A shocking discovery sends Christine on a quest to find the stranger who left her behind in Jamaica. Determined to unravel the mystery of her birth, Christine uses every tool at her disposal and treads with courage where no child should.
Thursday, 28 March 2013
J.L Campbell: Book Launch : Christine's Story: Jamaican Kit Lit
A shocking discovery sends Christine on a quest to find the stranger who left her behind in Jamaica. Determined to unravel the mystery of her birth, Christine uses every tool at her disposal and treads with courage where no child should.
Friday, 22 March 2013
March Murder Madness with a touch of Macbeth - Driven to Murder - RFW flash fiction
Add boredom to the list. I’d yawn and go to bed.
The God of War had been unleased on that unfortunate land for its entire history. I’d seen enough murder and mayhem in Afghanistan to last me a lifetime. The bomb that sent me home was a godsend in the long run.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
WORD COUNT: 996
FCA
NOW is the time to sign up for a little March Madness in the form of prose/poetry up to 1,000 words that fits the theme -- Driven to Murder.
To honour the Roman God Mars (Greek Ares), your characters will plot/implement a deceitful act under the guise of love.
Further guidelines found on our Challenges Page.
WHAT TO DO
* ADD your name to the inlinkz list below
* WRITE your story/poem according to the RFW Guidelines on the Challenges Page at RFW. You may be able to incorporate a murder scene from your WIP
* PUBLISH your entry on your blog during the three days - March 22 - 24
* Return to the RFW comment stream and tell us you've posted. Alternately delete your original link and add a direct link
Further questions leave a comment below or email Denise on den.covey@gmail.com or Donna on donnahole@gmail.com
SUBMIT your link NOW and start planning your awesome story/poem. Can't wait to read your entries.
Monday, 18 March 2013
Alex J Cavanaugh - Top Ten Movie Countdown Blogfest
1. GONE WITH THE WIND (1940) - Unforgettable (to me) characters. Scarlett, Rhett, Mammy, Mellie, and that milksop Ashley Wilkes - they are a part of my life. So intense was the storyline, so human were the actions/reactions of those caught up in the war against slavery and the war against themselves. It was a huge project, probably too broad for modern producers/directors, but the romantic elements were there and added extra suspense and colour to the powerful story.
Rhett Butler: With enough courage, you can do without a reputation.
This is a crocodile! |
This is a knife! |
Monday, 11 March 2013
Fact is Stranger Than Fiction - Lost Treasure - Wild Australia, Lost Cities. March Mayhem at RFW.
Click here for a link to the Ten Top Treasures of the World.
Click here for a link to the Seven Lost Cities of the World - amazing images.
I was very interested to come across this account of Lost Treasure in Australia's youngest national park (created in July 2012) in the weekend papers.
At the time of their creation, they were nothing more complex than bacteria-like life, thus, they yield no fossil record. Buried for millions of years, the sandstone was raised out of the sea by the movement of the Earth's crust. Eventually it cracked and a network of joints emerged around which the unique towers would eventually form.Through exposure to water, wind and plant roots, the cracks became chasms and pillars of sandstone began to take shape.
The drive to Limmen from Darwin, Australia's northernmost capital city, is a spectacular outback journey across the Top End to the Gulf of Carpentaria.
There is evidence that the lost city at Cape Crawford was a sacred place to local Aboriginal people. Two trees have anaesthetic properties - Green plum and Snottygobble (don't you love that name?) These indicate the area was once used for circumcision ceremonies.
I love tourists! |
These lost cities are evidence of a much older seawater inundation and of the passage of time itself.
The Heartbreak Hotel welcomes you to Cape Crawford |
- I hope you enjoyed your trip to the Lost Cities. Do you have any similiar stories to share?
- Do you have a favourite legend which is based on fact to share with us?
Thursday, 7 March 2013
Insecure Writers Support Group Post - the Premise, the Pitch, the Synopsis
Research is one of my favourite things, so as I'm ready to perfect these scary little add ons to my novel, I've hit my favourite place for writing questions -- the Writers Knowledge Base. Here is the result...a conglomeration of solid advice. I'll use the royal 'we' in my post 'cause we're in this together. And this will be a LONG post 'cause I wanted to have them all together. I hope you find something useful.
Source |
There are two aspects of story setup where small changes can create the biggest payoff. Tweaking these before we've put words on the screen is also relatively painless. After all, we haven't had a chance to fall in love with our characters, setting, and plot choices. Setting up the conflict and the story question really begins from our first sentence, and if we don't know what that is going to be, we're probably not quite ready to start writing even if we are pantsing it. If everything comes down to the story question, then the success of the book ultimately begins and ends with that question. But how does premise tie into that question. Are they the same thing? Or slightly different?
The premise or concept includes a number of different elements.
When EXTERNAL STORY QUEST forces CHARACTER to confront her INTERNAL PROBLEM or STAKES, PLOT illustrates the THEME.
The premise isn't just about the theme. We have to start with the external story quest. Literary agent Rachelle Gardner points out that one of the most common mistakes she sees in queries or hears in verbal pitches is that writers have a hard time conveying the actual story of their novel. She explains that it's critical that we make sure "the character's emotional journey is illustrated in the real-life action of the story." One feeds off the other. The internal problem complicates the external story quest and leads to the growth of the protagonist. The protagonist's journey, in turn, develops the main theme, which further facilitates our choices in the obstacles we throw at her.
The "And so?" Test
Use "And so?" as a test of relevance as we plot a story. "What does this piece of information tell us that we need to know? What's the point? How does it further the story?" What consequence does it lead to?" Any time that something happens and we can't tie the answer to "And so?" back to the main premise, we are derailing the momentum of the story, which "should follow a cause-and-effect trajectory beginning on page one so that each scene is triggered by the one that preceded it."
Does everything in the story's cause-and-effect trajectory revolve around the protagonist's quest (the story question)?
What Is the Story Question?
It's the ultimate test of whether a premise is compelling. It's the premise boiled down to the thing that the reader has to know, the reason the reader keeps turning the pages to the end. For example...
Will Katniss Everdeen survive the Hunger Games?
Will character overcome the opposition?
For "overcome," we can substitute any verb that suggests conflict. And here we are, back at conflict.
Note that the example from THE HUNGER GAMES is very specific and external. Because Suzanne Collins did such a great job setting up the conflict in the first book of her trilogy, we all know what the Hunger Games are by now, so I don't need to define it. If "Hunger Games" was instead "Zombie Crunch Time" and we were trying to pitch that to an agent, we would need to be able to boil down the idea in a few succinct words. The closer we can come to nailing that explanation in a single, compelling sentence, the more likely it is that we've nailed the premise.
Rachelle Gardner suggests that before we pitch to an agent, we make sure our book has "a protagonist with a choice to face (a conflict), obstacles to overcome, a desired outcome, and consequences (the stakes) if the goal is not reached. Again, that's easier to set up before we've written. And chances are, that if we haven't done a good job setting it up before we've written, summing it up after we've written is going to be more difficult.
The "What If?" test
It's a great idea to see how many "What If" questions we can find in a premise. Let's take another whack at HUNGER GAMES – a good choice because most of us have read it.
What if in a post-apocalyptic society children were forced to fight to the death as a spectator sport?
What if one of two children forced to fight each other to the death was in love with the other?
What if while two children were forced to fight each other to the death, one had to preserve the other's life?
You get the point. It comes down to a compelling read because as a reader, I just must know the answer.
The "So What?" Test
It has been suggested that readers actually search for the answers to three different questions while they are reading. "So What?" the first of these questions basically demands to know why the premise matters, why it is different from what readers have already read a thousand times?
Applied to the premise, the "So What?" test helps us ensure that the premise has a hook—something intriguing to make the reader choose to read this book, to buy this book, instead of one of the many other choices on the shelf. If the premise itself doesn't pass the "So What?" it's probably not time to write yet.
The "Oh Yeah?" Test
The "Oh Yeah" test is one of plausibility. It grounds the premise and forces us to lay the groundwork. Why would the things that happen in the story happen? Why couldn't they happen any other way? If there's anything unfounded in the story, anything that happens only because the author needs it to happen that way, then the reader will sniff it out. Plot holes kill a premise no matter how compelling that premise may be. And plot holes can usually be patched by laying solid groundwork from the beginning. If the premise itself doesn't pass the "Oh Yeah" test, well . . . you get the idea.
The "Huh?" Test
The "Huh?" test applies to anything in the story that the reader can't follow—anything that doesn't make sense. And that goes for the premise as well as every, single sentence in the book. If the reader can't follow the idea, can't follow the action, can't tell who is speaking or what is going on, then he or she will quickly stop reading.
If the premise doesn't fit into a simple, compelling format, it probably isn't distilled enough to work yet. It can sometimes help to try writing it in different ways to see what pops.
QUESTIONS TO ASK WHILE WE'RE NOODLING AROUND WITH PREMISE
Once we have a really solid premise, it's easy to restate it in any number of different ways and have it always hold up. Here are a few more formula we can use to examine a premise and see if we can add something or change something to make it more compelling.
One sentence mistaken belief:
Character believes misconception or twisted life view, until discovery and series of events that result in disaster.
Two sentence inciting incident:
When inciting incident launches character on quest to avoid consequence, she must overcome her obstacle to success before she can defeat antagonist, save loved one, or retrieve the MacGuffin.
Character premise:
A character must do something to keep antagonist from doing something else or else reason why we care?
Story action launch:
Book title starts when character discovers/is pushed/something happens leading to dire consequences.
First page set-up:
On the first page of Book Title, something strange leads character to question/discover/investigate something previously taken for granted which leads to consequence.
Ticking clock premise:
Will character discover/expose who (antagonist) is doing something bad in time to save herself or some other poor schmuck from dire consequence?
Quick reminder, these last ways to examine premise are just for us while we're noodling around trying to get a handle on what we're writing. I wouldn't necessarily recommend using them as your ultimate pitch. Many agents have stated that they don't like rhetorical questions in query letters, and throwing a premise question into a query might be too close for comfort. Bottom line? Do your research into what specific agents like and don't like.
What is an elevator pitch and why do you need one? An elevator pitch is a short one- to two-sentence description about the book. It’s the briefest of the briefest descriptions you can develop. The reason elevator pitches are important is that we have an ever- shrinking attention span, so you need to capture someone’s attention in a very short, succinct pitch.
STEP ONE: Look at the core of your book. What is your book about, really? Looking at the core of your book will help you determine the primary message.
STEP TWO: Look at the real benefits to the reader. (Not what you think the reader wants to know but what they actually need.) What’s in it for the reader?
Image via Wikipedia
- Have emotional appeal
- Be helpful
- Be insightful
- Be timely
- Matter to your reader!
- Concise: Your pitch needs to be short, sweet, and to the point.
- Clear: Save your five dollar words for another time. For your elevator pitch to be effective, you must use simple language any layperson can understand. If you make someone think about a word, you’ll lose them and the effectiveness of your elevator pitch will go right out the window as well.
- Passion: If you’re not passionate about your topic, how can you expect anyone else to be?
- Visual: Use words that bring visual elements to your reader’s mind. It helps to make your message more memorable and brings the reader into your story.
- Stories: People love stories. It’s the biggest element of the elevator pitch: tell the story. I also find that when the pitch is woven into the story, it often helps to create a smoother presentation.
- Write it down: Start by writing a very short story so you can tell the story of your book in two paragraphs. This will get the juices flowing. As you start to edit your story down from 200,000 words to two paragraphs, you’ll start to see why it’s important to pull only the most essential elements from your story to craft your elevator pitch.
- Make a list: Write down 10 to 20 things that your book does for the reader. These can be action statements, benefits, or book objectives.
- Record yourself: Next, record yourself and see how you sound. I can almost guarantee you that you will not like the first few drafts you try. That actually is a really good thing. If you like the first thing that you write, it probably won’t be that effective. Recording yourself will help you listen to what you’re saying and figure out how to fine-tune it.
- Rest: I highly recommend that you give yourself enough time to do your elevator pitch. Ideally you want to let it rest overnight, if not longer. Remember the elevator pitch is perhaps the most important thing that you created in your marketing package. You want to make sure it’s right.
DEFINITION: A synopsis is a brief summary of the major points of a written work, either as prose or as a table; an abridgment or condensation of a work. Wikipedia.
PREMISE:
http://www.writersdigest.com/writing-articles/by-writing-goal/improve-my-writing/the_premise_of_your_story
http://childrenspublishing.blogspot.com.au/2012/10/six-tests-of-solid-story-premise-and.html
ELEVATOR PITCH:
http://www.amarketingexpert.com/craft-an-exceptional-elevator-pitch/
SYNOPSIS:
http://www.publishingcrawl.com/2012/04/17/how-to-write-a-1-page-synopsis/