Alrighty, guys, J again.
I just had a glorious idea (yes, that happens occasionally). It's something I've always wanted to try.
We are starting a new way to write a story.
How it works: I am going to start the story off with the beginning (about 100 words or two paragraphs) and then am gonna let you guys write the next part in the comments section. So, we'll be writing together. We will also be writing responses too. This is gonna be fun.
The only rules as far as content is: keep it family friendly. That's important. And if you could keep your responses relatively short (100-ish words or two paragraphs) that way no one takes over the story. It's also important that you guys ACTUALLY WRITE RESPONSES! That way the story actually progresses. You don't have to be a good writer, it doesn't matter. So if you're reading this, write the next part to the story, please. That's what makes it fun.
So, yeah, the story doesn't have to make sense, it's just meant to be fun. Write whatever you want (remember keep it family friendly) and don't worry about making minor grammar mistakes. Let's see where this goes.
I will give you the title and beginning and you just continue the story where I leave off:
The Russian Bear.
Sweat covers me as I rush through the woods, doing my best to not fall over.
I hear screaming behind me, but I don’t turn back. Turning back would mean my
death. I really don’t want that. Instead, I run faster, hoping that its fierce
appetite has been sated. Not likely. I'm probably dead anyway.
I always wondered how I would die. I was not expecting this. Just yesterday
I was camping with my friends. Was it really yesterday? Seems like longer, this
is literally my worst nightmare. Most of my friends are dead already, and I’m
next. I run faster.
ItzRighttoWrite
"You can make anything by writing." -CS Lewis
Saturday, March 5, 2016
Dreams
Alright, guys, it's J here. I would like to discuss dreams. No, I'm not talking about the cliche "Hopes and dreams." I'm talking about literal dreams. The weird movies you watch when you go to sleep. You know what I mean, right? Yes, you're a smart person. Brownie points all around.
Anyway. Dreams are widely known for being weird. Many people went crazy over Inception because it "portrayed dreams accurately." Well, I protest this. If Inception actually portrayed dreams accurately: DiCaprio would have morphed between an elephant and a monkey several times while his dead wife wouldn't actually kill anyone, she would just almost kill everybody but then just start laughing at the last second and disappear. Don't forget Tom Hardy and Joseph Gordon-Levitt would be fighting the entire movie screaming "WHAT DID YOU DO WITH BATMAN!" and even this wouldn't be an accurate portrayal of dreams. Dreams are weird people.
Now, I must assure you, I'm not here just to rip on dreams and Inception (a movie I actually really like). I am here to talk about how helpful dreams actually can be to a writer. They are so full of odd ideas that one of them might actually be good. If you've been stuck on what to do for your next scene/book sometimes sleeping is really the best option. Even if you never use any of your dreams in your actual work, paying attention to them at least gets you creatively thinking again.
I've found a lot of inspiration from my dreams, even though I don't think I've ever actually used my dreams in my stories directly, I still ponder my dreams that get the creative juices flowing.
So, yeah. Listen to your dreams. Literally. There's a lot of good stuff that you can replay in your mind and then do what you want with it.
That's all I've got today, guys. Be sure to follow us! The more followers we have, the more likely we are to post fun stuffs.
Be sure to laugh often.
Anyway. Dreams are widely known for being weird. Many people went crazy over Inception because it "portrayed dreams accurately." Well, I protest this. If Inception actually portrayed dreams accurately: DiCaprio would have morphed between an elephant and a monkey several times while his dead wife wouldn't actually kill anyone, she would just almost kill everybody but then just start laughing at the last second and disappear. Don't forget Tom Hardy and Joseph Gordon-Levitt would be fighting the entire movie screaming "WHAT DID YOU DO WITH BATMAN!" and even this wouldn't be an accurate portrayal of dreams. Dreams are weird people.
Now, I must assure you, I'm not here just to rip on dreams and Inception (a movie I actually really like). I am here to talk about how helpful dreams actually can be to a writer. They are so full of odd ideas that one of them might actually be good. If you've been stuck on what to do for your next scene/book sometimes sleeping is really the best option. Even if you never use any of your dreams in your actual work, paying attention to them at least gets you creatively thinking again.
I've found a lot of inspiration from my dreams, even though I don't think I've ever actually used my dreams in my stories directly, I still ponder my dreams that get the creative juices flowing.
So, yeah. Listen to your dreams. Literally. There's a lot of good stuff that you can replay in your mind and then do what you want with it.
That's all I've got today, guys. Be sure to follow us! The more followers we have, the more likely we are to post fun stuffs.
Be sure to laugh often.
Thursday, March 5, 2015
Worlds
Hey. It's A.
I've always wanted to be able to speak another language. I think that'd be interesting and educational, and you'd have all these new words to use! Learning a new language is like discovering a new world. (I didn't know that I've been speaking another language this entire time; snobbish, was it?)
I've also always wanted to travel.
Who doesn't want to travel?
The point is...there is so much to discover in the world. There is so much different from what you know. There is so much to learn. To hear. To see. To taste. To feel.
Don't forget this when writing your story. Just because it's fantasy doesn't mean there is no humidity. Just because it's historical fiction doesn't mean the buildings aren't rough. Just because it's sci-fi, or romance, or whatever the heck other genre doesn't mean your world isn't a concrete one.
It should feel real. Make it feel real. Pick a real place and describe it, go beyond the obvious, dig deep and really tell what's true.
Firework by Katy Perry is stuck in my head now, thanks for asking.
I've always wanted to be able to speak another language. I think that'd be interesting and educational, and you'd have all these new words to use! Learning a new language is like discovering a new world. (I didn't know that I've been speaking another language this entire time; snobbish, was it?)
I've also always wanted to travel.
![]() |
Iceland |
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Italy |
![]() |
France |
![]() |
China |
![]() |
Germany |
The point is...there is so much to discover in the world. There is so much different from what you know. There is so much to learn. To hear. To see. To taste. To feel.
Don't forget this when writing your story. Just because it's fantasy doesn't mean there is no humidity. Just because it's historical fiction doesn't mean the buildings aren't rough. Just because it's sci-fi, or romance, or whatever the heck other genre doesn't mean your world isn't a concrete one.
It should feel real. Make it feel real. Pick a real place and describe it, go beyond the obvious, dig deep and really tell what's true.
Firework by Katy Perry is stuck in my head now, thanks for asking.
Friday, February 27, 2015
The tales of fairies
J here.
Before we get started, I'd like to straighten out a couple of things that I feel you have been misled about. Obviously, I do write blog posts and also: I can read cursive. I just don't speak Snobbish.
Now that we've got that cleared up, on to the good stuff.
Before we get started, I'd like to straighten out a couple of things that I feel you have been misled about. Obviously, I do write blog posts and also: I can read cursive. I just don't speak Snobbish.
Now that we've got that cleared up, on to the good stuff.
Fairy tales. We've all heard them. For some of us it’s a major
part of our childhood; there are some who think they are silly; some simply don’t
care; and then there’s me. I look at fairy tales and see the options: what if
Rapunzel was actually a man? Would the long hair actually be his hair or a
really unkempt beard? Perhaps Belle is only manipulating the beast to gain his
great wealth? Who knows? Maybe Rumpelstiltskin eventually fell in love with the
queen and had compassion so he hired a snitch to "find" out his name so she could keep her child and he supposedly dies mysteriously....
These are things that I might be posting about in the
future. Short stories. Just tidbits for your enjoyment. Who knows?
Maybe I’ll become famous and get a deal with Hollywood.
Stay cool y’all.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
Failure
J doesn't write blog posts anymore. You should talk to him about that. Get on it. Gosh.
Today you get two things from me (A, in case you didn't figure), so don't miss him too horribly. First I'll start with some words of sort of encouragement:
This isn't to say that you fail at life if you stop writing (though gosh...wouldn't you kind of?) but rather: you fail as a writer if you stop writing. Just because your first draft is crap, your second draft is crap, your fifty-third draft is crap...that doesn't mean you've failed. Some people never finish stories; some people finish stories that no one ever reads; some people publish stories that no one ever reads.
This doesn't make you a failure because writing isn't about the pages or the word count or the poetic prose. Writing isn't about what other people can see and measure. Writing isn't even about always becoming a better writer.
It's about writing.
It's about thinking. It's about creating. It's about living, escaping, embracing, discovering, developing, learning. Writing is just about writing. Stop worrying about the rest.
The second thing you get from me (I did say there were two, didn't I? Pay attention) is a writing prompt. Even if you don't base a 150k word novel on a writing prompt, you can at least base one page on a writing prompt.
Here it is:
Oh. And note that it's a *black* rose. They do exists.
Today you get two things from me (A, in case you didn't figure), so don't miss him too horribly. First I'll start with some words of sort of encouragement:
You fail only if you stop writing.
-Ray Bradbury
This isn't to say that you fail at life if you stop writing (though gosh...wouldn't you kind of?) but rather: you fail as a writer if you stop writing. Just because your first draft is crap, your second draft is crap, your fifty-third draft is crap...that doesn't mean you've failed. Some people never finish stories; some people finish stories that no one ever reads; some people publish stories that no one ever reads.
This doesn't make you a failure because writing isn't about the pages or the word count or the poetic prose. Writing isn't about what other people can see and measure. Writing isn't even about always becoming a better writer.
It's about writing.
It's about thinking. It's about creating. It's about living, escaping, embracing, discovering, developing, learning. Writing is just about writing. Stop worrying about the rest.
The second thing you get from me (I did say there were two, didn't I? Pay attention) is a writing prompt. Even if you don't base a 150k word novel on a writing prompt, you can at least base one page on a writing prompt.
Here it is:
He tended that rosebush every single day that he was alive.
No one knows what to do with it now.
By the way, and not that you care, but I have Riptide stuck in my head (by Vance Joy). "...I gotta lump in my throat cuz your gonna sing the words wrong...." Don't know why. Get it out.
Oh. And note that it's a *black* rose. They do exists.
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Wishful Thinking
A here.
J not here.
Writing prompt?
Okeeeeeeey:
J not here.
Writing prompt?
Okeeeeeeey:
Write about the accidental wish that came true.
Saturday, January 31, 2015
Nobody
J never writes posts when I tell him to. He's probably thinking something like, "It's yooooour tuuuurn."
What a jerk.
Whateves, though. Let's get down to business (to defeat the Huns, yes, I know). Today's topic:
There are no limits to where you can take your manuscript, so go where you want to go (or where the characters take you - but that's another post).
Not that you care, but now I have that song from Mulan stuck in my head. (...DID they SEND me daughTERS...when I asked....for SONS?) Wonderful.
What a jerk.
Whateves, though. Let's get down to business (to defeat the Huns, yes, I know). Today's topic:
For those of you who can't read cursive (*cough* J *cough*), this translates to: WRITE LIKE NO ONE'S READING YOUR STINKING STUFF |
Okay. Something I would love is if I could inspire people to just write. Stop worrying that it isn't perfect; stop worrying that you can't write what you want because your mom's going to read it; stop worrying about the whole editing ordeal. The moment I realized that it's okay to write bad first drafts was the moment my writing excelled. Which is why I really like today's quote.
Stop writing for a crowd. Stop trying to write a bestseller that is just like all those other bestsellers. Close the door, close Facebook, *gasp!* open your manuscript...and write like there's nothing holding you back. Because honestly, the only thing holding you back is you and the "backspace" key. I think you can get on top of this.
There are no limits to where you can take your manuscript, so go where you want to go (or where the characters take you - but that's another post).
Not that you care, but now I have that song from Mulan stuck in my head. (...DID they SEND me daughTERS...when I asked....for SONS?) Wonderful.
Friday, January 30, 2015
Not so heroic heroes
Hey all, this is J here, I'm sure that most of you are familiar with the fact that another Avenger's movie is coming out, I wrote this a little while ago an thought you might enjoy.
I'm guessing this is roughly the conversation that went on when the Avengers found out Ultron turned
bad. (Written in screenplay format, sort of)
Stark: “At least he doesn't turn
green and rage about uncontrollably.”
Banner: “Hey!”
Stark: “You’re right, poor taste.
He looks much more like our good ol’ friend, the winged-helmet captain.”
Cap: “My helmet doesn't have
wings.”
Stark: “No, but it would be a good
improvement.”
Cap: “Tony.”
Stark: “Maybe chicken wings
standing up on the sides.”
Cap: “Tony!”
Stark: “Their all the style in
Asgard. Just ask Hammer-boy.”
Thor: “Are you being disdainful
towards my helmet?”
Cap: “Guys!!! Can we please focus
on Ultron?”
Thor: “Stark, you built this
apparatus. Can’t you order it to do your will?”
Stark: “Think of it this way,
you’re father probably told you to not destroy towns in other people’s worlds.
He made you, but he couldn't stop you from flattening a small urban establishment, not to
mention Izzy’s diner, which had the best coffee in New Mexico.”
Cap: “Your point?”
Stark: “The point is, I'm Odin,
Ultron is Thor, and the human race is that small town in New Mexico. The fact
that I built it is now completely irrelevant.”
Banner: “That’s not actually true.
You see, you built him, so you know his programming, his armor, his weapons,
his weaknesses. You might be the only one that stands between him and world
domination.”
Stark: “Oh, I probably should have
mentioned, he might be listening right now. He can do that.”
Cap: “Is there anything else you
forgot to mention?”
Banner: “That’s not bad enough?”
Thor: “The Captain is right. If
Stark has other knowledge about our foe, he should share it with us. The more you know about your enemy, the
better chance you have on winning.”
Stark: “He can adapt, which means
that there's a good chance he’s changing his layout as we speak so the
weaknesses I know of he will no longer have.”
Banner: “How is he listening in on
us? Is he tapping into our phones Big Brother style?”
Thor and Cap: “What's Big
Brother?”
Stark (answering Banner): “No,
he’s connected to Jarvis, which is connected to me.” (tapping at his earpiece.)
Cap: “Why haven’t you destroyed that
thing yet?”
Stark: “I wouldn't be able to talk
to Jarvis, unless I was in Stark tower or in a suit.”
Banner: “Doesn't Ultron control
Jarvis?”
Stark: “Why does everybody keep
asking me this?”
Cap (after snatching the earpiece
from Tony’s ear): “I think you can live without your butler for a few days.”
Stark: “Fine. But let’s make it
fair and give me your shield.”
Thor: “On my world, it is
honorable to trade weapons for a stint of war.”
Cap: “Alright, deal.” (he smashes
the earpiece)
Banner(to Thor): “I’ll give you my
pocket knife if you let me borrow your hammer.”
Thor: “Nay, old friend, even in
your empowered state you could not lift it, remember?”
Banner: “Actually, I don’t.”
Cap: “We need to determine what
Ultron’s next move is going to be.”
Stark: “First we need to figure
out what he wants. What's his goal?”
Cap: “Human eradication.”
Stark: “Exactly, but we need to
know how he intends to accomplish that.”
Cap: “Take out the world leaders.
U.N. maybe.”
Banner: “No. He knows that he
needs to act quickly. He wants something big enough and fast acting enough to
make us no longer a threat.”
Cap: “Nuclear bombs?”
Stark: “No, that’s too messy. He
wants to bring peace to the world, not destroy it.”
Banner: “Electricity.”
Stark: “Good, yes, that is
definitely plausible. If he could somehow wipe out the worlds electricity in
one massive EMP surge, than swoop in with his stargazing troops, he would be able to
destroy the human race as slowly as he wanted. Be the next big boy in town.”
Cap: “But wouldn't no electricity
mean he runs out of power?”
Stark: “No, he doesn't run on
electricity, he has a nuclear furnace built inside of him. He’s
self-sustaining.”
Cap: “Nothing but the best for
your crazy robot.”
Stark: “I'm sorry, other than a
shield, what have you made that’s been helpful?”
Banner: “Actually, he didn't make
the shield, your father did.”
Stark: “Oh, yeah, that’s right.”
Thor: “I'm not entirely familiar
with the human way, but, is this helping us to find the metal-beast?”
Stark: “Finding him is easy, he’ll be
setting up EMP bombs at all the major power plants in the world.”
Cap: “Why didn't you say that?”
Stark: “I was going to when you so
politely interrupted me.”
Thor: “Then let’s go find the
creature and smite him.”
Cap: “Thor’s right. Avengers,
assemble.”
Stark: (patting Cap on the
shoulder): “We’re already assembled winghead.”
Saturday, January 24, 2015
Salt
I (A, that is) just decided. Prompts, inspiration, starting points. Pictures, sentences, a clip of a scene. I'm going to post some (when I feel like it, of course), providing you with a snippet of what could be. I'm offering you a match (the prompt) and you have to light it, you have to start the fire (the story), you have to feed it until it's blazing.
So go for it. Read the prompt sentence, then write one hundred-ish words about where takes you. Give your imagination a chance to breathe and write about the place and time where
So go for it. Read the prompt sentence, then write one hundred-ish words about where takes you. Give your imagination a chance to breathe and write about the place and time where
everything tasted like salt
Thursday, January 22, 2015
The humor of it all
Hey all, what’s up? It’s J
here. I was just thinking about certain things that make stories compelling.
You know: story, conflict, dialogue, that sort of thing. One of my favorites is
humor. For me, humor is a big impact on whether or not I’ll like the book or
not. I’m not saying your book has to be a comedy, I just mean that if your
characters are funny, legitimately funny, they’ll be likable, guaranteed.
Now that’s kind of tricky, isn't
it? There’s a big difference between movie humor and book humor. Things that
could be hilarious in a movie often fall flat when read, whereas some humor
that is comical in written form can just be plain lame when put on the big
screen.
I try to tinker with it, see
what works, what doesn't. In my experience, physical humor is not something
that works. It takes too long to explain and by the time you do explain, the joke has
gone on too long with little actual comedy involved. My solution? There are a couple of
ways to do it. One is witty one-liners. Sarcasm is another one, especially in
the case of a story written in first-person. My personal favorite, however, is arrogance.
You take this and sprinkle a healthy dosage of that sarcasm on there, and you’re
ordinarily un-remarkable character becomes your favorite. (Tony Stark, anybody?)
I may come up with a few finer points to say on humor in the future. No reason wasting your arsenal on the first go of it, am I right?
I may come up with a few finer points to say on humor in the future. No reason wasting your arsenal on the first go of it, am I right?
Take it easy, or…whatever it is
you like to do.
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
The Idea
Hey. This is A.
An author once said, "If you wish to be a writer, write." Nerd points to whoever guesses who the author is that I'm talking about (I don't get any points because I don't remember, hence I'm not a nerd--did you even read our intros?), but the POINT is...writers write. It's that simple.
And that impossible.
I can't make this magically possible for you, seeing as I don't understand any more about writing than the next not-nerd, but what I can do is give you bits and pieces of how I make it less impossible for myself.
Step 1: the idea.
Duh. You can't write if you don't have any idea what you're writing about. No, you don't need to know everything before you start typing away (or scribbling, if you have the patience for the ol' pen and paper), but you do need to know something. You need to know different things depending on what you write (I happen to write fiction, because, as a friend told me, "Reality.Whose idea was that, anyway?"), but you will basically always need that spark of idea. You know (or do you?). That spark that starts as one idea, but then another idea catches on, and another, and another.
To write, you need ideas.
To get ideas, you need to think.
So are you thinking?
An author once said, "If you wish to be a writer, write." Nerd points to whoever guesses who the author is that I'm talking about (I don't get any points because I don't remember, hence I'm not a nerd--did you even read our intros?), but the POINT is...writers write. It's that simple.
And that impossible.
I can't make this magically possible for you, seeing as I don't understand any more about writing than the next not-nerd, but what I can do is give you bits and pieces of how I make it less impossible for myself.
Step 1: the idea.
Duh. You can't write if you don't have any idea what you're writing about. No, you don't need to know everything before you start typing away (or scribbling, if you have the patience for the ol' pen and paper), but you do need to know something. You need to know different things depending on what you write (I happen to write fiction, because, as a friend told me, "Reality.Whose idea was that, anyway?"), but you will basically always need that spark of idea. You know (or do you?). That spark that starts as one idea, but then another idea catches on, and another, and another.
To write, you need ideas.
To get ideas, you need to think.
So are you thinking?
Labels:
A,
ideas,
less impossible,
quotes,
tips,
writing in general
Monday, January 19, 2015
Intros are great
Yo, my name is J. Well, that is not entirely true, now, is it? I thought to myself, "What better way to start a blog then some mystery?" Can you feel it surging? No? I understand, me either, but for all intents and purposes, I am "J," here to shed some light on the infamous world known as...Literature. Not actually true; I want this to be a fun blog, not a college course. With that said, I'm looking forward to future posts that I hope are at least interesting to you.
Signed: "J"
Signed: "J"
I'm A, the Girl
And a bete noire of mine is when people use words nobody else understands just for the sake of using words nobody understands. Or for the sake of not using a word everybody understands, get it? So just use the words you mean, alright? And really mean them when you use them, and use them well not wastefully, and you 'n I'll get along...fine.
We'll get along fine, dude. I mean it. Really.
Sincerely,
A
P.S. You should also know that I am NOT a nerd.
P.P.S. And I didn't come up with the blog name, either. CheeseItz, am I right?
We'll get along fine, dude. I mean it. Really.
Sincerely,
A
P.S. You should also know that I am NOT a nerd.
P.P.S. And I didn't come up with the blog name, either. CheeseItz, am I right?
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