Rip Todoroki Family You Would’ve Hated Celebrity Gossip Columns

Rip Todoroki Family You Would’ve Hated Celebrity Gossip Columns

Rip todoroki family you would’ve hated celebrity gossip columns

More Posts from Yerdannyy and Others

8 years ago
妄想プリセツキーエキシ 二枚目は某北欧選手オマージュのクリムキンイーグルです
妄想プリセツキーエキシ 二枚目は某北欧選手オマージュのクリムキンイーグルです

妄想プリセツキーエキシ 二枚目は某北欧選手オマージュのクリムキンイーグルです


Tags
8 years ago
I Read A Lot Of Writing In My Line Of Work And While That’s Amazing, I See The Same Flaws Again And

I read a lot of writing in my line of work and while that’s amazing, I see the same flaws again and again. Below is a list of 7 common writing mistakes in fiction and how you can fix them. This list is by no means complete. In fact there’s a great list over at The Editor’s Blog that covers even more mistakes.

1. Bad dialogue

Sometimes writers can forget that they’re writing a conversation and thus not write a conversation. The dialogue can be boring, stilted and unnatural, and I’d rather listen to the territorial call of an Australian Raven than read one more word of it.

There are many things that contribute to bad dialogue, but here are the three that really get on my nerves:

Not using contractions–I’ve seen work that is modern and still doesn’t use contractions. Consider this: “You are going to be late.” Unless the speaker is trying to sound like an irritated mother and is leaving an emphatic silence between each word to sound threatening, use contractions. It sounds really drawn out and like the speaker is pointing their nose in the air. We generally don’t speak like this in real life, so neither should your characters.

Using complete sentences–Not only is it natural for your characters to chop their sentences, this can also contribute to their voice. Does your character say “I don’t know.” or “Dunno.” Would he/she say “I missed the train and had to find a lift home.” or “Missed the train. Had to find a ride.” In casual speech, we often only use the words necessary to convey our message, even if it doesn’t form a complete sentence. You shouldn’t apply this to every line of dialogue, but consider it if your dialogue sounds stale.

Using characters as a conduit for research and plot information–Sometimes writers like to show off their research (looking at you Jurassic Park), backstory, world building and plot by having their characters talk way too much. If your character says “Once this valley was home to an ancient race of elves, who looked after the land and treated it with respect. One day, the secret magic spring dried up and then the goblins came. Without their magic spring, the elves couldn’t fight back, and they were killed by the goblins. The goblins didn’t respect the land and now it’s uninhabitable.” he should probably shut up. It sounds less like a person talking than it does an audio tour. The information he’s shared could be given in a much more interesting way.

How you can fix it:

Listen to and watch the way real people talk to each other. Do they speak in full sentences with full words? Do they speak with grammatical correctness? Do they speak differently in different situations? How do hand gestures, body language and facial expressions help them communicate?

Read your dialogue out loud as if you’re practising lines for a movie. Does it sound natural? Does it flow?

Test every piece of information your characters give out. Does it all need to be said? Would your character say all of it at once? Do they need to say it all in so many words?

2. Passages of uninterrupted speech or thought

Sometimes you might want to avoid telling the reader about something and have a character tell another character instead. Sometimes you might want to avoid telling the reader how a character feels about something by having them think about it excessively instead. If this goes on for longer than a couple of paragraphs (or less), you risk allowing your reader to drift out of the scene.

The only thing anchoring your reader in the scene is your characters and what they’re doing. If the characters are talking or thinking for a long time without interacting with anyone or anything else, they might as well be floating in space, which can make the reader feel like they’re floating in space. That’s not to say that they’ve forgotten where the scene is taking place or who else is involved, just that it can feel that way if this is how the character acts.

How you can fix it:

If your characters have a lot to say, try to include the other characters as well. Have them ask questions or make comments so it feels like a scene and not a soliloquy.

If your character is around others when he/she is deep in thought, try to include the other characters in some way. If the POV character is thinking about something that the other characters can see, why not give voice to one of the other characters in between thought paragraphs?

If the character is alone when he/she is deep in thought, is there a way they can interact with their environment? Unless they’re standing in front of a wall, they should be able to see, smell, feel or hear something.

If your character is absolutely, completely lost in thought, is there a way you can bring some sort of image into it? For example, on page 216 of The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, Katniss is thinking about how to treat a burn she receives. Almost the entire page is a paragraph describing a memory; however, there is still action in this memory and, therefore, there is something for the reader to imagine.

3. Not knowing when to/not to use said

Some people will tell you to use descriptive speech tags and others will tell you there’s nothing wrong with said. Both are true, but when do you follow the former and when do you follow the latter? And when do you use no speech tags at all?

Using anything but said and using nothing but said both get exhausting and boring very fast.

How you can fix it:

Below is a rough guide to what kind of speech tag to use. Please bear in mind that it is only a guide and will not and should not apply to every situation.

I Read A Lot Of Writing In My Line Of Work And While That’s Amazing, I See The Same Flaws Again And

Said is unobtrusive–a way of letting the reader know who’s talking without making a song and dance about it. Specific verbs (e.g. whispered, shouted, mumbled) give the reader information about how the words are being said. Adverbial tags can also give extra information about how something is being said, but more often than not they can be replaced with a stronger verb (e.g. she said loudly can be replaced with she shouted). Writers can also fall into the trap of telling where it’s better to show when using adverbial tags, which can make the writing bland. Sometimes telling is better, but with speech tags, it’s usually better to absorb the reader in the conversation. If you’ve used an adverbial tag, go back and have a look at it. Is there a better way you could get the message across?

What you need to pay attention to when determining what speech tags to use is the context of the speech. If the reader is already aware of the manner in which a character is talking, it won’t be necessary to remind them every time the character speaks. If there are only two characters in the conversation, it won’t be necessary to finish each quote with he said/she said. Going back to #2, you can also do away with speech tags entirely and use action to demonstrate how a character is feeling, while also grounding the reader in the scene.

The key to avoiding repetition and blandness is to find a balance between using the unobtrusive said, using something more specific, and mixing it up with a bit of action, which means you might not even need a tag at all.

4. Too much description/overwriting

Sometimes it’s better to tell and not show. Some details just aren’t important enough to warrant a lengthy description. If you want your reader to know that it’s raining, you can write something better than “It was raining”, but there’s no need to go overboard and write a poem about how the puddles on the asphalt looked like a great abyss.

Think of description like camera focus. The more you describe something, the more focus you put on it. If you put enough focus on something, you eliminate everything else. What’s this? A close-up. What does a close-up in a movie tell you? That object of the close-up is significant.

Be wary: when you write thirty words describing the way the moonlight is reflecting off the inky black lake, you might not be just setting the scene. You might also be giving the lake undue emphasis, and it’s probably going to irritate your reader when they realise there’s nothing significant about the lake at all, you were just showing off your imagery skills.

How you can fix it:

Keep it real. What would the character notice, what would they think about it and is it worth the attention? And try not to focus on sight. Your characters have more than one way to perceive their environment, and incorporating their other senses can help build a 3D setting for your reader rather than just painting them a picture. Give the reader enough to imagine the scene, and no more.

5. Not knowing when to/not to use adverbs

There’s a lot of writing advice out there that will tell you to cut all adverbs. The result is that many writers now think adverbs exist only to eat their children and wouldn’t dare to ever use one.

There is truth to the advice, but to say “The road to hell is paved with adverbs”? Really, Stephen King? And his dandelion analogy assumes there’s no editing process.

Adverbs aren’t evil, but there is such a thing as using them ineffectively. Which of the below are more descriptive?

She ran quickly or She sprinted

“It’s a long way down,” he said nervously or “It’s a long way down,” he said

He was shamefully prone to anxiety or He was prone to anxiety

She sprinted not only gets to the point faster, it also creates a more powerful image for the reader. “It’s a long way down,” he said gives no indication of how the speaker is speaking or feeling; however, “It’s a long way down,” he said nervously is telling, not showing. Rather than using an adverb here, the writer could describe the speaker’s body language. He was shamefully prone to anxiety tells you how the character feels about being prone to anxiety and there is no stronger word to replace “shamefully prone”.

How you can fix it:

Ask yourself:

How would the meaning of the sentence change if the adverb was removed?

Can the adverb and verb be replaced by a single verb?

Does the action really need clarification?

Does the adverb add something to the sentence that can’t be described in another way?

6. No conflict in the beginning

The first few chapters of a lot of stories I’ve read involve the main character plodding along in their daily life. This is a good thing as the reader needs to get a feel for your character before the big plot things happen, but that doesn’t mean the first few chapters should be without conflict. I don’t want to read about a character waking up, looking at themselves in the mirror, getting dressed, getting coffee, going to work, getting home, going on a date etc. for three chapters. It’s boring and I don’t care about any of it.

The confusion might be caused by common story structure theories that say the main conflict enters the story at the first plot point, or 25% into the story. But this doesn’t mean there should be zero conflict at the beginning! At the beginning of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone Harry was told ‘no funny business’ or he’d be grounded. Not long after that, there was some vanishing glass and an escaped boa constrictor. After this happened there was a mysterious letter addressed to Harry, and he spent an entire chapter trying to get hold of it as the weirdness escalated. There’s conflict and a goal right off the bat, and the story hasn’t even really started yet. In The Hunger Games Katniss faces the Reaping. In The Hobbit Bilbo finds himself hosting a dinner party for dwarfs and being asked to go and fight a dragon.

How you can fix it:

Take a look at all the books you’ve read. Most of them (if not all) start with some sort of problem or goal. Study up on this to help you realise what makes a good beginning.

Don’t fill your first few chapters with characterisation and nothing else. Build your character in the context of a problem or goal.

Keep in mind that you find your characters more interesting than your reader does. What you like about your character might not be enough to keep the reader’s interest.

What’s going on in your character’s life? How is this going to influence what happens when the conflict or story goal takes the stage?

What would happen if you cut your beginning out of the story? Would the plot still make sense? Maybe it’s better to start the story at a later point.

7. Lack of story structure

When you write a first draft, whether you’ve planned it or not, there are going to be structural flaws. Maybe halfway through you thought of a way to solidify a character’s motivation. Maybe at the climax you thought of a way to strengthen your conflict. Maybe somewhere in the middle you had no idea where you were going with this and slugged your way through some boring scenes. It’s all good; this is how stories come together.

What should happen next is that you revise your draft with story structure in mind. There’ll be a lot of “I should add a scene here about this” and “what was I thinking when I wrote that?” and after a few goes, you’ll have a story.

Writers don’t always do this though (which, by the way, makes my job take longer and cost more). They’ll go through and fix all of the obvious problems, but what remains is a manuscript that still lacks a solid structure. It’s messy to read, it’s confusing, it’s clearly not thought out, and it feels like the writer is giving me the finger. I’ll regret paying for the book, stop reading it and leave a negative review on Goodreads. Is that worth not giving your book a good edit?

How you can fix it:

Read a lot. Make sure you have a decent grasp on different story structures. Make sure you understand the way stories progress, the way they’re paced and what keeps the reader engaged.

Re-outline. Or if you pantsed your way through the first draft, make an outline. Write a checklist for what each scene should accomplish and what each chapter should accomplish. Make a timeline of how the events progress and how the tension increases. Don’t base this on what you’ve written, base it on what you’ve figured out about your plot.

Edit ruthlessly. If a scene doesn’t measure up to your new plan, cut it. If it’s in the wrong place, move it.


Tags
6 months ago
A Cute Doodle While I Was Doing Assignments

A cute doodle while i was doing assignments


Tags
5 months ago
五夏 What If

五夏 What if

Twitter

Instagram


Tags
4 months ago

TALONS.

yerdannyy - Untitled Menace

You can never have too much talon!Dick🦉


Tags
1 month ago
I Don't Trust Gege And What Exactly He's Cooking...

I don't trust Gege and what exactly he's cooking...


Tags
1 month ago
What Makes Erik So Dazzling At Conferences:
What Makes Erik So Dazzling At Conferences:
What Makes Erik So Dazzling At Conferences:

What makes Erik so dazzling at conferences:


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • daugtherofthesea
    daugtherofthesea liked this · 1 week ago
  • dangerd00dles
    dangerd00dles liked this · 1 week ago
  • nuttychopshopsublime
    nuttychopshopsublime liked this · 1 week ago
  • urmigurimgay
    urmigurimgay liked this · 1 week ago
  • breadinbottle
    breadinbottle liked this · 1 week ago
  • temeraire101
    temeraire101 liked this · 1 week ago
  • virgincallgirl
    virgincallgirl liked this · 1 week ago
  • satomi1455
    satomi1455 liked this · 1 week ago
  • mailka
    mailka reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • mailka
    mailka liked this · 1 week ago
  • aizawa-fan-811
    aizawa-fan-811 liked this · 1 week ago
  • obsessedwiththesturniolos
    obsessedwiththesturniolos liked this · 1 week ago
  • lorddoodle
    lorddoodle liked this · 1 week ago
  • thatcatangelwriter
    thatcatangelwriter liked this · 1 week ago
  • itsodeep04
    itsodeep04 reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • itsodeep04
    itsodeep04 liked this · 1 week ago
  • starzzsys
    starzzsys liked this · 1 week ago
  • blue-pasta
    blue-pasta reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • blue-pasta
    blue-pasta liked this · 1 week ago
  • luminouslotuses
    luminouslotuses liked this · 1 week ago
  • luminouslotuses
    luminouslotuses reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • a-very-distinctive-style
    a-very-distinctive-style liked this · 1 week ago
  • nikosa678
    nikosa678 liked this · 1 week ago
  • a5trophel
    a5trophel liked this · 1 week ago
  • thoughtfulfrogtyrant
    thoughtfulfrogtyrant liked this · 1 week ago
  • echo-m-violet
    echo-m-violet liked this · 1 week ago
  • desolatelydireconduit
    desolatelydireconduit liked this · 1 week ago
  • ravenclawl
    ravenclawl liked this · 1 week ago
  • luckiecharms8991
    luckiecharms8991 liked this · 1 week ago
  • aeriael
    aeriael reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • leeeemeeeeleeee
    leeeemeeeeleeee liked this · 1 week ago
  • kohreeander
    kohreeander liked this · 1 week ago
  • vnvivian
    vnvivian liked this · 1 week ago
  • miraidashinomia
    miraidashinomia liked this · 1 week ago
  • theunsociablefriend
    theunsociablefriend liked this · 1 week ago
  • alanine9
    alanine9 liked this · 1 week ago
  • mosssparrow
    mosssparrow liked this · 1 week ago
  • immelodyflower
    immelodyflower liked this · 1 week ago
  • yoru-ichi
    yoru-ichi liked this · 1 week ago
  • societeysmenace
    societeysmenace reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • societeysmenace
    societeysmenace liked this · 1 week ago
  • quotesaremyhobby
    quotesaremyhobby liked this · 1 week ago
  • brookeyy22
    brookeyy22 liked this · 1 week ago
  • protagonistscum
    protagonistscum liked this · 1 week ago
  • mayumix
    mayumix liked this · 1 week ago
  • innerchildcycle
    innerchildcycle liked this · 1 week ago
  • running-on-3-hours-of-sleep
    running-on-3-hours-of-sleep liked this · 1 week ago
  • northermkirbi
    northermkirbi liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • bluejay-ares17
    bluejay-ares17 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • iamdeanwin
    iamdeanwin liked this · 2 weeks ago
yerdannyy - Untitled Menace
Untitled Menace

433 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags