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wallacepolsom
untitled
Misplaced Lens Cap

gracie abrams
I'd rather be in outer space đž
Cosimo Galluzzi
Cosmic Funnies
KIROKAZE
taylor price

JVL
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

romaâ
d e v o n
trying on a metaphor
cherry valley forever

tannertan36
Mike Driver
hello vonnie

Discoholic đȘ©

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@ezekielstrawberry
From âThe Pyramidâ (Experimental/Surreal Short, 2019).
âPriestessâ [Digital Collage, 2018]
A Romanian woman, a Romanian lamb. Perfect rural photo.Â
your accelerationism is showing
some mini collections of tips for writers
(based on things that yours truly notices as an editor-in-training. This list is in no way complete, and will probably be added to as I continue to find repeated mistakes)Â
Dialogue
Use beats in your dialogue to break it up. Even âsaidâ can make a very effective beat between lines.Â
(No beats: âItâs not lethal. Just highly dangerous with a good chance of being mutilated.â // Beats: âItâs not lethal,â he said. âJust highly dangerous with a good chance of being mutilated.â)
Note how the break allows a bit of a pause for ~dramatic effectÂ
thinking of dialogue, use punctuation and distinct speech patterns! âLife, uh, finds a way.â is an iconic line anyway, but Jeff Goldblumâs signature verbal tic gives it character.Â
Itâs okay if characters stutter. Donât let the condemnation of stuttering characters as âcringeyâ in fanfic put you off. (and on that note, fuck cringe culture. Seriously. It saps all the fun out of creativity and fun is important.)
Start! A! New! Line! Whenever! Someone! New! Speaks!!
DO NOT FEAR THE WORD âSAIDâÂ
Setting & Blocking
 Use the landscape and settings around your character, and always, always remember a sceneâs blocking. Where is everything in relation to your characters? Have you left someone holding a coffee cup for the last three scenes? Did you lose a character somewhere along the way?Â
using the contents of a scene is also great for fight sequences.Â
Similarly, large character casts are hard to keep track of so donât be afraid to break them up. Sending someone off somewhere else can create some nifty little subplots.Â
Keep a personal note of how time passes. Trust me, itâs incredibly helpful to you as a writer and also for future readers.Â
Characters
Character growth does not have to be positive. Sometimes characters fail or suffer or get their motivations twisted up, and they finish the book as a villain rather than a hero.Â
All that matters is that a character changes throughout the plot in a way that readers can see; the sort of change they go through is entirely up to you.Â
scrap the idea that someone has to deserve a redemption arc. They probably donât deserve it, which is the whole point. So donât be afraid to make your villains seem completely irredeemable.Â
and you donât need to redeem your antagonists in order to make them complex, sympathetic villains, anyway. Sometimes people get so stuck in their beliefs that they canât see another way and it goes too far. Not everyone comes back from that.Â
Also, motivations and goals can absolutely change. Thatâs okay. You just need to have something that drives your character so that your readers are rooting for them.Â
Protagonists donât need to be heroic. How you define the protagonists and antagonists in your story is based entirely on the morality in your story-world, NOT the moral ideas in the real world. What counts as a complex protagonist in a world torn apart by biological warfare will be very different than one living in our world.Â
Prose & Grammar
simple prose is just fine and you donât need to fluff it up for pretty quotes.
Remember to vary your sentence structures and length. Start smaller and build it up, drawing your readerâs attention.Â
âAndâ and âButâ are very valid sentence starters that are great for communicating the tone of internal narrative. Youâre allowed to tweak grammar if thatâs helpful for telling the story, it just needs to be accessible. Test out what youâve written on other people.Â
Check that your tenses are consistent!!Â
Donât listen to any advice before you start writing. Just start. If you listen to too much advice you will get overwhelmed. Once you start, you will find out what you need to know next.
Margaret Atwood (via writingdotcoffee)
-agrees-
-stops reading and closes Tumblr-
Monday morning
New York slushÂ
Cold napkin coffeeÂ
Drip by drip
Other than writing, I am completely unemployable.
Anne Lamott
Pad a pad with a pad you got at her pad.
My pillow is a pad.Â
My pillow pads my head.Â
You can put a pillow on another pillow. This is padding a pad.Â
But where did you get the pad?Â
At her pad.Â
By the way, a helicopter can land on a pad.Â
And a dog can pad along on the pads of its feet.Â
You can pad the pads of your feet with foot pads you got at her pad while your dog pads along.Â
Having padded my pads at my pad, my pads are now padded with padding.
âInflateâ synonyms: Which are your favorites?
Augment (meh)Â
Bloat (love it)Â
Boost (meh)
Enlarge (what is this a how-to manual? no)Â
Escalate (maybe)Â
Exaggerate (cool. I was thinking like a balloon, but you can also inflate a story)Â
Expand (overused, donât you think?)
Magnify (maybe)Â
Maximize (no)
Overestimate (I donât think thatâs what I was thinking when I looked up âinflateâ synonyms. Guess itâs closer to the âexaggerateâ meaning of the word. Anyway I donât like this one either way)Â
Pad (as in to protect with cushioning. I dislike this because pad has multiple meanings. An animal can pad along. A bandage or pillow can be a pad. A helicopter can land on a pad. The fact that you can pad a pad with a pad from your mateâs pad...just...just...)Â
Widen (ok)Â
Good âSupportâ Synonyms are so hard to find these days:
to back (bc Iâm a politician or mogul?)Â
to ballyhoo (meaning to promote. From google: "a much-ballyhooed musical extravaganza.â Yes)
to benefit (ugh)Â
to bolster (meh)Â
to boost (maybe)Â
to cheer (yeah)
to cooperate (merp)Â
to encourage (no way Jose)Â
to further (why do these all suck)Â
to intercede (it depends)Â
to maintain (is this even a synonym for support)
To promote (nope)
To prop (yes)Â
To puff (definitely!)Â
âWeakâ synonyms. Which are your favorites?
Anemic (yes)Â
Enervated (I like this word! But at risk for clunkiness)
FeebleÂ
Flimsy (love it!)Â
Fragile (meh)
Frail
Hesitant (k.)
Powerless (yuck)
Puny (PUNY HOOMIN)Â
Shaky (no)
Sickly (dislike)Â
Sluggish (meh)
Spindly (yes yes)
Uncertain (merp)Â
Weakened (good if youâre a computer I guess)
WimpyÂ
non-prophet information network
You know what all the books published and movies made and comics inked have in common? Someone finished what they started.
Chuck Wending (via writingdotcoffee)