Archives for: April 2010
The Drive to Write
By david167 on Apr 27, 2010 | In Welcome
Writing is hard and anyone who is trying to make a living at it needs to be smart, determined and maybe even slightly insane. Some would be writers dream of writing someday, but they do not realize that writing is an art and to be a writer you need to write. While this sounds like common sense, many writers either take a break to focus on other things in their lives (marriage, kids, the bill paying job) or think that they can write a novel when they retire or have some spare time.
Writing is an art that grows through habit. By writing every day the art form and the flow of words continues to improve. Only the celebrities can publish a book without having tried to write one and their secret is that the books are ghost written by the starving artist who will never get credit.
Why write? If the odds are against you and the pay is lousy, why put yourself forward as a writer? Is it for fame and glory? Some may do it for that reason, but there are easier ways to obtain that fame and glory is not always what it is cracked up to be. In most writers there is a need to write that is as basic to us as the need to breathe. We will spend our time hurting our eyes as we stare at computer screens and editing for hours on end. We may lose relationships with those who cannot understand the drive of the art that pushes us forward. Writers who try to make a living at it are obsessed gamblers. We do not have to play at a poker table or the slot machine. We gamble every time we put ink on paper and submit our article, poem, story, or book to a would be publisher and hope to be paid.
Thank you for reading and please visit www.davidalanlucas.com for more articles, blogs, poetry, and stories that I write.
Through the Eyes of Another
By david167 on Apr 6, 2010 | In Welcome
There is a diagram that was used in a marketing class that fits how characters perceive the other characters as well as the world around them. The diagram had the person staring through a veil of perception at the wall of reality. Like real people, our characters will see themselves in various lights either to their benefit or determent, depending on their level of self-esteem and guilt. While they may perceive themselves in these lights, the question that should be raised is how do other characters perceive them and their actions?
Every character, no matter how small, is a protagonist in their own story. They go about doing things because they are trying to achieve their own story goals. If a writer takes this approach to creating their characters, they could create an army of real characters missing only the element of how they are perceived by each other. Why does John love Jane, but Jane wants nothing to do with John. Maybe Jane sees John as a player or as a loser. Maybe Jane would like to be with John, but because of peer pressure from her friend Jill, she will not. Why? Because Jill thinks he is creepy. As the writer begins to build the relationships they also should begin to build the perceptions that every character has in regards to the others they are interacting and have a reason or a “perception veil” for it. As an example, maybe Jill sees John as creepy because he reminds her of someone she knew who scared her.
In television, movies, and plays, the viewer is often not informed of the character’s perception of another unless that character says something about it or there is a narrator. In short stories and novels, the author does not have to worry about this handicap—they are the narrator and can either fill in or leave open the blanks as necessary to tell their tale. The decision to do this depends on the story. However, regardless if the author ever reveals the reason, the author should know it as the perception and the reason behind it will dictate how the two characters will interact.
Thank you for reading and please visit www.davidalanlucas.com for articles, blogs, poetry, and stories I write.