ephemeralfireflies
ephemeralfireflies
MandarinMoon
368 posts
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ephemeralfireflies · 3 years ago
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How to Make Interesting Worldbuilding Choices
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We can’t assume that everyone knows the world we’re talking about, right? Luckily, author and previous Camp NaNoWriMo counselor Cass Morris has a few suggestions to help us more deeply explore our worldbuilding:
One of the most powerful things we can do as writers is create a world. What we write holds a mirror up to reality, where we can examine and criticize our own world or try to build a better one. We get to play god with our characters, and in doing so, we exercise a great deal of power in what we choose to reflect, to magnify, to laud, and to condemn.
So how can we make interesting choices, rather than relying on stale tropes, biased perspectives, or common assumptions about “the way things are” or “the way things were”?
Here are five basic concepts I suggest you explore to develop a richly detailed and unique world:
Keep reading
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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Useful Writing Resources II
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Like the last one of these I did, this is a long list of resources for writers to use. Use them wisely:)
Find The First One Here
*** = Separate List Of Resources Pertaining To That Specific Subject
Productivity & Writer’s Block
Ways To Unstick A Stuck Story
10 Outlining Methods For Writers
Things To Do When You Can’t Seem To Write
Ambient Sounds For Writers Masterpost
ZenPen
The Most Dangerous Writing App
Evernote
Writer, the Internet Typewriter
Wordcounter
Character Development
Writing Types Of Characters *** Making An OC ***
Character With Social Anxiety
Female Characters To Avoid
Writing Healthy Relationships
List of 300 Possible Secrets To Give Your Character
Fantasy & Miscellaneous
Myths, Creatures, And Folklore
Helpful Things For Action Writers To Remember
Writing The Opening Scene
Fictional Kisses
Master List of Writer’s Questions Answered’s Posts
Writing Advice Masterlist
The Little Details
How bodies decompose
Wilderness survival skills
Mob mentality
Other cultures
What it takes for a human to die in a given situation
Common tropes for your genre
Average weather for your setting
Free Online Sources For Research
Japanese creatures
greek creatures
creatures organised by type
creatures listed by letter
humanoid creatures
filipino creatures
chinese creatures
cryptids
‘fearsome critters’
angels
beings referred to as fairies
creatures that pretend to be human
a page on therianthropic creatures
shapeshifters
hybrid creatures
extraterrestrial creatures
deities
a page of mythology page links
a section of folklore page links
flying creatures
theological demons
fictional species lists
mythology related lists
legendary creature related lists
Writing Emotional Scenes
Creating Story Structure
What You Need To Hear Before You Publish A Book
Description
Words to Describe Someone’s Voice
An Article About Describing Voice
Voice Types
Vocal Qualities
Panix.com Character Chart
Vocal Impressions
Speech Patterns
Gender and Speech Patterns
Speech Accent Archive
Speech Impediment
What Makes A Man’s/Woman’s Voice Sexy
Synonyms-Antonyms.com
TheCaveOnline
550 Alternative Words for Said
Plot
Subplots
7 Ways to Add Great Subplots to your Novels
The 7 Shoulds of Writing a Subplot
Who Needs Subplots?
Subplots
Knowing Your terms: Subplots
Weave Subplots into your Novel
Understanding the Role of Subplots
Plot, Plot Layers, and Subplots
Plot and Subplot
Subplots - Chicken Soup for your Novel
How Many Subplots are Acceptable?
Subplots by Word Count
Too Many Subplots?
Generators
Appearance Generator
Archetypes Generator
Character Generator
Character Traits Generator
Family Generator
Job/Occupation Generator, (II)
Love Interest Generator
Motive Generator
Name Generator
Personality Generator, (II)
Quick Character Generator
Super Powers Generator
First Encounter Generator
First Line Generator, (II)
Plot Generator, (II), (III)
Plot Device Generator
Plot Twist Generator
Quick Plot Generator
Brand Name Generator
Medicine Title Generator
Name Generator
Quick Name Generator
Vehicle Generator
Town Name Generator
City Generator
Fantasy Race Generator
Laws Generator
Pet Generator
Setting Generator
Species Generator
Terrain Generator
Subject Generator
”Take Three Nouns” Generator
Word Prompt Generator
Color Generator
Decision Generator
Dialogue Generator
Journey Generator
Title Generator, (II), (III)
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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Oh my gosh. I just found this website that walks you though creating a believable society. It breaks each facet down into individual questions and makes it so simple! It seems really helpful for worldbuilding!
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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The steps to traditional publishing
If you decide to pursue traditional publishing, what are the steps after you've written and self-edited your manuscript?
1. Querying
For traditional publishing, you'll need a literary agent 90% of the time.
In order to get a literary agent, you need to query a bunch of them. It is also possible to secure representation at in-person pitch events or on Twitter events like PitMad.
For querying, it is important to compile a list of agents who are reputable and who represent your genre and age category. Then, decide in how many rounds you will query these agents.
Follow their guidelines!
For most agents, you'll need a query letter - a one-page cover letter pitching your book. You'll also need a synopsis, which sets out the entire work in a few pages. Some agents may also request extracts from the manuscript.
2. Getting an agent
If an agent likes your submission they will contact you. Most likely, this will be to request part of your manuscript, or the entire work.
If they still want to represent you after reading the book, they will offer you representation.
You will then sign a contract of representation and the agent will get a percentage of the proceeds of your published books.
3. Agent edits
Not all agents are editors, but most are. If you get an editorial agent, the agent will work with you to polish your novel even more.
This will take as many rounds of edits as is necessary for both of you to be satisfied.
4. Going on submission
Once your book is ready, your agent will pitch the book to editors at publishing houses.
This will usually take multiple rounds and a lot of time.
This is like querying, only more excruciating.
Once an editor shows interest in your work, this process comes to an end.
This also means that the power is back in your hands. Your agent will now let the other editors know that you have an interested editor and that they will have to respond within a certain period if they still want to represent you.
5. Acquisitions
Even if an editor wants to publish your work, they need the go-ahead of the entire publishing house.
This is what acquisitions meetings are for.
The editor will pitch your book to the rest of the company. The marketing, financial etc teams will then decide whether they think the book can be profitable.
6. Offer and auction
If the publishing house wants to publish your book, you will receive an offer from the publisher.
If more than one publisher is interested, the book will go to auction, where the interested publishing houses will bid to publish the work. The best offer will then be accepted.
7. Contract
Once you've decided to publish with a certain house, contract negotiations will begin.
Your agent will be in charge of negotiating on your behalf. However, it is probably a good idea to educate yourself on the things to look out for and to consult with an Intellectual Property lawyer.
Once you and the publisher are satisfied with the contract, you will sign.
You will receive an advance, which is the amount the publisher predicts you will earn in royalties from the book. The first portion of the advance is usually paid upon signature of the contract.
8. More edits
Then, you will have various rounds of edits with your editor to ensure that the book is the best it can be.
Once this is complete, you will probably receive the second portion of the advance.
9. Behind-the-scenes stuff
Your publisher is then in charge of certain procedures necessary for publication e.g. formatting and cover design.
The publishing house will also create a marketing plan, which you should supplement with your own marketing.
10. Publication
And, presto, your book is published.
The process from offer to publication can take anywhere between just under a year to 6+ years.
Should you earn out your advance, you will receive royalty cheques from your publisher.
So, those are the usual steps in broad terms. Some aspects may vary, but this is what you can expect when pursuing traditional publishing.
Reblog if you found this useful. Comment if you have further questions. Follow me for similar content.
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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The steps to traditional publishing
If you decide to pursue traditional publishing, what are the steps after you've written and self-edited your manuscript?
1. Querying
For traditional publishing, you'll need a literary agent 90% of the time.
In order to get a literary agent, you need to query a bunch of them. It is also possible to secure representation at in-person pitch events or on Twitter events like PitMad.
For querying, it is important to compile a list of agents who are reputable and who represent your genre and age category. Then, decide in how many rounds you will query these agents.
Follow their guidelines!
For most agents, you'll need a query letter - a one-page cover letter pitching your book. You'll also need a synopsis, which sets out the entire work in a few pages. Some agents may also request extracts from the manuscript.
2. Getting an agent
If an agent likes your submission they will contact you. Most likely, this will be to request part of your manuscript, or the entire work.
If they still want to represent you after reading the book, they will offer you representation.
You will then sign a contract of representation and the agent will get a percentage of the proceeds of your published books.
3. Agent edits
Not all agents are editors, but most are. If you get an editorial agent, the agent will work with you to polish your novel even more.
This will take as many rounds of edits as is necessary for both of you to be satisfied.
4. Going on submission
Once your book is ready, your agent will pitch the book to editors at publishing houses.
This will usually take multiple rounds and a lot of time.
This is like querying, only more excruciating.
Once an editor shows interest in your work, this process comes to an end.
This also means that the power is back in your hands. Your agent will now let the other editors know that you have an interested editor and that they will have to respond within a certain period if they still want to represent you.
5. Acquisitions
Even if an editor wants to publish your work, they need the go-ahead of the entire publishing house.
This is what acquisitions meetings are for.
The editor will pitch your book to the rest of the company. The marketing, financial etc teams will then decide whether they think the book can be profitable.
6. Offer and auction
If the publishing house wants to publish your book, you will receive an offer from the publisher.
If more than one publisher is interested, the book will go to auction, where the interested publishing houses will bid to publish the work. The best offer will then be accepted.
7. Contract
Once you've decided to publish with a certain house, contract negotiations will begin.
Your agent will be in charge of negotiating on your behalf. However, it is probably a good idea to educate yourself on the things to look out for and to consult with an Intellectual Property lawyer.
Once you and the publisher are satisfied with the contract, you will sign.
You will receive an advance, which is the amount the publisher predicts you will earn in royalties from the book. The first portion of the advance is usually paid upon signature of the contract.
8. More edits
Then, you will have various rounds of edits with your editor to ensure that the book is the best it can be.
Once this is complete, you will probably receive the second portion of the advance.
9. Behind-the-scenes stuff
Your publisher is then in charge of certain procedures necessary for publication e.g. formatting and cover design.
The publishing house will also create a marketing plan, which you should supplement with your own marketing.
10. Publication
And, presto, your book is published.
The process from offer to publication can take anywhere between just under a year to 6+ years.
Should you earn out your advance, you will receive royalty cheques from your publisher.
So, those are the usual steps in broad terms. Some aspects may vary, but this is what you can expect when pursuing traditional publishing.
Reblog if you found this useful. Comment if you have further questions. Follow me for similar content.
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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Scene vs. Summary & When to Use Which
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When I was a young writer, I didn’t fully understand what a scene was and what a summary was. Later, when I understood the difference, I wasn’t always sure when to use which. These days, I occasionally help writers with the same things. They may use summary for what should have been a scene, or they may write a whole scene for what really should have been summary. Understanding the difference and when to use which can be key when writing a successful novel.
Sure, some of it is subjective.
But what might be surprising to some, is that most of the time, one is more 
 “correct” than the other.  
Scene
A scene is a structural unit that tends to have these qualities:
- Happens in Real Time
A scene will largely happen in real time. This means we “watch” the characters move, act, and talk, as if it were happening in real life.
- Dramatizes (Shows > Tells)
A scene dramatizes. It uses showing more than telling. If a character is angry with a friend, we see that anger in action and conversation. We may witness her yell or kick a rock, for example. It’s like watching a stage play.
- Concrete
Because it is dramatized, a scene will usually be more concrete. It will more likely appeal to our senses and the physical world and experience.
- Characters Acting in a Specific Location
A scene will have characters in a location (in some very rare cases, the setting or society may act as characters). They might be talking on a train ride, or exploring a cave, or dueling in the snow.
Scene Examples
(Because a full scene often lasts pages, these examples are passages from specific scenes.)
“This won’t take long, Andrew,” said the doctor. Ender nodded. “It’s designed to be removed. Without infection, without damage. But there’ll be some tickling, and some people say they have a feeling of something missing. You’ll keep looking around for something, something you were looking for, but you can’t find it, and you can’t remember what it was. So I’ll tell you. It’s the monitor you’re looking for, and it isn’t there. In a few days that feeling will pass.” The doctor was twisting something at the back of Ender’s head. Suddenly a pain stabbed through him like a needle from his neck to his groin. Ender felt his back spasm, and his body arched violently backward; his head struck the bed. He could feel his legs thrashing, and his hands were clenching each other, wringing each other so tightly that they arched. “Deedee!” shouted the doctor. “I need you!” The nurse ran in, gasped. “Got to relax these muscles. Get it to me, now! What are you waiting for!” Something changed hands; Ender could not see. He lurched to one side and fell off the examining table. “Catch him!” cried the nurse. “Just hold him steady–” “You hold him, doctor, he’s too strong for me–” “Not the whole thing! You’ll stop his heart–” Ender felt a needle enter his back just above the neck of his shirt. It burned, but wherever in him the fire spread, his muscles gradually un-clenched. Now he could cry for the fear and pain of it. “Are you all right, Andrew?” the nurse asked.
- Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card
Mrs. Reed occupied her usual seat by the fireside; she made a signal to me to approach; I did so, and she introduced me to the stony stranger with the words: “This is the little girl respecting whom I applied to you.” He, for it was a man, turned his head slowly towards where I stood, and having examined me with the two inquisitive-looking grey eyes which twinkled under a pair of bushy brows, said solemnly, and in a bass voice, “Her size is small: what is her age?” “Ten years.” “So much?” was the doubtful answer; and he prolonged his scrutiny for some minutes. Presently he addressed me—“Your name, little girl?” “Jane Eyre, sir.” In uttering these words I looked up: he seemed to me a tall gentleman; but then I was very little; his features were large, and they and all the lines of his frame were equally harsh and prim. “Well, Jane Eyre, and are you a good child?”
- Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
Summary
A summary has these qualities:
- Condensed Time
Summaries condense time. They may cover a month in a single sentence. They may talk about recurring events over a time period, within one paragraph. They may relay a past event (or in some cases, a future event) within a brief moment. They don’t happen in real time.
- Explains through Telling
Since the moment isn’t happening in real time, the audience is told more than shown what happened. This gives summary a stronger, guiding, narrative hand. Rather than experiencing the passage like the character, it’s more like the audience is being guided by a storyteller (generally speaking).
- More Abstract
For those reasons, telling is more abstract. It’s more likely to express ideas and concepts, rather than specific experiences.
- Characters and/or Setting may Change Swiftly (or Maybe Not Even Be Present In Some Cases)
A summary may not focus on a specific character or stay in the same setting. It may move quickly through settings or may not even mention a specific setting.
Summary Examples
Mother came home and commiserated with Ender about the monitor. Father came home and kept saying it was such a wonderful surprise, they had such fantastic children that the government told them to have three, and now the government didn’t want to take any of them after all, so here they were with three, they still had a Third 
 until Ender wanted to scream at him, I know I’m a Third, I know it, if you want I’ll go away so you don’t have to be embarrassed in front of everybody. - Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card
John had not much affection for his mother and sisters, and an antipathy to me. He bullied and punished me; not two or three times in the week, nor once or twice in the day, but continually: every nerve I had feared him, and every morsel of flesh in my bones shrank when he came near. There were moments when I was bewildered by the terror he inspired, because I had no appeal whatever against either his menaces or his inflictions; the servants did not like to offend their young master by taking my part against him, and Mrs. Reed was blind and deaf on the subject: she never saw him strike or heard him abuse me, though he did both now and then in her very presence, more frequently, however, behind her back.
- Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
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When to Use Which
Most novels are better written with more scene than summary. Scenes dramatize the story, so that the audience feels like they are experiencing and participating in it. Scenes are more impactful. Scenes are more likely to stir emotions. Because they are more concrete, they are more likely to stick in the reader’s memory.
However, this is not to say all novels are better with more scene than summary. You can indeed find successful books with more summary. This can be particularly useful in books with huge casts and many viewpoint characters, books that take place over a long period of time (such as a character’s entire life), or books with powerful, present omniscient narrators. Not all books that rely on summary more than scene are bad.
But most books are better told largely through scene than summary.
And pretty much all novels need some of both.
So when do we use which?
Sometimes I edit passages that are weakened because they are summarized instead of dramatized. Other times I read scenes that offer very little dramatic value and should have been summarized.
Scenes
A good rule of thumb is the more significant the moment, the more likely it needs to be rendered as a scene.
Big turning points and climactic moments should almost always be a scene–whether that turning point relates to character arc, plot, or theme.
This means that the climactic moments of the beginning, middle, and end, should almost always be a scene.
Anything we’ve been building up to in the primary plotline related to the arc, events, or theme, should probably be a scene.
Weiterlesen
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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Verbing weirds language.
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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Looking For

Read: 5 Ways To Find & Fix The Plot Holes In Your Novel
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ephemeralfireflies · 4 years ago
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Ruth Rendell On Writing Suspense
In this post, we share snippets from Ruth Rendell on writing suspense.
Ruth Rendell, who also wrote as Barbara Vine, was born 17 February 1930 and died 2 May 2015. She was an English author of thrillers and psychological murder mysteries.
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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IT’S NOT ‘PEEKED’ MY INTEREST
OR ‘PEAKED’
BUT PIQUED
‘PIQUED MY INTEREST’
THIS HAS BEEN A CAPSLOCK PSA
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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Three-Act Structure in 30 Days
A Cog Special for NaNoWriMo
Hey friends! I’m unable to participate in NaNo this year, but! I thought I could share with you a “prompt list” I developed for myself. One prompt a day, this list might just help you achieve a complete book in 30 days! (Maybe.)
ACT ONE
11/01 - Develop what most inspires you. Let your world blossom, your character present themself, or your conflict begin.
11/02  - Introduce your protagonist’s day-to-day routine. Show who they are in their own element before their life spirals out of control.
11/03 - Show readers a conflict that’s been occupying your protagonist’s mind–use this as an opportunity to reveal another dimension of your world and the characters that inhabit it.
11/04 - Delve deeper into the side characters. Explore their superficial relationships with your protagonist.
11/05 - Bring in a new face. This face might belong to a new friend, a love interest, or even the villain.
11/06 - Take a moment to breathe, then destroy your protagonist’s world. Break it in such a way there’s no taping it back together. (And remember! This doesn’t have to be a bad change! Just an irreversible one.)
11/07 - Let your readers wallow in the fallout. Show how your protagonist initially responds and who they reach out to (if anyone).
Congratulations!! You’ve completed Act One! You’re well on your way to a book!! Remember to take a small breather and reward yourself. Look how much you’ve accomplished in as little as a week!
ACT TWO
11/08 - Your protagonist is on the precipice; let them jump. Encourage them. This is where the plot truly begins.
11/09 - Show your character the paths they can take. They don’t have to choose one yet, but let them know what their options are.
11/10 - Introduce conflict between your protagonist and one of the characters they thought they trusted.
11/11 - Explain away the conflict. Put your protagonist and that character back on somewhat firm ground–maybe there’s still suspicion, but it won’t break them. Yet.
11/12 - Make your character choose a path. It’s too late in the game to be all wishy-washy about what to do and how to do it.
11/13 - Show them that they’re not yet equipped to handle the primary conflict of your novel.
11/14 - Let them take a step back and re-asses. Let them consult with those that they trust and try to find how to best tackle the conflict.
11/15 - Give them a way to grow the skills they need or learn the information they need to best succeed in the main conflict.
11/16 - Renew their confidence. Little-by-little, help them remember that they can do this.
11/17 - Let your protagonist’s relationship with another character take an unexpected turn. This could be anything from them having helpful knowledge/skills to having a connection with the villain to being romantically interested in the protagonist.
11/18 - After all their hard work is paying off and your protagonist thinks they might just be able to succeed in their goal.
11/19 - The newfound skills/information/etc. your protagonist has gathered are put to the test, and they come out victorious. Delight all around!
Take a moment to think and reflect. Have a nice tea and prepare for everything to go utterly, terribly wrong, because that’s where we’re going with this.
11/20 - Your protagonist’s worst fear is confirmed and all the bravado they’ve gathered comes crashing down around them. (Hint: This is a great place to bring back the 11/10 conflict.)
11/21 - Your protagonist struggles to cope with the last blow they took, but they don’t have much time. They need to compose themself.
11/22 - Time to gear up for the grand finale. There’s no going back now, and everyone knows it. Let your protagonist and their allies gather.
Look at you go!! You’ve written the majority of a book?? You’ve made it through the hardest part and you’re in the home stretch. You can do it!!
ACT THREE
11/23 - Shove your protagonist into a room with the conflict that’s been haunting them from the beginning and let them have a moment with it.
11/24 - Bang! Pow! Climax time!
11/25 - Just when your protagonist thinks they’re winning, make it all go wrong. A fundamental piece of the puzzle is missing and we’re in disasterland now, lads.
11/26 - Let a side character prompt the protagonist’s defining moment–let them do something unexpected to prompt an even more unexpected response.
11/27 - Ideally, this will be victory time! Everything we’ve been hoping for since the beginning comes to fruition and all the protagonist’s hard work pays off. Alternatively, you could make this end real bad. It’s up to you.
11/28 - Let the results of the final conflict settle in. These could be good or bad, depending on your story, or even better: both.
11/29 - Go back to the beginning. Rewrite the first scene or develop a prologue. Now that you have a sense of the ending, you’ll have a better idea of where things should’ve started!
11/30 - Show your readers where everyone ended up–did they get a happy ending? A sad ending?
You’ve finished your book!!!!!!! YOU’VE FINISHED YOUR BOOK!!! Heck yeah.
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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Triple Chocolate Cake
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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WriterofthePrompts Ultimate Ask Masterlist
I’ve decided to make a masterlist of asks I’ve done to make them easier to find for you guys (and for myself). I split them into categories as best as I could by genre and topic. Also, some asks have some helpful tips in the notes as well to check out (some are marked but not all) and if you have anything to add that you think would help, feel free to reply or reblog with your addition. I’ll try to keep it updated with future asks. (Update: you can now see the Ultimate Ask Masterlist 2 and my list of Random Writing Tips)
Now without further ado, the strangest and most wonderful list I’ve ever made.
World Building
Urban fantasy prompts/creating urban fantasy world (also linked under fantasy)
Links to help with world building
Creating a pantheon of gods
Things to research when writing a historical novel (also linked under Historical)
Using metaphors in descriptions
Too much world building?
Asking questions to develop a magic system
Wizard school ideas
Why magic would drain from a world
Tips for descriptions
Reasons for civil war
Character Development
Writing confusion in your character
Obstacles to character goals: traveling abroad
Reactions to sadness
Reactions to a devastating event
Showing a character’s anxiety towards something
Showing a character’s secret without revealing it
Reasons a character would die for another
Secrets in a character’s past
Culture shock with loss of rules
Growth of a trainee witch
Characters provoking other characters
Dealing with moving to a completely new place
Why a 19yo would allow a strange boy to live with her
Why a character would want a do-over in life
Showing a character going from good to bad
Possible good messages when the villains aren’t reformed
Kid growing up surrounded only by adults
Quirks for characters
Showing friendship with reserved characters
Introducing an antagonist
Introducing side characters
When you don’t think your character’s backstory fits
Writing Different Types of Characters
Writing antiheroes
The reluctant hero
Writing a violent character afraid of their mind
Making an immoral character likeable
Not a normal girl
Sympathetic villain
Making sure your character isn’t just a flirt
Writing intelligent characters
When your hero isn’t very heroic
Confident characters
Writing an antisocial character
Character Family
Visiting family for the first time
Showing closeness in siblings (opposite twins)
How a joker and a quiet character can become friends
Daughter of a party organizer prompts
Parent jobs where the kid needs to keep up appearances
The mom that left comes back
a vampire
Including character’s parents
Why a character would leave another
Sibling relationships
character with an abusive father (and how to show fear)
Romance
Writing a slow paced love story
love interest vs the ex revamped
Platonic male x female relationships
Random places to get married
Suspense and romance with a “different” male lead
sad relationship prompts
Asexuality and romance
Mutual pining
Romance with large age differences
Childhood friends falling in love
Fluffy unique first kiss
Ways of showing commitment in characters (vampire edition)
Friendship to romance
Small situations for a couple story
fantasy creature and human fluff
characters meeting and falling in love during war
Why best friends might fall in love
Unlikely soulmates prompts
Sci Fi
Using dreams as energy
Time travel prompts (asked for male x female protags)
Time travel: how saving someone can go wrong
Reliving memories
Android characters
Writing humanoids in post apocalypse
Consequences of growing a baby in an artificial womb (theoretical)
The evil AI that characters can’t (shouldn’t) destroy
Girl and guy get trapped in the same body
Rich people in post apocalypse
Discovering you have a doppelgĂąnger
Superheroes
Teenagers, hormones and their superpowers
Weird superpowers
Superhero kids reluctant to be superheroes
Aliens
beings traveling to Earth
Why an alien wouldn’t be able to leave Earth
Reasons an alien would be sent to live on Earth
Human/alien team surviving on hostile planet together
Fantasy/Paranormal
Urban fantasy prompts/creating urban fantasy world (also linked under world building)
gods losing their powers
creations turning on their creators
How elemental powers might work
Why NOT to destroy the world when it’s your goal
Mistreated genies
Tropes of a fantasy (also linked under Writing Motivation/Tips)
Male character ideas in a fantasy
Immortal woman prompts
Beauty and the Beast revamp
How Death and a teenage girl become adventure teammates
Powers for magical beings writing down history
Girl meets demon from forest behind her house
Reverse fairytale prompts
Revamped fairytale prompts 2
Manatees being confused by mermaids
a princess befriends a baby dragon
Making a character believe in a cure for a curse
Egyptian gods living among us
A love between the sun and the moon
What fantasy creatures do on Halloween
Human and fantasy creature become pen pals
Creatures
Monsters and urban legends
Fantastic creatures
A little bit on dragons
Kind dragons
Magic and Witches
witch x wizard romance
witch prompts
Witch being protective over a human-turned-doll
magical boarding school
Ideas for curses
A young witch exploring the boundaries of her powers
Traps a wizard could set for a thief
Angels and Demons
Angels and demons
Angel as a human on earth
Jobs for angels and demons who fall in love
Physical impacts on a demon who keeps dying and coming back
Demons hunter prompts
Vampires
Human meets vampire 1
Human meets vampire 2
How to hide your vampirism from your family
Royal vampires
Vampire hunter gets bitten by a vampire
Reasons a locked up vampire would go after your character
Why a vampire and vampire hunter would work together
Vampire x werewolf forbidden love
Ghosts
Helpful ghost prankster prompts 1
Helpful ghost prankster prompts 2
Human and ghost solving mysteries together
1776 woman with supernatural abilities prompts
A medium whose friend is in a coma
Medium question Pt. 2: their fatal flaws
Battle Scenes
Writing Battle Scenes Tips
How to lead up to an action scene
Keep reading
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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okay so this blog is a m a z i n g and all the prompts are so good. anyway sorry if you've already been asked this but i can't seem to find any good prompts for an urban fantasy story. like, i find paranormal ones but not so much urban fantasy ones (think the raven boys). do you have any you could share?
I am so so so so sorry it has taken me forever to reply (I just finished exams) but Thank You so much for sending this in. This kind of question actually wasn’t asked before but I did get a similar one recently from an anon about how to create a magical world in a more modern setting so I’m going to try to answer them both here :) First the prompts:
The protagonist’s family has always had a protective power to keep their town safe and were once revered. Now, they are outcasts and many doubt their validity. Until the power skips a generation and things start to go very bad.
(This one could maybe also a superhero-isa one but it could also work for more fantasy like characters). A group of humans with the ability to manipulate the elements have always been in hiding but the climate on Earth has become so bad they can’t keep turning a blind eye
In the modern world the relative few with magical abilities are superior to those without. They are the “able” people of the world
Non-magical humans can buy black market items from those with special abilities to take on their power. The protagonist is either one of the people who has had their power stolen or a non-magical human who has seen the danger that these items can create.
People with the ability of premonition are entrusted to make sure that events unfold the way they were predicted, no matter what. One of these people has done some terrible things and let even worse things happen, but one premonition they just can’t ignore.
Someone born into a family that has always had special abilities doesn’t get theirs and puts a lot of effort into not being found out. Maybe too much effort

I hope those fit what you were looking for (also sorry again for taking so long  😬) Now a few tips on building the urban fantasy world:
One thing to keep in mind about fantasy in general but maybe especially in urban fantasy is to get a good hold on what your fantasy elements are exactly early on. There are so many fanatical elements to play with—it’s basically whatever you can imagine—and you don’t want to go too heavy on the fantasy in an urban fantasy, otherwise it might not feel like one. So decide what elements you’re including, like are you going to have witches and wizards only or will there also be vampires, demons and other creatures? Also, are they benevolent and helpful, or selfish and mean-spirited? Is this side of the world a secret or is it open?
Then figure out how these elements will affect the setting. For example, in a world where demons and ghosts are a known fact, I’d imagine that people would take and understand death a little differently. If magic is real and the world leaders have it or have someone who does, world crises would be quite different, and probably wars too. There are probably endless impacts depending on which elements you choose. Again, just be careful that you don’t go over board. The key difference between fantasy and urban fantasy is the setting. You still want the story’s world to be recognizable as the modern world to readers to get that cool kind of juxtaposition and “what if” sort of scenario. 
These are just what I think are the main points but I found a pretty good page on TV Tropes that has a lot more information and is a bit more detailed. It’s definitely worth checking out of yo want to write urban fantasy.
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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“I live in the north of England, I’m used to freezing cold temperatures”
Oh honey.  That’s what the pilgrims said.  They mostly died.
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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Build a better sentence.  Add an adjective, and words that describe the “when”, “where”, “how” and “why” of the sentence.  Be creative!
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ephemeralfireflies · 6 years ago
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Use the sentence at the bottom and build a better sentence by adding an adjective, and answering the “when”, “where”, “how” and “why” of the sentence.
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