#and then write a book
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
vroom--vrooming · 2 days ago
Note
There's already a discussion that carmen might faking her q&a by answering her own questions. If you realize, all the questions have the same tone, style of writing, or how formal it is. But since carmen is very aware about her own gossip and one of them about her faking her q&a, she decided to be a lil bit subtle about it. By answering questions with emojis. I mean her followers mostly are young girls, so it's kinda impossible if none of the not using emojis
And pretty sure those young girls are not really interested in paying for a subscription to buy her book. That's too much effort to buy a book about investment from an amateur. Hopefully she changes her tactics and is a little less obvious with her q/a
3 notes · View notes
Text
I firmly believe that some stories can never be translated into a different medium and that's okay
55K notes · View notes
hayatheauthor · 17 days ago
Text
10 Non-Lethal Injuries to Add Pain to Your Writing
New Part: 10 Lethal Injury Ideas
If you need a simple way to make your characters feel pain, here are some ideas: 
1. Sprained Ankle
A common injury that can severely limit mobility. This is useful because your characters will have to experience a mild struggle and adapt their plans to their new lack of mobiliy. Perfect to add tension to a chase scene.
2. Rib Contusion
A painful bruise on the ribs can make breathing difficult, helping you sneak in those ragged wheezes during a fight scene. Could also be used for something sport-related! It's impactful enough to leave a lingering pain but not enough to hinder their overall movement.
3. Concussions
This common brain injury can lead to confusion, dizziness, and mood swings, affecting a character’s judgment heavily. It can also cause mild amnesia.
I enjoy using concussions when you need another character to subtly take over the fight/scene, it's an easy way to switch POVs. You could also use it if you need a 'cute' recovery moment with A and B.
4. Fractured Finger
A broken finger can complicate tasks that require fine motor skills. This would be perfect for characters like artists, writers, etc. Or, a fighter who brushes it off as nothing till they try to throw a punch and are hit with pain.
5. Road Rash
Road rash is an abrasion caused by friction. Aka scraping skin. The raw, painful sting resulting from a fall can be a quick but effective way to add pain to your writing. Tip: it's great if you need a mild injury for a child.
6. Shoulder Dislocation
This injury can be excruciating and often leads to an inability to use one arm, forcing characters to confront their limitations while adding urgency to their situation. Good for torture scenes.
7. Deep Laceration
A deep laceration is a cut that requires stitches. As someone who got stitches as a kid, they really aren't that bad! A 2-3 inch wound (in length) provides just enough pain and blood to add that dramatic flair to your writing while not severely deterring your character.
This is also a great wound to look back on since it often scars. Note: the deeper and wider the cut the worse your character's condition. Don't give them a 5 inch deep gash and call that mild.
8. Burns
Whether from fire, chemicals, or hot surfaces, burns can cause intense suffering and lingering trauma. Like the previous injury, the lasting physical and emotional trauma of a burn is a great wound for characters to look back on.
If you want to explore writing burns, read here.
9. Pulled Muscle
This can create ongoing pain and restrict movement, offering a window to force your character to lean on another. Note: I personally use muscle related injuries when I want to focus more on the pain and sprains to focus on a lack of mobility.
10. Tendonitis
Inflammation of a tendon can cause chronic pain and limit a character's ability to perform tasks they usually take for granted. When exploring tendonitis make sure you research well as this can easily turn into a more severe injury.
This is a quick, brief list of ideas to provide writers inspiration. Since it is a shorter blog, I have not covered the injuries in detail. This is inspiration, not a thorough guide. Happy writing! :)
Looking For More Writing Tips And Tricks? 
Check out the rest of Quillology with Haya; a blog dedicated to writing and publishing tips for authors!
Instagram Tiktok
44K notes · View notes
roach-works · 5 months ago
Text
speculative fiction writers i am going to give you a really urgent piece of advice: don't say numbers. don't give your readers any numbers. how heavy is the sword? lots. how old is that city? plenty. how big is the fort? massive. how fast is the spaceship? not very, it's secondhand.
the minute you say a number your readers can check your math and you cannot do math better than your most autistic critic. i guarantee. don't let your readers do any math. when did something happen? awhile ago. how many bullets can that gun fire? trick question, it shoots lasers, and it shoots em HARD.
you are lying to people for fun. if you let them do math at you the lie collapses and it's no fun anymore.
75K notes · View notes
sanguinifex · 5 months ago
Text
You gotta read and watch some old books and films that aren’t 100% modern politically correct. I’m not saying you should agree with everything in them but you need to learn where genres came from to understand what those genres are doing today and where media deconstructing old tropes is coming from.
Also, more often than you might think, they’re not actually promoting bigotry so much as “didn’t consider all the implications of something” or just used words that were polite then but considered offensive now.
Kill the censor in your head.
52K notes · View notes
the-overanalyst · 1 year ago
Text
it's always so fascinating and heartbreaking when a character in a story is simultaneously idolized and abused. a chosen prophet destined for martyrdom. a child prodigy forced to grow up too fast. a powerful warrior raised as nothing but a weapon. there's just something so uniquely messed up about singing someone's praises whilst destroying them.
131K notes · View notes
animentality · 11 months ago
Text
kicking a hornets nest.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
98K notes · View notes
joytri · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
91K notes · View notes
lannegarrett · 8 months ago
Text
I know adverbs are controversial, but "said softly" means something different than "whispered" and this is the hill I will die on.
55K notes · View notes
mostly-funnytwittertweets · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
20K notes · View notes
ur-daily-inspiration · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media
16K notes · View notes
minimalist-quotes · 2 months ago
Text
Don't make the mistake of being so understanding and forgiving that you overlook the fact that you're being disrespected.
16K notes · View notes
fromdarzaitoleeza · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
{Words by José Olivarez from Citizen Illegal /@fatimaamerbilal , from even flesh eaters don't want me.}
70K notes · View notes
lilliesand-valleys · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
15K notes · View notes
charliejaneanders · 11 months ago
Text
Random writing thought: the best stories are often the ones that only you could have written — but also the ones that you could only write at this one moment.
I couldn't write All the Birds in the Sky from scratch now if I tried. But the me of 2013 couldn't have written The Prodigal Mother either.
35K notes · View notes