shadowscast: First Slayer shadow puppet (Default)
[personal profile] shadowscast
Sometimes I just worry that what I'm writing is very boring.

Is it useful to show a character on the airplane, in the airport, or should I cut in the next day when his jet lag is half gone and he's already on his way to the first Important Plot Point? Does it add, say, to the fullness of the narrative, of the character development? Of the creation of mood? Or is it just dead weight?

Obviously it could go either way - dead weight or important mood-setting - depending on how it's done.

My short stories tend to be long; I prefer novels. When I read pro fiction I choose novels almost exclusively over short stories. I think one of the big appeals of fan fic for me is that a fic is always kind of like a chapter in a longer novel - there's already been plenty of leisurely establishing of character and place.

I read somewhere, sometime, that amateur writers tend to "open too many doors" - that is, they start the scene a few moments earlier than necessary. The opening of the door is mundane and adds nothing to the scene, which could just as well start with the character just inside. (Exceptions: when the opening of the door is not mundane. When the door must be kicked down, or the lock picked, or the strange door-graffitti analysed. Yeah, there's always exceptions.)

Anyway. I'm pretty sure that's one of my big weaknesses.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-05-03 08:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dodyskin.livejournal.com
Hi. I think it depends on your writing style dunnit? If you're all flowery and introspective then you can go with a few short sentences describing moods/thought/images throughout the journey and it would be fine. If you're all action!dialogue then maybe it could get a bit list-ey. Ask on one of the fic communites I spose.

December 2022

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
181920 21222324
25262728293031

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 11th, 2026 02:30 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios