Posts Tagged ‘My Writing’

10 Writing Rules You Should Break and Why

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When you start writ­ing, you cling to rules.  Rules take this great sea of pos­si­bil­i­ties and attempt to turn them into a river that flows in one direc­tion.  They’re not nec­es­sar­ily bad ideas, but you can gain as much from break­ing them as you can by fol­low­ing them.  Here are a few writ­ing “rules” and rules of liv­ing a writ­ing life that I have heard and the rea­sons I have rebelled against them.  Particularly, I come at these as a writer of sci­ence fic­tion and fan­tasy, so your results may dif­fer from the pic­ture on the box.

1.  Write what you know.

This rule should be “draw from your per­sonal expe­ri­ences.” I imag­ine as told orig­i­nally, that’s what it meant, but some begin­ning writ­ers take this to mean that they should only write work set in places they have been, about peo­ple they know, and so on.  As some­one who has set sto­ries in the Himalayas (never been there), East Africa (been there), and the outer orbit of the solar sys­tem (never been there, except that one time, long story), well… some­times, we write about things we want to know, not just the things we already know.  A book is the eas­i­est way to travel with­out going some­where.  There shouldn’t be a rule exclud­ing the writer from trav­el­ing through their writ­ing too.

2. Don’t try to force devel­op­ing your voice.

You don’t have time to let your voice develop nat­u­rally.  The world is full of writ­ers, maybe more than ever before.  Everyone you know is work­ing on a book.  If they say they aren’t, they’re lying.  Writing is a hell of a lot bet­ter of a job than dig­ging ditches or flip­ping burg­ers, so of course every­one wants to be a writer, and every­one thinks they have some­thing to say.  Having some­thing to say is impor­tant, but if you’re going to stand out these days, you need to find a unique way to say it.  Get a voice, and get it quick.  It doesn’t mat­ter how.  You need to find a way to remove your­self from the horde of 20/​30-​​something white nerds who want to write sci­ence fic­tion.  Or what­ever your group is, if you’re not me.  I don’t want peo­ple to say, “Jeremiah Tolbert? He’s like, Cory Doctorow, only dumber, right?”   Don’t be like some­one else.  Be you, but if you is bor­ing, and you really want to make it, change who you are.  We are not all orig­i­nal snowflakes, but we can pre­tend to be.  Self-​​trepanation is not rec­om­mended, but it might not hurt.

3.  Omit need­less words.

Yes, fine, some words can be removed to strengthen a sen­tence, but some writ­ers will take this too far, to the point of turn­ing every nar­ra­tor into the same per­son.  Word choice plays a large part in the voice of a char­ac­ter.  If you take this rule to the extreme, you neuter your writ­ing.  Verbal tics are okay.  Bloated prose is not.  Unless your nar­ra­tor likes bloated prose.  But that’s hard to pull off and look like you meant to do it.

4. Don’t take rejec­tions per­son­ally.

This is like telling peo­ple to stop breath­ing or to stop lov­ing their par­ents.  I sup­pose if you’re the kind of per­son who just can’t let some­thing go, then maybe you should find another career, but every writer takes rejec­tions per­son­ally.  Don’t believe them if they say they don’t.  The trick is get­ting over it quickly. And for God’s sake, stop post­ing on your blog about every rejec­tion you get.  Nobody cares.  Hardly any­body cares when you get an accep­tance either.  They will con­grat­u­late you, but that’s only because they want you to con­grat­u­late them when they sell to Hentai Slash Fic Online for half a cent a word and a bagel.    Editors aren’t just reject­ing your story.  They’re reject­ing you and your work. If you’re going to keep writ­ing like that, yeah, they don’t want to see any­thing else you willl write either.   It hurts.  Nothing can be done about it except for you to stop suck­ing so much.  So get to work.

5. Don’t blog so much. Write more.

Blog as much as you want.  Just don’t expect any­one to read it.  If you had to be doing some­thing besides blog­ging, I don’t think it should be writ­ing more fic­tion. You should be read­ing more.  Read the instruc­tion man­ual to your blender.  Read cereal boxes.  Read trashy romance nov­els, and read the clas­sics.  Read 400 blogs and news web­sites.  Write when you have some­thing to say, and a new way to say it.  Writing more is going to help you espe­cially when you are start­ing out, but after a cer­tain point, you’re bor­der­ing on hyper­graphia, and that’s a men­tal ill­ness, sorry, not a career.  In gen­eral, stop beat­ing your­self up about how much you do or don’t write.  Live your god damn life, and the writ­ing will come.  Or it won’t.  Nobody will care but you.

6. Kill your darlings.

Some peo­ple take this as an imper­a­tive to be harsh in your edit­ing.  Other peo­ple take it as a com­mand to mur­der your char­ac­ters.   If it’s a dar­ling to you, it might actu­ally, you know, be good writ­ing.  Find a way to kill the bor­ing dri­vel and keep the dar­lings.  But yes, I  agree that you should mur­der your char­ac­ters. Murder every sin­gle one of them, so long as it’s inter­est­ing to do so.

7. Get rid of your TV.

Do you know why it’s so hard to moti­vate your­self to write?  It’s not because your life is full of dis­trac­tions like TV and video games.  It’s a lack of con­crete rewards.  Most peo­ple roll out of bed and go straight to work, and they don’t have to get rid of their tele­vi­sion or inter­net access to be able to do it.  That’s because they know there’s a pay­check com­ing at the end of the period.  Writing, unless you’re already suc­cess­ful, is on spec.   You do the work and then you hope some­one wants to buy it.  The solu­tion isn’t to get rid of your tele­vi­sion.  Even the most pro­lific writ­ers need to rest and relax some­times.  The solu­tion is to make writ­ing the reward itself. Challenge your­self with each piece.  You have to find it ful­fill­ing on the page before any­one else sees it. Selling the piece and see­ing it pub­lished should be a bonus.

I almost wrote “icing on the cake” here but to hell with cake with­out icing.  That’s just a spongy bread. Screw that.

8.  Never sub­mit a first draft.

Sometimes you nail it.  I’ve sold first drafts.  You will too.  The mis­take here is think­ing that all the work in writ­ing hap­pens on the page.  At my guess, it’s about 20% of it.  The rest goes on before you even sit down.

9.  Always sub­mit your first draft.

I for­get who said this.  Heinlein?  Screw that guy.  Nobody always nails it.  When your name car­ries a cer­tain amount of pres­tige in your field, you might be able to sell every first draft, but do you really want to do that?  Do you really want work out there, cir­cu­lat­ing, that you know isn’t the best you could have done?  Do you have that lit­tle pas­sion for what you do that you just can’t be both­ered?  Then read on to rule 10.

10. Don’t Give Up.

There should be a lot more giv­ing up in the world of writ­ing.  If you can be encour­aged to quit writ­ing and find a more lucra­tive pro­fes­sion, like, say, clean­ing toi­lets, then do so.  You’ll save your­self a lot of heart­break and rejec­tion.  And you make room for the rest of us who are psy­chot­i­cally obses­sive about “break­ing in” to mar­kets that pay the same thing they paid in 1952.

I mean all of the above with the upmost love and respect, of course.

The Central Problem with SFWA’s Main Website, And Solutions

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The Central Problem with SFWA’s Main Website, And Solutions

The cen­tral prob­lem with the func­tion­al­ity of SFWA’s web­site is that it doesn’t know who it is attempt­ing to com­mu­ni­cate with. This is under­stand­able, as there are sev­eral pos­si­ble audi­ences for the SFWA web­site: a poten­tial mem­ber, the mem­ber, and the gen­eral inter­ested pub­lic. You might argue that indus­try members/​publishers/​editors are also another audi­ence, but I would just group them in with the gen­eral public.

A lesser prob­lem is that the site is sim­ply dated in design. A quick look at the html code indi­cates pretty seman­tic mark-​​up, but an odd mix of inline styling and stylesheets. There’s a heavy dose of javascript required for the drop-​​down menus to func­tion, which I think is just fine. The links mostly lack title attrib­utes, which might cause prob­lems down the road with show­ing up prop­erly in search engines, but prob­a­bly not a huge deal there. But the real prob­lem is that it just isn’t very inter­est­ing to look at. This is the group of peo­ple that have inspired more big-​​budget amaz­ing action pic­tures with cool eye candy than any other genre of fic­tion. Their web­site should rep­re­sent this, while still being designed with acces­si­bil­ity in mind, of course. But there is a lot you could do to spice up the look.

The infor­ma­tion and tools are orga­nized in a fairly hap­haz­ard way. Why is the Search tool grouped with with the mem­ber login and con­tact infor­ma­tion? Why does the “Why should I join SFWA?” infor­ma­tion take prece­dence on the front page over the press infor­ma­tion? I would rethink the orga­niz­ing and impor­tance of infor­ma­tion here. The piracy cam­paign stuff? I would remove it entirely. It’s an impor­tant issue prob­a­bly, but does it really deserve such front page real estate? Also, I’m sorry, but web rings went out of style in 1998. This really serves to make the page look dated. Of all the pro­fes­sional writ­ing orga­ni­za­tions I looked at, the only one still fea­tur­ing a web ring is SFWA. That goes for the badge images as well. These are all signs of a designer that hasn’t really kept with the times, and are more indica­tive of a pri­vate web­site than a pro­fes­sional orga­ni­za­tion. If you dis­agree with me, just scroll down to the links entry on this blog from a few days ago and look at the other orga­ni­za­tions. Even the worst of them have this right. SFWA’s web­site should get it right too.

Among other sug­ges­tions I will be detail­ing in the future, I rec­om­mend chunk­ing the nav­i­ga­tional infor­ma­tion together bet­ter. Focus the outward-​​facing web­site for prospec­tive mem­bers and the gen­eral pub­lic and remove all infor­ma­tion for exist­ing mem­bers to the log-​​in sec­tion. Prominently fea­ture a log-​​in screen some­where on the page for mem­bers, but have the site behind that be designed to their needs. It’s a dif­fer­ent project and a dif­fer­ent site.

Also, I highly rec­om­mend using some of the wasted screen space now to include a side­bar that rotates on a ran­dom basis from a list of sub­mit­ted authors. Call this Featured Member and have it include 50 words on an author along­side a nice photo of the author or the cover of their lat­est book.

Junk every­thing in the right col­umn and start over, basi­cally. None of that belongs here. And it’s all ugly and out­dated in look.

So these are just a few of my ini­tial thoughts on the web­site. As I am not a mem­ber, I can’t really speak for the pri­vate mate­ri­als behind the login page, but I think there is plenty of work to be done on the public-​​facing side of things.

Jetse de Vries on What Should be Left Unsaid in Fiction

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Jetse de Vries on What Should be Left Unsaid in Fiction

Jetse of Interzone has made a post talk­ing about the bal­ance of answered vs. unan­swered ques­tions in fiction.

This is an attempt to pin­point one of the things that makes a story res­onate: that is, one of those qual­i­ties that makes a story stay with the reader long after she/​he has fin­ished read­ing it. I’m aim­ing at what should be left unsaid in a story.

Different read­ers are going to want dif­fer­ent things out of a story. One thing I used to get burned on in crits was that every­one wanted more, but the “more” that they wanted, background-​​wise, was dif­fer­ent. I think as a writer, I end up try­ing to focus on only what is imme­di­ately impor­tant to the story, and then let­ting the reader fill in the rest. On my Kansas Jayhawk vs. The Midwest Monster Squad story pub­lished in Interzone, one of the fun things some of my reader friends did was come up with the daikaiju mon­ster mas­cots for other states. That’s the kind of reader par­tic­i­pa­tion I whole-​​heartedly endorse.

On Gaming and Writing

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On Gaming and Writing

The sim­ple rea­son as to why I have not been post­ing much is that I have devel­oped an active social life that keeps me out of the house. It’s a very geeky social life, though. I am spend­ing three to four nights a week gam­ing with new meat­space friends.

On Tuesdays, I’m run­ning a D&D cam­paign. I’m not a huge fan of D&D, but it’s like oat­meal. It may not taste very good, but it can be filling.

On Wednesdays, I spend the evening at Gryphon Gaming & Comics. I pick up the new comics for the week and then play board games and card games with who­ever shows up. I’ve met some really inter­est­ing peo­ple this way, and tried a lot of new games that I have never heard of before attending.

On Thursdays, I’ve picked up a lit­tle war gam­ing sys­tem called Warmachine/​Hordes. I play the Hordes side of things, because I find the idea of run­ning an army of gigan­tic, unstop­pable trolls just irre­sistible. I find the paint­ing part of things very relax­ing as well. It’s not as hard on my right brain as the day job is, but it’s bet­ter than just turn­ing into a full-​​fledged couch potato too.

In addi­tion the the above, I’m in talks to run a monthly one-​​shot game at the store, and I’m talk­ing with some­one about play­ing a cam­paign of Shadowrun. I think I will draw the line at 4 days of gam­ing com­mit­ment. I need to get some writ­ing done at some point.

Speaking of writ­ing, I recently sold a story, “Groob’s Stupid Grubs” to Black Gate. I don’t remem­ber if I’ve posted that yet. Anyway, with that sale and a rejec­tion from Asimov’s this week (mov­ing, but didn’t work. I need to learn how to write sto­ries that work. At least I’m get­ting pathos now, which is an improve­ment on the old me), I only have one story out, the Yeti thing with Shawna.

Right now, I’m just enjoy­ing life, and enjoy­ing not spend­ing 60 hours a week alone behind a key­board. I’m tak­ing notes and read­ing, and I am not giv­ing up on my writ­ing. But I am def­i­nitely sidelin­ing it for a while so I can enjoy hav­ing friends and being around peo­ple again. It’s been a long time coming.