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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Body Language Cheat Sheet for Writers
As described by Selnick’s article:
Author and doctor of clinical psychology Carolyn Kaufman has released a one-page body language cheat sheet of psychological “tells” (PDF link) fiction writers can use to dress their characters.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Love from the Barricade is now available for Kindle for $6.99, or $2.99 if you’re a Prime Member.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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THINGS WHICH MAKE WRITERS ANXIOUS:
not writing
writing
people reading their stories
people not reading their stories
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Writing your 1st draft while trying to keep track of all the plot, themes, world building, and characters in your head:
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Love from the Barricade is an edgy tale of the sometimes cloudy road to adulthood.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Quick and Dirty Writing Advice:
Consume media that inspires you. Play video games, listen to music, watch movies/tv, read books that make you want to write.
Stop feeling guilty for not writing, it’s not helpful.
But, don’t let fear of failure stop you.
Don’t start over, keep going.
Write the book you want to read.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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For a better dialogues.
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1- must serve a purpose.
Before writing a conversation, take the time to ask yourself what key purpose(s) the conversation will serve.
With an established purpose in mind, you can begin writing dialogue with the confidence that you’re adding value to your story rather than setting readers up for boredom.
2- leads to events.
Most often, conversations work to resolve or create tension, establish context, or reveal new information that moves the story forward.
3- details aren’t always important.
Readers don’t need to see the mundane details of every conversation play out on the page.
Greetings, exchanges of basic information, and other boring but occasionally necessarily details can just as easily be stated in the text as they can be spoken — and oftentimes to better reception. So rather than slow the pace of your scene by writing mundanities into the conversation, state that she gave him her phone number and move along.
4- forget the tags, unless the dialogue is followed by an action.
Dialogue tags are used to attribute lines of dialogue to characters, the most common tag being “said”.
Used occasionally, dialogue tags can help clarify who is speaking without slowing the story’s pace. Many authors, however, make the mistake of overusing tags in an effort to maintain clarity and expound upon how the dialogue is being said (e.g. she shouted, he whispered, it hissed…).
If you’ve crafted strong voices for your characters, however, and if you make good use of action tags —which we’ll discuss in a moment — you’ll find there is little need to include much more than an occasional “he said, she said” in your story. Speaking of which…
If you do find that you need to employ a dialogue tag for the sake of clarity, “said” is most often your best choice. Why? Because “said” is so ubiquitous that it’s often, in a sense, silent. Readers will graze right over the word while still catching the identity of the speaker, ensuring your tag doesn’t disrupt the flow of the story.
Action tags are the small attributive actions that precede or follow a line of dialogue, such as the following:
Amanda fiddled with the hem of her shirt. “I don’t know if that’s the best idea.”
“Are you sure that’s what you really want?” Brad raised a questioning brow.
Making use of action tags is a great way to indicate speakers during dialogue while also keeping readers engaged and adding motion to the scene.
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Article: http://www.well-storied.com/blog/write-better-dialogue .
Note: this is my short version of the article, if want to read the entire version visit the website link👆🏼. I do not own any rights of the article.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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BOOK BLOGGERS!
I have a novel debuting next month, and I’d love for you to be part of my book tour! 
If you would like to read, review, and interview me for your blog, please DM me! You can read more about it on my GoodReads (linked above).
I do hope to hear from you all.
xx
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Alright fine, i’m up… asshole
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Camp Pep: You Are an Artist
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Camp NaNoWriMo is nothing without you, our incredible participants. Today, Camp NaNoWriMo participant Ashley Jean Granillo offers you some advice for this week of Camp:
Dear Writer,
Your story is worth telling, even if the writing hasn’t caught up to the ingenious idea that you’ve been working out on in your mind as you shower away the filth of your day job.
If you’ve forgotten: writing is a process. Currently, you’re probably in the drafting stage. And drafts, especially first drafts, aren’t perfect. They are messy––riddled with grammatical errors and sentences that appear to be in the language of your choosing but sound foreign. This is exactly where your writing is supposed to be. Yes, you are supposed to be writing cliches and flat lines of dialogue because you are only in the beginning stages of unveiling your story’s true potential. Think of yourself as an artist, sketching out the shapes of a landscape. The detail and color will come with patience.
Keep reading
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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the 7 deadly sins of being a writer
self-doubt
procrastination
sleep deprivation
jealousy
wailing (despair)
notebook lust
horrifying comma use
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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reasons to not quit writing:
your writing is a skill, not an inborn talent (unless, yeah, maybe it is). not everyone can do what you do and love
everyone says they want to write a book. everyone has what it takes to write a book. not everyone does it anyway. you be the small percentage of success you read about
your writing will always seem brickshit horrible because you wrote and read it a million times
you love this writing thingy. quitting it will be like cutting off your fingers one by one.
someone out there will want to read what you wrote.
someone out there wants to know what is on your mind. 
someone out there appreciates your art. they will share it with their friends. they will share it with their loved ones. they will share it with their future self because maybe what you wrote saved them.
if you give up now, you know you will just come back to it again, whether it’s years from now, months, or next week. you love writing, that’s why you planted the seed of thought that you are going to write this book, and whether you come back to it or not, your unwritten stories will come back to you.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Help your buddies, ya’ll.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Music, the musicians––aren't always what they appear to be. You can still love music. It doesn't always have to be punk rock. You never have to be the person you were years ago. Let things change.
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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missauthorjean · 6 years
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Battle of the Bands was the beginning of it all. But when Val abandons Aijae at Warped Tour, she's left to navigate the scene alone. Luckily, her college creative writing class brings her more than an outlet, but friends apart of a community she can only hope to live in forever.
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