Coloring the Page: Purple



PURPLE is up next in our continuing “Descriptive Kaleidoscope” of color synonyms, based on one of my favorite writing tools — created by a gentleman who is blind but had his sight until he was 11.

Check out the earlier entries for “Red,” “Blue,” “Green,” “Yellow,” “Black,” “Brown,” “White” and “Gray” here.

Burgundy: Dark grayish or blackish purple to dark purplish red
Lavender: Light purple to very light or pale violet
Lilac: Pale to moderate purple
Magenta: Moderate to vivid purplish red
Mauve: Brilliant violet to strong or brilliant purple
Mulberry: Dark purple; almost black at times
Orchid: Pale to light purple, from grayish to purplish pink or red
Plum: Deep purple
Raspberry: Moderate to deep purplish red
Royal Purple: A deep to strong purple
Violet: Reddish blue, purplish red
Indigo: Deep bluish purple

And, if you just can't get enough of synonyms, check out the new Physical Attribute thesaurus at The Bookshelf Muse.

A Writer's 'If'

The original 'If' by Rudyard Kipling is one of my favorite poems and inspirational quotes of all time! It's a great motivator for when you're holding on to dreams with your last fraying thread.

If you've never read it before, find it here.

So, imagine how thrilled I was to discover a writer's version of it, penned by Jon Gibbs, who posted it at his blog and over at the Bransforums.

LOVE it!

 
...

Read the rest here!

Piecing Together a Plot

Ever feel like your plot is sliding out of control?


No matter how intricate and twisty our plots are, plot holes will inevitably rear their ugly heads. Whether it’s a saggy middle, a loose end or a need for higher stakes, we’re bound to face trouble areas. Thought I’d share some of my favorite insights and exercises to help us through.
 
Identify and heighten the Goal, Conflict and Stakes
  • Go through your novel and write these three words at the top of every chapter.
  • Now, define them for every chapter.
  • It helps identify trouble areas and highlight “soggy middle syndrome.”

Use questions and exercises to fix the trouble areas you ID’d
  • How can you make your MC’s problem personal? This creates emotional power.
  • How can you make it matter more than life?
  • What’s the moment that your MC realizes there’s no turning back? Do readers get to see that scene?
  • How can your MC’s problem get worse? Once you think you’ve made it as bad as it can be…ask this question again.
  • What will be lost if your MC fails?
  • Heighten your story’s turning points through action, dialogue and emotion
  • Do you have a mix of internal and external tension? How can you add one or the other?
  • Are your characters emotional or active? How can they be both? Can their actions and emotions be at odds?

Nail the timeline and logistics
  • Know what ALL your characters are doing at any given moment, even if they’re not on scene. I did a guest post on this topic for Sommer Leigh’s Tell Great Stories a while back. MG author Janice Hardy also has some great tips on her blog.

So, there you have it. Not a perfect plot solution, but enough questions to keep us busy and scheming away on our next twist!

Genre Favorites!



It's heeeere! The latest blogfest from Alex J. Cavanaugh, and it's all about our favorite genres. Mine are below. Tell me yours in the comments trail!

One blogfest, four favorites!

Movie: Adventure
Music: Country or classic rock
Books: Fantasy (Is anyone really surprised at this one?)
Guilty pleasure genre: I've got two, both from the world of movies and TV. One's sort of a genre, and one's just a plain old guilty pleasure. :)
  • You're Beautiful - My K-drama favorite! If you haven't heard of it yet, check out this HILARIOUS synopsis from Sarah Rees Brennan. 
  • Desperado - Guns, guitars and Antonio Banderas. Best guilty pleasure EVER!

Choices



 
 
Life is choosing between dreams.
If you are lucky, you get to chase yours to its end.
If you are very lucky, you get to chase more than one.
 
 
A little dose of inspiration for you today! I'm off to read some pitches for GUTGAA and (hopefully) submit my own. Have you checked out the pitch polish yet?
 
 


Why You’re Great

Writers are dangerously susceptible to self-doubt and fear. Every time I see it in the blogosphere, I want to give the whole community of my fellow writers a collective hug. You guys are amazing! Do you know that?

Here’s a little something to try next time you’re feeling down. If we can’t fully shut up the voice of doubt, let’s counter it. I learned this from the owner of my hometown newspaper who gave a presentation in the middle of arguably the toughest era for print papers.

She opened by saying, “You really shouldn’t have asked me here today. Subscriptions are down, ad revenue is faltering and our paper is seriously struggling,” but then (and this is the most important part, so pay attention), she went on to say “Here’s why you did ask me here today. We’re among the top papers in the nation, we’re at the forefront of online and mobile app content, and readers love our web stories so much they’re willing to pay for them. Very few others are accomplishing that in the face of difficulty.”

It was a powerful juxtaposition!

For us writers, our lists might look something like this:

Why someone should steal my pen, burn my MS and never let me write again
  • I’m not good enough.
  • I never will be.
  • I can’t finish my WIP to save my life.
  • I have a stack of rejections high enough to wallpaper my writing space.
  • Plotholes abound! And I don’t know how to fix them.
  • My characters are flat and uninteresting.
  • Everything I write sounds so cliché.
  • I’ll never be like JK Rowling or Stephen King or…
  • __Fill in the blank___

If you or any writer you love has ever said or thought these things, stop, breathe, get your fingers away from that delete button and read on.
 
Why I am a writing superstar and will one day own the best-seller lists
  • I AM good enough.
  • And if I’m not right now…I will be!
  • I’m plugged into an awesome community of writers, and I’m working on my craft in some small way every day.
  • I’ve been blessed with an imagination that creates entire worlds (Seriously, how cool is that? For this alone, we should be so grateful to be writers.)
  • I’ve written tens of thousands of words. Not hundreds, not thousands, tens of thousands…maybe even hundreds of thousands! (Most people would run away from that screaming!)
  • From simple words and paper, I can spin characters (or places) that people care about (Think about that for a minute. The only reason anyone knows anything about these characters is because of YOU.)
  • People are actually talking about my writing. (If you have betas of any kind, it’s true!)
  • I’ve written phrases and lines so uber-awesome they’d rival the best authors in the game.
  • __Fill in the blank__

Now, buck up little writers! Just because we have struggles or failures doesn’t mean we are failures.

You’re greater than what you think or fear you are on those darkest days.

Short Stories - Yea or Nay

It's a short week here in the States, thanks to the Labor Day holiday, so I figured we'd stick with the "short" theme and talk about short stories.
  • Do you guys read 'em?
  • Do you like them individually or put together in an anthology?
  • Where do you get them?
I'll admit this isn't an area where I read much, but I've been seeing some intriguing ones crop up as e-shorts, and I'm curious.

Just leave your thoughts in the comments trail!

And if you're looking for my GUTGAA Intro, it's here.

GUTGAA or Bust!

Deana Barnhart
 
 
Not to be confused with busting a gut. This splendiferous blogfest helps us gear up to get an agent. If you haven't heard of it yet, stop...click the link...we'll wait. Go! Shoo!

We kick off the festivities with these fun "Get to Know Me" questions. And if you really can't get enough, there's always the "About Me" section of the blog.

Enjoy! I'm off to get to know all of YOU.

Where do you write?
Wherever I can. Honestly. Mostly, I write sprawled on my bedroom floor, but I've also written at desks, in the car (with a tape recorder) and in a tree stand to name a few.

Quick. Go to your writing space, sit down and look to your left. What is the first thing you see?
Ha - my laundry bag. Guess that's a bit of a wake-up call. :)

Favorite time to write?
Writing time IS my favorite time, no matter when it happens. I try to be flexible and fit it in around the rest of my sometimes-crazy life.

Drink of choice while writing?
Ooh, great question. It totally depends on the time of year and my characters. Once, I was drinking a local brew while writing, and I loved the flavor so much I wrote it into the tavern menus for my WIP. In the winter, I'm a fan of hot chocolate with chai.

When writing , do you listen to music or do you need complete silence?
Music is a must. I'm addicted to Pandora, and I use music as inspiration or to set the mood of the scene I'm writing.

What was your inspiration for your latest manuscript and where did you find it?
The very strange combination of a breaking storm, Dio's song Rainbow in the Dark and Brandon Sanderson's Warbreaker cover art (Thank you Dan Dos Santos!).

What's your most valuable writing tip?
Be a student of the game. If you love it, truly love it, you'll read all you can, learn all you can, admire and study other authors every chance you get. It all adds up to perfecting your craft.

**Bonus tip! I can't resist - I just re-read this quote next to my desk at work and, you guys, it's perfect. "Never give up on something you can't go a day without thinking about." That's how it is with me and writing.**