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Our heads are seething with ideas, and sometimes those ideas tangle together and make magic.
Laini Taylor (x)

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It can be hard to get into the groove once you sit down to write. One trick that Iâve learned: leave yourself a little prompt at the end of your writing day, so you have a head start the next time you open your document. The prompts can be as simple as âThe next day my main character is going to get madâ, or they can be bullet points about descriptions or setting. Then, when you start writing in your next chunk of time, you can read the last page to get your writing voice in your head, and go straight into your prompt.
I. W. Gregorio is a practicing surgeon by day, masked avenging YA writer by night. After getting her MD, she met the intersex patient who inspired her debut novel, None of the Above.
Writerâs Care Packages from Camp NaNoWriMo and We Need Diverse Books.
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your wildest sci-fi/fantasy dreams, set free
What is the Jupiter Challenge?Â
The Jupiter Challenge is a project encouraging writers to go back to the worlds and characters they created in their childhood or early teenage years and use them to inspire new work. What did you want to make when you were thirteen? An adventure about a girl who discovers sheâs a vampire princess? A love story that takes place in a space circus? We want you to take those ideas, dust them off, and share them with the world.Â
When is it?
The challenge will officially start June 1st and end August 1st.
What is the writing criteria?
Entries for the main challenge should be at least 10k words and should be based on an idea you had before you were sixteen. Other than that - throw all rules out the window and go wild!
What about fan fiction?
The intention of the Jupiter Challenge is to develop original fiction, but fan fiction is by no means prohibited. Go for it.
Who can participate?
People who are old enough to be embarrassed by middle school.
Where will the stories be posted?
Weâre going to do an AO3 collection, so youâll need an account there to post your story.Â
What if I donât want to do the main challenge but I still want to write?
Never fear! Weâre going to be having smaller challenges, activities, and other fun stuff throughout the summer. You do not need to sign up to participate in these.
What about artists?
Artists have a couple of options - you can sign up to do your own visual art project, you can sign up to illustrate a writerâs project, or you can just hang around and use the prompts to inspire you!
How do I sign up?
Writers
Artists
Writing Tip #7
Get to really know your character. From novel to OC in a fanfic, know every little thing about them. What is their favorite color? Most hated food? Deepest fear? Guilty pleasure? Are they afraid of heights or spiders?
If you donât know them intimately, you canât write them well. Itâs like trying to tell the life story of a stranger you pass on the streets. You canât explain why they punched the wall, but they did. You canât write a character that people will get attached to them if you arenât attached yourself.
A fun way to figure out their nuances is take those silly personality quizzes online. They actually make you think really hard on the little stuff and it helps big time.
Remember that the world around them will also affect things. If a war is going on, the most likely wonât be eating like kings. Do they resent it or is it all theyâve know?
Sometimes itâs the little things that really open up a character. It can be as stressful as trying to pull all the skeletons from your best friendâs closet, but itâs worth it in the end. (I.E. had a character afraid of the color orange and they were stuck in a pumpkin patch with their friends. Panic ensued and fighting happened, all because it was a feared color.) Any detail can seem too little to include, yet they can be the driving force behind a scene.
Oh, and keep notes on their personality and preferences. Itâs easy to forget it all when you set down your writing.
Why You Should Protect Your Writing Time
Itâs easy to keep putting off writing if youâre busy or tired or youâre just not an inspired as you hoped, but sometimes the key is making writing a daily habit. I know itâs not always possible to write every day and there will be distractions, but Iâm saying you should try your hardest.
Here are a few reasons why you should protect your writing time:
Once you stop, itâs harder to get back into it
If you make something a daily habit, it will become easier. Once you gain momentum, you donât want to lose it. Sure, you can take a few days off, but after that it becomes difficult to jump back into it. Iâm not saying you need to write a chapter every day, but a sentence or two doesnât hurt. Learn to write in small increments.
You might lose track of your story
From my personal experience, I know that I lose track of details when I stop working on a story for a while. It kills my motivation because I know that Iâll have to go back and read where I left off and try to figure out if Iâm still on the right track. Writing every day will help you keep your story fresh in your mind.
Youâll improve
Practice, practice, practice. Writing anything every day will help you figure out your strengths and weaknesses. What do you need to work on? Â What do you like writing about? Youâll learn more about yourself if you make writing a habit.
Waiting until youâre motivated doesnât always work
Sometimes you need to fake it until you make it. You canât wait until youâre motivated to write or else youâll be waiting around A LOT. Thatâs why sometimes I make myself write no matter what. Sometimes I end up with nothing good, but sometimes it turns into something incredible and Iâm inspired again. Fighting through it sometimes gives you the push you need.
Thereâs always something stopping you
There will always be something happening in your life that stops you from doing what you love. Writing takes work and sometimes you donât want to do it. That doesnât mean you donât love it, but you just need an extra push on occasion. Donât wait until you have a whole day to spare. Learn how to write when you have a quick break or right before bed. Thatâs why making it a habit works!
Remember: I know that sometimes you canât write. I know itâs harder for some people than for others and it can really depend on the individual. Â Keep your mental health in mind when youâre writing and donât force yourself to do something that jeopardizes that! You come first!
-Kris Noel

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Seasonal Inspired Names
your character should be more than a tragic backstory. more than i lost my parents at a young age so now i rebel against the world. more than i have all these wicked skills without proper background or training.Â
sass is great, and so is silence â but when arenât they using their biting wit? when do they speak up? do they use their ass-kicking skills for good? for evil? have they lost people along the way â actually, itâs inevitable, so what happened after the funeral? did your character attend? did they seek revenge, or search for answers at the bottom of a bottle?Â
donât toss around tragedies if youâre not going to apply them to your characterization. alcoholics arenât just loud and physically abusive; ptsd doesnât mean youâve boarded up the windows and refuse to leave your house. you wonât always continue to hate your parents after theyâve died. you will doubt your life decisions. being rich doesnât make you sexy. being smart doesnât make you socially awkward [ alternatively, it doesnât make you the most attractive person in the room. ] even if youâre wicked smart, youâll still get some things wrong.Â
do your research. if you put your character through traumatic events, not everyone walks away unscathed. but being haunted by the ghosts of your past doesnât make you attractive either. itâs a nitty gritty, dirty fucking business. you get mad, your world loses color, you feel alone, and sometimes you ask yourself why youâre the one who lived.Â
treat your character like their own person. just because you wouldnât say something to someone doesnât mean theyâll keep their trap shut. it doesnât mean theyâll want a big wedding or fast cars or apple pie made the way your mother taught you. maybe youâre pro-life and your character is pro-choice. maybe itâs vice versa. just because your character is a dick doesnât mean it should be a reflection on yourself. but if theyâre going to be a dick, and you want it to be believable, give them a reason to be a dick. a reason to hate the world, only slightly less than they hate the people living in it. maybe more. maybe itâs maybelline.
being smart and young and witty and attractive doesnât mean your character will be respected. it doesnât mean your character deserves to be respected. older, more experienced characters may trust your character less because theyâre so damn young, no matter what you do or say to try to prove them wrong.Â
Welcome to the official Tumblr of The Offing, an online literary magazine publishing work in all genres.
OUR MISSION:
The Offing publishes work that challenges, experiments, provokes â work that pushes literary and artistic forms and conventions, but understands that to do so requires a rigorous understanding of those forms and conventions.
The Offing is a place for emerging writers to test their voices, and for established writers to test their limits.
The Offing actively seeks out work by and about those often marginalized in the literary conversation, including people of color, women and gender non-conformists, and members of the LGBTQ and differently abled communities. The Offing believes writers and artists deserve to be compensated for their work, and we will pay our contributors. It wonât be much at first â $25, $50 â but we will work diligently, with your help, to raise the funds to increase that amount, and to offer stipends to our editorial staff.
The Offing is a channel of the Los Angeles Review of Books.
Follow us and weâll let you know when new work is featured in the magazine. Weâll also be featuring items exclusive to Tumblr, including Q&As with our contributors and editors. Visit our website to sign up for our bi-monthly newsletter.Â
Interested in submitting? You can do that here.Â
You can also keep up with us on Twitter and Facebook.
If youâd like to volunteer with or offer tax-deductible financial support to The Offing, please email [email protected].
Worldbuilding is an essential part of any work of fiction. But especially for science fiction or fantasy, itâs the lifeblood of storytelling. But when worldbuilding fails, it can wreck your whole story, and leave your characters feeling pointless. Here are seven deadly sins of worldbuilding.
Above all, watch with glittering eyes the whole world around you because the greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely places
Roald Dahl, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (via bookshopped)

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How to Do Research for Your Novel
When does research become a bad thing? When writers use it as an excuse not to start writing yet. Iâve seen writers spend ten years researching a novel that not only didnât require such exhaustive background research; it would have been better off without it. Still other writers love doing research so muchâor at least they say they doâthat they never write at all. Itâs like being a perpetual student, staying in school and earning degree after degree to put off venturing out into the real world.
Research has its rightful place in the novel writing process and is in fact vital to many kinds of stories. The keys to keeping it under control are to understand that there are two kinds of research for the novelist; know which kind should be done when and know when not to do research at all.
Background Research
The first kind of research, the kind in which some writers mire themselves as a means of putting off actually writing, is background research. Background research is exactly what it sounds like: investigating an era, a subject, an industry, or whatever is necessary to come up with a believable plot for your novel.
Background research is necessary when you have an idea for a novel that is either set in an unfamiliar time or place or is about a subject that you know so little about, you canât even begin to construct a story until you know more.Imagine, for example, a writer with an idea for a novel set in the field of nature preservation. His lead character is a forest ranger. Though he has the vaguest notion of a story idea, he hasnât a notion of exactly what forest rangers do all day. And he must know this before he can start putting a story together, before he can start stringing actions together for his lead character.
This article isnât about how to research. You know what the various methods are, from consulting books and other printed materials in libraries to surfing the Net to conducting informational interviews. This article is about how much research to do.
How can you avoid falling into the perpetual research trap, yet still learn enough to work with? By setting out concrete questions for yourself before you even begin. In most cases the writers who mire themselves in research and never get to writing the novel itself use what I call the âimmersion approach.â They read book after book, fill notebook upon notebook with notes, in an effort to insert themselves as deeply as possible into their subject. There is no real plan to their workâall books on the subject are fair game; itâs impossible to go too deep; no detail is unimportant. Itâs all in the name of immersion.
If, on the other hand, you force yourself to compile a list of questions you need answers to before you can build your story, youâve already gone a long way toward limiting the research phase.
Letâs take our forest ranger example. Our hypothetical writer has a vague notion for a thriller set in the world of nature conservation; his premise is:âSuppose a man [the forest ranger] discovered that his best friend, a fellow ranger, was murdering animals and selling their [what?] on the black market.â
Our writer must ask himself what basic information he needs to begin devising his story. Here are some likely questions:
What animal products are sold on the black market? (Fur, skin, tusks, etc.)
Around which of these products is there likeliest to be violence/danger?
In what countries does this illicit selling occur?
Are the animals that provide these products protected? Where? (Protected forests, jungles, savannas, etc.)
What are the people called whose job it is to protect these places?
What are these peopleâs primary activities in performing their jobs?
Do these people work from any sort of headquarters on or near the land they protect, or do they move about, with no central headquarters?
If they do work from a headquarters, where would it be?
What would the headquarters be like? (Building, cabin, tower, etc.)
How many people would work in one facility? On one protected area? Are there shifts so that protection is constant?
If there is more than one person, how do they communicate?
And so on. Questions lead to more questions. When the actual research begins, yet more questions inevitably arise. But the research process has been shaped into a finite project. Each question is tackled, one at a time, and when itâs answered, the novelist moves on to the next one. If the novelist resists the temptation to be sidetracked, which can lead to dangerous immersion, then the background research process has a definite end, and the plotting phase can begin.
When Not to Do Background Research
More than once I have advised a writer faced with extensive background research to reconsider her project entirely. In these instances it was clear that although the writer had a strong interest in the subject she was about to research, her absolute lack of knowledge of this subject made research impractical; the learning curve was too steep. To conduct the research necessary to achieve even a rudimentary knowledge of the subject would take so long that by the time the book itself was written, too much time would have passed, causing too long a time span. Publishers want books good and fastâusually no more than a year apart. In terms of career strategy, sometimes a project simply isnât practical.
When I decided to write my own fiction, I knew I would write amateur-sleuth mysteries, because what I most enjoy reading is amateur-sleuth mysteries, both contemporary and historical. I was torn, however, between two ideas.
One idea was to write a mystery series featuring a sleuth who was a literary agent in a present-day New Jersey village and who was helped in her detecting by her cat. The other idea was to feature as my detective an alchemist in medieval London. On reflection, I realized that despite my extensive reading of novels set in the medieval period, I would have an enormous amount of research to doâresearch that would probably have to be added to for each novel in my series.
On the other hand, I am a literary agent, I live in a small town in New Jersey, and a number of cats have owned me. For this idea, there would be no learning curve at all. Because Iâm an agent, making my living selling books, when it comes to decisions such as this Iâm practical if nothing else. My choice was clear. I would follow the age-old adage âWrite what you know.â Thus, Jane Stuart and Winky of Shady Hills, New Jersey, were born.
Think hard about any project youâre considering that will require too long a research period. Sometimes, in terms of your career, the learning curve is just too steep.
Spot Research
The other kind of research is what I call spot research. Itâs the small piece of information you need at a precise moment in the plotting or writing of your novel. Whatâs the actual name of rat poison? What kind of wood would that table be made of? Whatâs a town about fifteen miles south of Stamford, Connecticut?
As with background research, writers often use an item of spot research as an excuse to stop plotting or writing and start searching. Entire days can be spent looking for a tiny item of informationâdays that will likely spoil the flow and momentum of your work.
Items that require spot research are items that matter but can wait until youâre done. When youâre plotting or writing your novel and one of these items arises, donât stop; signify that youâll have to research this later by typing â[????]â or âTO COMEâ or the old journalistâs expression, âtkâ (to come). At the same time, jot on a piece of paper that youâve headed âResearchâ and place it near your keyboard. Thus, in your manuscript you type:
If Gail had headed south on Route 17, sheâd definitely have passed through Paramus and then [????].
And on your Research sheet you write:
Town south of Paramus.
When Iâm plotting or writing a novel, I force myself never to stop to do spot research. I do all of that when my first draft is completed and printed out. Since I donât let myself stop to research, I have no excuse to stop writing. I counsel the novelists I represent, especially the ones on tight deadlines, to follow this practice, and I counsel you to do the same.
â Evan Marshall
30 Uncommon Character Development Questions
What position does your character sleep in? ( i.e; stomach, side, back, etc. ) Describe why they do this â optional.
Does your character have any noteworthy features? Freckles? Dimples? A scar somewhere unusual? etc.
Does your character have an accent? What does it sound like?
Do they have any verbal tics? Do they have trouble pronouncing certain words or getting their thoughts across clearly?
What are their chief tension areas?Â
If you were to pick one song â and only one song â to describe your character, what would it be and why?
How does your character perceive themselves? Positive? Negative? Neutral?
Are they a quick thinker or do they need time to sort through their thoughts?
Does your character dream or are their nights filled with an empty blackness? Describe a dream theyâve had or a night they couldnât sleep and what they did to preoccupy their time.
If they had a choice, would they prefer a subway or a bus for public transportation?
What do they think of creation? Do they believe in evolution or do they believe in God? What is their religion like?
Describe 5 unusual characteristics your muse has.
Have they ever been so overwhelmed they had to stop and take a break from something?Â
Are they a team player or do they prefer to be solo?
Can they multi-task or must they focus on one subject at a time?
What are their best school subjects? What are their worst? List five of each.
Is your character an introvert or an extrovert? How do they handle big crowds of people?
Are they a leader, do they prefer to follow, or would they rather just stay on the sidelines altogether?
If your character was suddenly challenged, would they rather run away or stay and fight?
If your character was allowed to murder one person without any consequences, who would that person be and why?
Your character has been granted 3 wishes; what would they wish for and why?
Does your character trust people right off the bat or does it take them some time to warm up to someone?
Do they prefer romance or affection? What is the quickest way to your characterâs heart?
Does your character have any enemies? If so, who and why?
Do they have any weird bedroom habits? Any unusual kinks?
How does your character prepare for bed? Do they sleep at all or can they stay awake for days on end without trouble?
If your character had one thing to say to their parents before they died, what would it be?
Are they afraid of death? Do they have any regrets?
Does your character get restless when things are too quiet or do they favour solitude and silence? Why?
Finally; if your character was forced to eat one thing for the rest of their life, what would they choose and why?
Write what you need to write, not what is currently popular or what you think will sell.
P D James (via writingbox)
WHO.
For each of your characters - particularly the main ones - fill this out:
Name:
Age:
Sexuality:
Married/Single/Other:
Race:
Eye colour:
Hair colour/style:
Build/body type:
Style of dress:
Quirks, flaws:
Positive attributes:
Habits:
Five words that spring to mind when you think of them:
(insp)
WHAT.
Every story - no matter how long or short - is comprised of a beginning, a middle and an end, or a start, a conflict and a resolution/conclusion (alternatively a cliff-hanger, depending on whether your writing piece is part of a series). This step is very simple:
Write down a minimum of five dot points detailing things you would like to happen in each category.
WHEN.
In which time period does your novel take place?
What is the timespan? A day? A few days? A week, a month, a year or more?
WHERE.
Where does your story take place? Describe the setting in five or more words, then write a paragraph giving further detail.
If you've created a place entirely of your own imagining, write another paragraph detailing what makes it unique and different to our own world.
WHY.
Probably the most important of all the questions:
Why do the things that happen in your novel happen? What causes them to happen? Is it the characters, the way the plot unfolds?Â
What is the main aim of the story? Are your characters out to vanquish a terrible evil? Are they on an adventure to discover a lost object? What is the overall arc of your novel?
---
This was created with NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) in mind, but could certainly be applied to any story. If you already have an outline I encourage you to answer these questions anyway, without referring to any notes you may have - test yourself to see how much you know!
inktype inspires (x) â something wicked

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Appealing to the five senses is the feature that will always set writing apart from the visual media. A good writer will tell us what the world smells like, what the textures are, what the sounds are, what the light looks like, what the weather is.
Janet Fitch (via writingquotes)
We should see color. We should see religion. We should see homosexuality. We should see gender identity. We should see all the things that make people and the world different and not pretend that we are colorblind or that one story is enough to represent a whole group of people. But we should also remember that most people have the same kinds of feelings and wants. Everyone wants to be the hero sometimes.
Author Sara Farizan, âEveryone Wants To Be the Hero Sometimesâ (CBC Diversity)