Title: How to Write "to win" - the "Secrets" to Writing Success (from our Creative Writing Course)
Author: Craig Lock
Web Sites: http://kompuwiz.com/kompustore and http://www.bridgeniche.com
Other Articles: http://www.soulful-writer.com
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HOW TO WRITE TO WIN - WHAT ARE THE "SECRETS" TO CREATIVE WRITING SUCCESS?
(Extracted from our Creative Writing Course)
"It took me twenty years to become an overnight success."
- anon
That quote keeps me going!
"If a man has talent and cannot use it, he has failed. If he has
a talent and uses only half of it, he has partly failed. If he
has a talent and learns somehow to use the whole of it, he has
gloriously succeeded and has a satisfaction and a triumph few men
ever know."
-- Thomas Wolfe
"Everyone has a talent. What is rare is the courage to follow the
talent to the dark place where it leads."
-- Erica Jong
Funnily enough, I don't believe there are any magic 'secrets' to writing.
If so, I'm still trying to discover them.
So I'll cover this subject very briefly, because I don't know the
answers. It's really all common sense, following your basic
instincts and having a bit of fun at the same time, as you learn the craft as you go along.
Just BE YOU and write what your heart, your imagination tells you
to write. The writer or author is a puppeteer, moulding the clay
through the words that you choose. You weave the strandsof the
article or story together, through use of your creative
imagination.
You start your article, short story or novel with an idea. You
decide HOW you will start: "Once upon a time". (This could be the
little child emerging from the depths of your soul). Sounds very
"airy-fairy" that!
You perhaps got the plot from a television programme or a
newspaper article. The plots of some of my novels came from
newspaper articles.
Then you make choices as you go along: to base your story upon
fact or fiction, or faction (a mixture of fact and fiction - I
like that genre (impressive word that - must use it more often!).
You choose the track. You are the director, producer and actor:
YOU set the scene, decide whether it is to be local or foreign.
It's up to you HOW you describe the landscape or surrounding
environment.
You decide on the characters and how you will describe them. To
let them live or die? What immense power you have to determine
destinies! Whether to have a happy or sad ending?
"And they all lived happily ever after...."
A few short words of advice to end off this lesson...
Make your writing fun and get readers (and the editor) "hooked"
with a good opening paragraph and an even better opening line.
What do you think of this example by Charles Dickens from "A Tale
of Two Cities"?
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the
age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of
belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of
Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope,
it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had
nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were
all going direct the other way - in short, the period was so far
like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities
insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the
superlative degree of comparison only.".
I find it excellent and powerful writing, but quite "heavy
reading". What did you think of that style of writing?
How's this for an opening line for a novel?
"James walked into the hotel and it was as if he was struck by a
bolt of lightning. He instantly went into a state of shock, as
the past ten years of his life flashed through his mind, as in an
instant replay. It was too much to all take in in a second. His
legs began to tremble, as if they had turned into instant jelly.
They could barely hold his slight frame, as he struggled with all
his might to hold his body upright. Out of his numbness he could
see seated at the end of the bar the face of the man that was
indelibly printed on his subconscious mind, the striking features
that had haunted him all those years. It was the same mysterious
man, who had turned his entire world upside down and consumed
James's every waking thought for the past decade."
"Did I need to say "mysterious man"? Do you want to read on?
Perhaps that could be the first paragraph of my next book?
Or this one from my novel "Angolan Dawn"
"It was just getting light with that certain freshness in the
air of early morning. Albertina Kangombe saw the figure of her
husband Marcelino receding in the distance down the sandy track,
walking slowly down the gentle hill. She saw him turn around once
to look at her but he could not see the tears of sadness running
down her face. She wondered when she would see her dear, strong
husband again. He was a tall man but he became smaller and
smaller as she saw him gradually receding into the distance on
that early January morning. And then he was gone...
Time to end off (I've done enough "work" re-writing this
lesson)....
Stimulate your imagination to the fullest. then go with the flow.
Observe life and jot down notes about your thoughts and feelings
Then "make the words dance to your tune".
"Don't spend your days, stringing your instrument- start making
music NOW. "
"Life is about finding, then following the dream... and one's
dream/vision comes to reality through believing in yourself,
making the commitment and then creating it."
- Craig Lock
See you next week, when we'll talk more about style and grammar.
Oh no, not another boring lesson!
I hope this information may be helpful to you in your creative writing.
Happy writing (creatively, of course!)
Craig Lock
http://www.craiglock.com
About the author:
Craig Lock has had six books published on various subjects with another 12 manuscripts published and distributed on the internet. He started the "original" Online Creative Writing Course: http://www.craiglock.com/downloads/cwcourse.htm
Craig Lock's novel Angolan Dawn and his other works* are available at http://kompuwiz.com/kompustore (click on "SoulfulBooks")
A moving novel on Angola as seen through the eyes of a hospital orderly during the war. There is also a true story of a migrant miner in South Africa which blends into the story.
* Hard-copies and e-books, fiction and nonfiction: self help, novels, travel, humour, writing and inspiration
Uplifting, encouraging and empowering people through the power of words and thought energy. Change YOUR world and you change THE world."
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