguini with clam sauce or a plain roasted chicken with lemon-zested dandelion greens or strong black coffee or a perfectly ripe peach or chips and salsa or caramel ice cream on top of poppyseed cake or smoked salmon with capers or aged goat cheese or a gin gimlet or some other startling item sprung from the imagination of some unknown cook. In fact, think of the world of literature as an enormous meal, and your novel as some small piddling ingredient - the drawn butter, for example, served next to a large, boiled lobster. Who wants that? If it were brought to the table, surely most people would ask that it be removed post-haste.
Even if you insisted on finishing your novel, what for? Novels sit unpublished, or published but unsold, or sold but unread, or read but unreread, lonely on shelves and in drawers and under the legs of wobbly tables. They are like seashells on the beach. Not enough people marvel over them. They pick them up and put them down. Even your friends and associates will never appreciate your novel the way you want them to. In fact, there are likely just a handful of readers out in the world who are perfect for your book, who will take it to heart and feel its mighty ripples throughout their lives, and you will likely never meet them, at least under the proper circumstances. So who cares? Think of that secret favorite book of yours - not the one you tell people you like best, but that book so good that you refuse to share it with people because they'd never understand it. Perhaps it's not even a whole book, just a tiny portion that you'll never forget as long as you live. Nobody knows you feel this way about that tiny portion of literature, so what does it matter? The author of that small bright thing, that treasured whisper deep in your heart, never should have bothered.
Of course, it may well be that you are writing not for some perfect reader someplace, but for yourself, and that is the biggest folly of them all, because it will not work. You will not be happy all of the time. Unlike most things that most people make, your novel will not be perfect. It may well be considerably less than one-fourth perfect, and this will frustrate you and sadden you. This is why you should stop. Most people are not writing novels which is why there is so little frustration and sadness in the world, particularly as we zoom on past the novel in our smoky jet packs soon to be equipped with pureed food. The next time you find yourself in a group of people, stop and think to yourself, probably no one here is writing a novel. This is why everyone is so content, here at this bus stop or in line at the supermarket or standing around this baggage carousel or sitting around in this doctor's waiting room or in seventh grade or in Johannesburg. Give up your novel, and join the crowd. Think of all the things you could do with your time instead of participating in a noble and storied art form. There are things in your cupboards that likely need to be moved around.
In short, quit. Writing a novel is a tiny candle in a dark, swirling world. It brings light and warmth and hope to the lucky few who, against insufferable odds and despite a juggernaut of irritations, find themselves in the right place to hold it. Blow it out, so our eyes will not be drawn to its power. Extinguish it so we can get some sleep. I plan to quit writing novels myself, sometime in the next hundred years.
--Lemony Snicket

NaNoWriMo

As some of you know, November was National Novel Writing Month :NaNoWriMo, and I recently won. Yeah. It is basically writing a novel of 50000 words in 30 days. And I will have fun editing. This was my first year doing it, and I came up with the entire thing while writing it, with only a abstract ending as a goal. The best part  was competing with my sister on who could gain the most word count in 2 hours. And then who could get to 5000 first. And no joke, within the first 20 minutes, she wrote 900 words. For that you just have to write what comes in your mind, you just have to write it on impulse. 

http://www.nanowrimo.org/