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hammione · 4 months
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One of the best writing advice I have gotten in all the months I have been writing is "if you can't go anywhere from a sentence, the problem isn't in you, it's in the last sentence." and I'm mad because it works so well and barely anyone talks about it. If you're stuck at a line, go back. Backspace those last two lines and write it from another angle or take it to some other route. You're stuck because you thought up to that exact sentence and nothing after that. Well, delete that sentence, make your brain think because the dead end is gone. It has worked wonders for me for so long it's unreal
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hammione · 6 months
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site that you can type in the definition of a word and get the word
site for when you can only remember part of a word/its definition 
site that gives you words that rhyme with a word
site that gives you synonyms and antonyms
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hammione · 7 months
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how to go from daydream to draft:
begin by daydreaming as you normally do, or just after you've finished doing so. write down every thought you have. one after another. do not reread. do not stop for spelling mistakes. just dump out every thought. this is called stream of consciousness writing. you can do this for every scene you need a first draft for.
struggling to draft the scene? try to daydream about it. start thinking about how it would look, feel, what the characters would say, act it out in your head and then write out the stream of your thoughts as they arrive.
by now you have a few scene dumps. you may be tempted to go back and edit. do not do this expect for obvious spelling mistakes. do not read closely and start thinking "i need to rework this sentence." that is for later. now you're in the zone. draft more scenes. or work out what the next scene needs to be, scaffold it with a few comments. this will be the inspiration for your next deliberate thought stream that you will write out. repeat this process until you have the whole draft.
now that you have a draft or part of a draft you get to do this very fun thing called revise until you're happy. sweep through your draft with specific goals each time. one sweep to fix spelling/grammar. another for character voice. another for plot. repeat until you're happy with it.
leave it alone. just leave it for a bit. at least a few hours or days or even weeks. forget it exists. this will allow you come back with fresh eyes. then you can do your revisions with an eagle eye. now you may realize you need to add/remove scenes. you know how to get the first version down. close your eyes and daydream at your desk if that's what takes!
remember that fiction writing is persuasive writing. you are trying to persuade the reader to care about what happens next, the character's, the world, the feelings. as you're revising, consider whether you are persuaded. is the feeling/thoughts you wanted to provoke being felt by you when you read it? when working with beta readers, be sure to communicate what you're trying to convey so they can tell you if you've been successful or not.
this got a bit beyond getting the first draft done. hope you found it helpful.
bonus tip: check the spellings of names and places and other nouns that are not typically used, like the name of a magic tool!
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hammione · 10 months
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3 ENEMIES-TO-LOVERS ROMANCE BOOKS TO MAKE YOU SWOON
Okay. Picture this. Close your eyes and picture this (and to be clear, I mean close your eyes after I tell you what ‘this’ is). This: you’re dressed in a white, beautiful dress, hair curled to perfection and heels polished. You look good and you feel even better; after all, you’re on your way out of work to meet your latest beau. He’s a man with a good job, nice personality and an even nicer…
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hammione · 10 months
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3 YOUNG ADULT ROMANCES GUARANTEED TO MAKE YOU CRY YOUR EYES OUT
Romeo Montague was 16 and Juliet Capulet was 13, meaning, these two fictional characters are teenagers. These characters are also the undisputed poster kids for tragic romance. What does this mean? Teenage romance stories are just tragic stories about two teenagers. Could this reasoning be fallacious? Most definitely, yeah. Young Adult novels are one of the most popular genres of fiction. Young…
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hammione · 10 months
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3 SECOND CHANCE ROMANCE BOOKS YOU MUST ADD TO YOUR BOOKSHELF
They fall in love. They break up. And sometimes, they end up together again after weeks, months, years of secretly pining and outwardly spitting vitriol about each other. Yikes. What a mess. I mean, what a mess I can’t get enough of. Second chance romances are one of the most popular romance tropes out there, and why not? We’ve all been there, one way or another. We’ve all had that…
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