For Writers
For Writers
About writing
A writer needs to get so many elements just right: well-developed characters, a compelling plot, conflict, humour, voice ... and once the writing is polished to perfection, there comes promotion, marketing, networking ... all the while, trying to balance the needs of a life in the real world.
Balance is important, but my focus has always been on honing my writing skills. You’ll find tips for writers here, links to pages about the craft of writing for children that I’ve found particularly useful, and you can read some of my own essays about writing in general. My monthly column for writers, Muselings, is part of the Muse Marquee ezine.
Tip
Join a critique group. It’s a great way to network with other writers. You get feedback on your work from people who can help you see it in perspective. One I belong to is part of the Museitup Club, where the only prerequisite is to have a
genuine passion for writing. Find out more about it here.
Great sites
Lots of sites have advice for writers, but I admit to a soft spot for advice that makes me laugh, dream, and wish for a wombat! Jackie French’s site is well worth a look. I love her books, too. If you’d like to read my review of her junior novel,The Space Bug, check my website soon for a pdf of my reviews.
Mem Fox gives writers some excellent advice entitled So You Want to Write a Picture Book.
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A walk along the beach can spark your creativity
Prune Juice for the Mind
by Susan Stephenson
Ideas for writing abound. Every writer knows that. So why do we sit at the keyboard and stare at a blank document, or worse still, play free cell until our brains are fried?
Sometimes, we writers have a creativity problem. We suffer from what I think of as constipation of the creative idea zone. Otherwise known as writer’s block, it can be debilitating. Some of us are afraid of failure, others of success. Don’t despair! If you need some prune juice for your creativity, try these ideas.
Take a walk. Try to walk in beauty. For me, it’s along the beach. Somehow, the ocean puts my puny problems into perspective. I synchronize the beat of my heart with the pulse of the ocean. Soon, I get to a place of inner calm where the white noise in my head disappears. A daily walk can be a time of relaxation. It can also be a time to open yourself to writing inspiration.
Change your environment. Sitting at your desk, willing yourself to write, can be counter-productive. How long is it since you’ve climbed a tree, danced around the room, sat inside a cubby you built, swung in a hammock and dreamed, stared into the flames of a fire, listened to music and allowed a scenario to build in your imagination? Have a notepad handy. If your creativity needs re-fuelling, taking a break from the mundane may be your answer.
Stimulate your sense of smell. Light a fragrant candle, crush some herbs, close your eyes and sniff some of your kitchen spices. Search back in your memory for a time when you smelled wet dog, smoke, a gas, newly-mown grass, a baby’s skin, frying onions, seaweed on the shore. Can you build a story around one of those memories? If evil had a smell, what would it be?
Stimulate your sense of touch. Have a massage, a foot rub, walk over pebbles or hot sand, curl your body into a tiny space. Play the blindfold game: have someone bring you objects to examine while you wear a blindfold. Your focus is not so much on guessing what you hold, as on allowing the sensory input to stimulate your imagination and jumpstart your writing.
Stimulate your sense of taste. Try tiny drops of olive oil, vinegar, syrup, salt, or lemon juice on your tongue. Stop after two or three or if you start eating glue.
Skip a meal. Concentrate on the taste of food in your next meal. Eat slowly, savouring taste and texture. Think back to times when different tastes had an impact on you. How do tears taste? How would you describe the taste of your lover’s skin? Does ice have a taste? If anger had a taste, what would it be? Let your taste buds direct your writing.
Stimulate your hearing. Go on a sound hunt. When you hear something, concentrate on its effect on your body. How does it make you feel? What does it remind you of? What sounds in your life mean danger? What sounds mean delight? What is the most wonderful sound you can imagine hearing? Has sound been important in your life? When? Why? Could you write from the point of view of a deaf character?
Look at things in a new way. Visual stimulation is all around if we’re lucky enough to enjoy good vision. Make a picture frame and look through it Spend ten minutes looking underneath things. Use a magnifying glass, binoculars, an octoscope. Look through coloured cellophane. Put yourself at child’s eye height. Gaze upon fractals, mandalas, trompes l’oeil. Look, see and write.
Creative self-expression is essential for your well-
being. You know that. So what are you waiting for?
Swallow that prune juice!
Online essays for writers
Metamorphosis at Absolute Write
Real Life Critters at Absolute Write
Whistle a Writing Tune at Fabulist Flash
B - Beginnings at Fabulist Flash
(Photo credit to Kelly B at Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/photos/foreverphoto/1363037750/)