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Messages - RobJN

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Author Craft / Re: Tools for Writers
« on: April 25, 2014, 08:13:49 PM »
I read this post a while back, and I can't tell you how much it helped me.  I'd only worked on short stories before, and wanted to work on a book.  Doing it with MSWord was looking like a headache, so I came here to see what others used.  I checked out Scrivener, used it for the trial period, and have been hooked ever since.

I'm still working on the book, and Scrivener (for the PC) has been a tremendous help.  I love the layout, and the way the manuscript works, it makes everything easy.  I've got character templates set up, and the story broken into different acts/folders with a new text page for each chapter. 

If anyone is just getting started, I'd recommend taking a look at Scrivener.  It's probably not for everyone, but I'm fairly disorganized, and its helped keep me going.

This is fantastic. Glad it helps. Now get back to work on that novel ;)

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Author Craft / Re: Given Penny's post, here is another pet peeve of mine...
« on: December 07, 2011, 07:10:21 PM »

Rob, I've read some of your work and, like Shecky said, rules are made to be broken. I trust your writing! In this case, the narrator is still making mental decisions. It might be effective to have those non-concrete contradictory assumptions rolling one off the other in rapid recession. I'd love that wild ride! Yes, it would drive me crazy, but also extremely sympathetic to the character, whereas too many of those seems for several pages would make me mad at the author?  Does that make sense? I'd consider it an honor to share that ride with the character, but irritating to be held off by the narrator. I mean the narrator is having to act and respond on what he thinks each statement is or action that happens.

*sigh* again, I'm not expressing this well. Let me just say, that I would absolutely love to read this work and get lost in translation hand in hand with the characters, but if it were several pages of 'seems' where I was observing instead, then I might walk away from it?

To be honest Rob, the seem would be okay, even good, but can you imagine the awesome impact on the reader the other way? Freaking award level maybe...

BUT it is the author's choice and rules are made to be broken. I kinda trust you on that Rob...  :-)

Looking through the statistics for the manuscript, the narrator "seems" (seemed, seeming, etc) a lot more than I'd thought. About 254 times in what would be 568 paperback pages.  :o  The narrator, I think, needs to do more straight observing/reporting and leave the interpretation to the readers. There is definitely room for the "eight words for three" trick in a lot of places in the narrative, as well.

Having more than one character around to guess at the meaning(s) across the language barrier means we don't have to rely solely on the narrator's guesswork. Now that I've written that, I need to remember to use that device more often.

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Author Craft / Re: Given Penny's post, here is another pet peeve of mine...
« on: December 05, 2011, 05:36:26 PM »
In one particular piece I've been working on, the narrator "seems" all the time. He has to guess at what the others around him are thinking and feeling. Other times, he is describing something he has never seen before (or is unsure is genuinely real, darned pesky illusions...), and his terminology is peppered with uncertainty. Yet another case, he does not speak the language of one of the company's traveling companions, and must constantly guess what it is she says purely by judging her facial expression and body language.

4
Got slapped with a headful of ideas all falling into place a couple weeks ago on an existing project I'd been writing. The original Untitled work weighs in at roughly 130,000 words. I'm two weeks and a little under 30,000 words into the rewrite, (very) tentatively titled "The Shores of Dreamland."

I've been wanting to get back to this particular story for quite some time, but the muses had been silent for a very long stretch. Figures, they'd open the floodgates all at once on me....

It feels very good to be writing again. ;D


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Display Case / Re: Perfect Casting, part 2
« on: May 03, 2011, 12:57:06 AM »
And I don't think that even getting it on with a horse will remove that typecast.
You read that fanfic too?? :o


... what? :-\

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Author Craft / Re: Why am I not writing SciFi/Fantasy?
« on: January 23, 2011, 04:49:46 AM »
Been there, doing that.

I read tons of fantasy fiction and a bit of sci fi. I try very hard to write the same type of material, because I like those types of stories and have my own I want to tell.

... so why is it that my best material is contemporary and (only slightly) magical-contemporary...?

My wife tells me it's because I'm boxed in by the "rules" of all the material that I've read and absorbed over the years, and the contemporary stuff I've written isn't penned in (pardon the pun) by such boundaries.

I think she's on to something... which is why I don't read much contemporary fiction.

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Author Craft / Re: I need more music.
« on: January 23, 2011, 04:44:11 AM »
The Piano collections from Windham Hill and Narada have some really good solo and ensemble stuff on them.

David Lanz has some pretty powerful piano pieces, as does Ludovico Einaudi.

If you can find them, the piano arrangement albums from the Final Fantasy series are some great music (even if you aren't into the games themselves).

For modern classical stuff, I go to Bear McCreary. He did most of the Battlestar Glactica music, as well as Caprica. He did the first season's music for Human Target and The Walking Dead (good lord I hope they put out a soundtrack for that show, the work was incredible!); he's currently scoring The Cape.

Yoko Kanno has to be my all time favorite composer, though. She can do classical. She can do jazz. Rock. Blues. Pop. Sometimes more than one style wrapped up in the same piece....

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Author Craft / Re: Books on writing?
« on: November 10, 2010, 10:58:02 PM »
Oh, also, not so much a book on writing, but one that's handy to have read at least once--Strunk and White. I forget the actual title, just the authors, but it's pretty much a grammar handbook.

Elements of Style

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Author Craft / Re: Chewing my nails... It's ready. Interested in reading?
« on: November 09, 2010, 12:55:20 AM »
Congrats!




Now get to work on the sequel ;)

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Author Craft / Re: Starting Out
« on: October 11, 2010, 12:41:10 AM »
On the iPod at the moment, but Googling "Jim Butcher Livejournal" should turn up his writing advice articles.

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Author Craft / Re: Starting Out
« on: October 10, 2010, 01:06:19 PM »
Write by the seat of your pants, or outline the heck out of everything before you jump in -- JUST WRITE. You can always go back and fix it later.

I mostly write-as-I-go, using Jim's "stepping stones" method. Often times, though, the characters take me in a completely different direction. I may do some rewrites every now and then to see if things veer back "on course," but usually find things working better when I follow where the characters lead...

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Author Craft / Re: So if you are writing..
« on: June 23, 2010, 12:14:29 AM »
My mom read me some Stephen King for a bedtime story one night when I was a wee lad...


And I scare myself with my writing, but it's more about form and structure, rather than the subject matter ;)

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Display Case / Re: Perfect Casting, part 2
« on: March 21, 2010, 11:29:55 PM »
Tang Soo Do, a Korean martial art, loosely translated as "Empty Hand Way."

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Author Craft / Re: The Secret History Spectrum
« on: February 15, 2010, 12:10:41 AM »
What kind of story do you want to tell? Let that decide where society's view of the supernatural fits along the spectrum.

Are your main characters among then 'enlightened'? Or are they hapless schmucks dragged into a whole new world view, and now having to cope with all that (in addition to whatever plot-related goodies you're throwing at him/her/them)?

If the supernatural coverup is a conspiracy, which side is perpetuating it?

Is it an X-Files-ish "The Truth is Out There" type of tale, where creepy-crawlies lurk in the sewers and basements and air conditioning ducts? Or are the "creepy-crawlies" as benign as a simple patch of garden gnomes that animate at night to do the weeding?

How severe your branding of the supernatural is in the story will contribute a great deal towards how society mainlines it. Does the supernatural want to be in the open? Do schools conduct regular "Zombie-drills"? Or do the things that go bump in the night watch, content from their closets, and from under the bed?

Maybe there are patches of the world where the supernatural frolic and play, away from the prying eyes of muggles normal folks. Maybe the normal folks' airplane comes apart in midair, and they find themselves washed up on a beach of one such remote isle of mystery.



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Author Craft / Re: Okay new game: hooked or not hooked.....
« on: January 16, 2010, 04:10:03 PM »
Good grab, belial.  It drips with atmosphere right from the start, very immersive. Nothing like a few umlauts to make you start feeling that cold north wind.

I have to agree with Gruud about the "peaceful day" slipped in there, as Ulfr & co. are girding (or... ungirding, I suppose) for war. It's a bit jarring, and swings the attention away from the situation at hand.

One other minor nit pick (I do that a lot, sorry) : The last sentence, there, reads as if Ulfr, the narrator, isn't, and then is an initiate, with the use of "...the initiates" and then following with "threw us to the forefront."

All in all, though, I would definitely read on to see how this plays out. The very setup begs all sorts of questions about themes, character motivations, and you've already set a great tone with those opening lines. With the main character, Ulfr, already on the verge of initiation, I have to wonder just how the first battle and what comes after will change him.

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