Action/Adventure: September 17, 2014 Issue [#6559] |
Action/Adventure
This week: What if... Edited by: Leger~ More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
The purpose of this newsletter is to help the Writing.com author hone their craft and improve their skills. Along with that I would like to inform, advocate, and create new, fresh ideas for the author. Write to me if you have an idea you would like presented.
This week's Action / Adventure Editor
Leger~
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What If...
I was working on writing a scene last week and since it was pretty much off the cuff, I got to a part where the character could likely do two different things. I stopped typing and really gave it some thought, what did I want to happen? I couldn't decide! So I wrote both. Just like the interactive stories on Writing.com, I wrote the next chapter two different ways, to see where I could take this story line. Eventually I chose one and continued, but writing both chapters helped me decide which fit the story better.
When outlining or free writing, use your imagination to see how your character can get from Point A to Point B. Do they run through the forest, smashing through the undergrowth and leaping over logs...or do they swing from branch to branch, making daring leaps from tree to tree? Think about what fits into the world that your character is traveling in and what seems to be the 'most likely' way to get from one point to another.
Sometimes choosing the opposite or 'least likely' path can be more exciting, as long as the choice still seems workable for that world setting. Perhaps your character discovers an underground system of tunnels. A twist in the scene can create a new path for future action in the story. Either way, be descriptive enough for your reader to envision the path your choose. And Write on!
This month's question: Do you use twists in scene settings to add interest to your story?
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Excerpt: The contest begins each month at 12:00 AM WDC time(EST)on the first day of the month, and will end at 11:59 PM on the last day of the month.
Excerpt: Each day in October, complete an assignment from the "October Nano Prep: 2014 Calendar". The exercises will help you develop your novel-length story before writing it and prepare for the marathon writing of NaNoWriMo .
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Excerpt: Level Up is a new activity dedicated to that age-old rite of passing for writers: submitting your work to paying markets! The process of sending out stories on submission can be daunting and time-consuming, and many writers aren't sure where to begin.
Excerpt: There aren't any definite rules, as Silent Hill is a town that is different for each person who visits it. Those who find themselves there find themselves in a waking nightmare. You can fight off zombie nurses, dogs and other strange creatures. If you've played the games or seen the movie, you will know what to expect!
What are you searching for? What guilty secret haunts you? How will you escape Silent Hill?
| | BOUNDING HOME (18+) Youth is lost forever as WWII trainees break their maidens as "Men o' War" on D-Day #1553061 by DRSmith |
Excerpt: Twenty-three days have passed since we stormed Omaha Beach; three weeks of rigorous combat before finally relieved. Our transports had squealed to a halt within a regimental command post set up in Ste-Laurent, a coastal village we helped liberate during opening days of the invasion. Woofie is first to spring from the truck, no doubt his 6’-6” body screaming for nourishment. I have to grin at the big lummox; his charge toward chow lines is second only to the one he made taking out a fortified pillbox. God pity any mess cook who tries denying him extra portions.
Excerpt: The dreams are always the same. I’m standing on a cliff, clutching a handful of rocks, afraid to look down or move. For all I know, the fall could be five feet, or five thousand feet, but I’m dreaming and I stand quivering, undecided and anxious.
Excerpt: Bang! Without warning the number three tire just exploded, on our trailer loaded with 44000 pounds of hand Sanitizer! It didn't get the one behind it. That sometimes happens. When it does you are stopped dead. We were lucky we still had three good tires on that side to allow us to limp a few miles. I dug out the book with all the truck stop information in it. The driver accessed his little console and announced that we were three miles south of Chadron Nebraska.
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This month's question: Do you use twists in scene settings to add interest to your story?
Last month's question: How do you stay organized during birthday week?
BIG BAD WOLF is Merry comments: I just have fun.
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