Ane Mulligan
Another good
example for deepening characterization came from a member of the critique
group, Penwrights. He told how after a particular critique, something clicked.
Now when his character hears tires on the gravel driveway and looks out the
window, she just doesn't simply see the next-door neighbors coming home. She
takes note of Jasper, their son. She describes him and even
renders her opinion:
He had his father's build, looking like another welterweight boxer, but Jasper had his mother's looks. Fortunate for him.
Being privy to
the character's thoughts and opinions, filtered through their past, brings them
alive to the reader, making them feel like the character is their friend (or
enemy in the case of an antagonist).
Many years ago
Ron Benrey taught me his Magic Paragraph. He's included it in his book The
Complete Idiot's Guide to Writing Christian Fiction, which
I highly recommend. That little bit of advice has a tremendous impact on your
writing. It goes like this:
1. Signal which
head to enter
2. Twang an
appropriate sense, emotion or mental faculty
3. Show
appropriate action
4. Repeat if
necessary
Write all your
descriptions with purpose. Use it to set a mood, foreshadow an event, or
perhaps even be a metaphor of the story question.
Follow the rules. Really?
I often hear writers complain about having to “follow the rules” or guidelines of writing. They see seasoned authors breaking these rules. Here’s what I’ve learned: Storytelling is a talent. Talent is a gift from God with some assembly required. And that entails learning the craft.
It’s much like when we first learn to print back in kindergarten. We had paper with large lines...guidelines. We all made our letters the same, straight up and down, first the lower case and then the upper.
After time, we graduated to cursive. Once again, the paper had guidelines. We slanted the letters at an approximate 45-degree angle, and kept the lowercase letters in the bottom half of the guidelines. It wasn’t until we’d mastered those guidelines that we began to apply our artistic creativity to our signatures.
It’s the same with writing. We must first learn what constitutes good writing, things like point of view, show vs telling, characterization, plot, conflict, etc., before we can understand when and how to break the rules. When you have mastered your craft, you can then know how to do it with panache.
.
I’m often asked about my “One Sheet” which is a single pitch sheet for a book or series. My critique partners and I spent a lot of time learning how to do a good one. When I had mine requested by an agent to use as an example of a good one, I knew we’d done it right.
It should
include:
· your hook
· a short
synopsis like the back cover blurb
· the book's
status, i.e.: a 92,000 word completed work of women's fiction
· your bio
· and finally your contact information.
Plain or with photos and graphics, as long as the one sheet includes the information listed above, you'll be fine.
WEBSITES FOR WRITES
The Write Conversation, My Book Therapy, ACFW, The Snowflake guy, The Book Club Network,
Ane Mu Ane Mulligan has been a voracious reader ever since her mom instilled within her a love of reading at age three, escaping into worlds otherwise unknown. But when Ane saw PETER PAN on stage, she was struck with a fever from which she never recovered—stage fever. She submerged herself in drama through high school and college. One day, her two loves collided, and a bestselling, award-winning novelist emerged. She lives in Sugar Hill, GA, with her artist husband and a rascally Rottweiler. Find Ane on her website, Amazon Author page, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest and The Write Conversation.