Happy hump-day, everyone! Today, I'm talking about my little tips and tricks page here on the blog. I spend one month a year organizing it, adding alllll the posts from the year prior, and giving little descriptions so you can find what you're looking for quickly and easily. Let's dive into what's there, shall we? Get your clicking fingers ready, grab your coffee, and let's roll!
Here are the topics:
WRITING TIPS
This is broken down into Characters, Plot, Craft, and Tips and Tricks (like using MS Word to measure pacing, how to use Google Drive to collaborate, and more).
ADVICE ON EVERYTHING
Where to write, things to do to help you write, book swag, and other stuff. All clearly defined for your reading and browsing pleasure.
EDITING TIPS
If you're in the self-editing stage of your novel, this is where you want to be. Broken down into Punctuation, Dialogue, Pronouns, Variation, and Word Usage, you'll find everything you need to help your editor help you.
ORGANIZATION TIPS
Tips to help you organize yourself, your book, AND your files.
WRITING EXERCISES
Things to help you practice your writing. Games you can play with the family and dialogue exercises, too!
BOOK FORMATTING
What should be there, how you can get your novel ready to publish, and a few warnings.
EDITORS AND CONTRACTS
About the different kinds of editors and a breakdown of several contracts.
BRANDING YOUR AUTHOR SELF
Genres, look and feel, and why how you behave matters.
SERIES POSTS
All the series posts I've written: Human Nature, Enneagram Types, Branding, Look at your xXx, Becoming a Book Blogger, and Punctuation (that one is fun).
FREE PDFS
All the PDFs I've created here for you to download, keep, and share for FREE!
BLOGGING AND BLOG TOURS
There's one on branding and one is a workbook to help you check your novel and fix holes (THIS IS A NEW TOPIC FOR 2016).
MARKETING TIPS
Tools you can use to help you navigate the online waters and marketing ideas I've had.
I hope you find useful stuff on these pages. Every now and then, I throw archived posts out there into the ether and hope someone finds them when they're needed. I'm seriously considering focusing on social media how to this year.
Which one is your favorite?
Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!
Jo
A blog dedicated to the education and support of Indie authors.
Also striving to providing great book recommendations and reviews for readers.
Links and Books by Jo Michaels
Showing posts with label free pdf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free pdf. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Your Supporting Cast of Characters
Happy Thursday, good people of the blogosphere! Just two more work days until the weekend! I hope you all have something awesome to look forward to. Today, I'm talking about your supporting cast of characters. These are the folks that make your world seem real, the ones your character will interact with on a limited bases, and/or minor characters we aren't supposed to give two shakes about. If any of you have downloaded my free PDF, A Novel Checklist, you'll know there's a whole section, printable on its own, to assist you in creating dynamic characters. But you can, and should, also use it for minor characters. Before I digress too far, grab your pens and notebooks and let's get going!
There are three basic character types:
Major Characters are the ones your story is about. I'm sure, if you've been around the blog a while, you have a good idea of how to create awesome characters that your reader can connect with. So, I'm not going to spend any more of your time on those. If you haven't been around a while, you can catch up on all the posts on characterization HERE.
Moving on...
Minor Characters are the ones that support the major characters, but people your reader isn't supposed to care too much about. These folks may help move the plot along or be assistants to the big action, but they're always disposable. Now, I've had minor characters assert themselves and become major characters, but they didn't start out "life" that way. These entities show up, perform one or two things in the plot, then disappear. We don't expect them to come back later and take over the spotlight.
Just in case they do, you should have a character bio on them.
Now, these characters can jump out of the story and yell, "Ta-da!" to announce themselves; but they should do what they came to do and get out. Make them eccentric, bigger than life, or obsessive. Readers will notice the person, expect action, and be glad when they leave.
Walk-Ons and Placeholder Characters are exactly what their name implies: temporary. They're background noise that allow you to create a realistic world. If you want them to be forgotten, don't give them a name and don't make them anything other than a stereotype. These will be clerks in stores, delivery drivers, mailmen/women, doctors, nurses, etc... Every person you'd find in the real world, that lives in the background and goes unnoticed, are your walk-ons and placeholders. Don't give them traits that make them stand out.
If one of your placeholders starts to make themselves a nuisance, cut them from your text altogether or change what it is about them that's making them like glue. Perhaps it's wardrobe choices, maybe it's a larger-than-life personality. No matter what it is, find it and eradicate the character. Don't give your reader unnecessary distractions.
I hope this gives you all something to work with. I'll be back tomorrow with some prompts to help your brain along.
What story have you read lately where a walk-on was overdone or a minor character stole the spotlight?
Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!
Jo
There are three basic character types:
Major Characters are the ones your story is about. I'm sure, if you've been around the blog a while, you have a good idea of how to create awesome characters that your reader can connect with. So, I'm not going to spend any more of your time on those. If you haven't been around a while, you can catch up on all the posts on characterization HERE.
Moving on...
Minor Characters are the ones that support the major characters, but people your reader isn't supposed to care too much about. These folks may help move the plot along or be assistants to the big action, but they're always disposable. Now, I've had minor characters assert themselves and become major characters, but they didn't start out "life" that way. These entities show up, perform one or two things in the plot, then disappear. We don't expect them to come back later and take over the spotlight.
Just in case they do, you should have a character bio on them.
Now, these characters can jump out of the story and yell, "Ta-da!" to announce themselves; but they should do what they came to do and get out. Make them eccentric, bigger than life, or obsessive. Readers will notice the person, expect action, and be glad when they leave.
Walk-Ons and Placeholder Characters are exactly what their name implies: temporary. They're background noise that allow you to create a realistic world. If you want them to be forgotten, don't give them a name and don't make them anything other than a stereotype. These will be clerks in stores, delivery drivers, mailmen/women, doctors, nurses, etc... Every person you'd find in the real world, that lives in the background and goes unnoticed, are your walk-ons and placeholders. Don't give them traits that make them stand out.
If one of your placeholders starts to make themselves a nuisance, cut them from your text altogether or change what it is about them that's making them like glue. Perhaps it's wardrobe choices, maybe it's a larger-than-life personality. No matter what it is, find it and eradicate the character. Don't give your reader unnecessary distractions.
I hope this gives you all something to work with. I'll be back tomorrow with some prompts to help your brain along.
What story have you read lately where a walk-on was overdone or a minor character stole the spotlight?
Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!
Jo
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Checklists for Novels - Part 3 of 3 - Scenes, Dialogue, Complexity, and Character
Happy Wednesday, good people of the blogosphere! Halfway through the week, we are. Wow, the volume of that cheer blew my hair back. Guess you're all looking forward to the three day weekend, huh? Well, I hope you all have a novel you're editing right now and can print these little checklists and make good use of them with your *ahem* time off. Today, you get checklists for scenes, dialogue, complexity (in one), and character (there are three of these). At the end, you'll find a link to a PDF you can download, print, keep, and share! All I ask is that you don't alter it in any way. Thanks! Let's get going!
Scenes
Complexity
Dialogue
Characters (this is broken out in the checklists)
Here's the link to the full PDF that has tweaks and little boxes to put checks in: GIMMIE MY FREEBIE!
Enjoy and share!
Have these changed the way you look at your novels?
Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!
Jo
Scenes
- Do your scenes ebb and flow well?
- Are the four basic happenings taking place?
- Action - This is the objective of the scene.
- Reaction - What the emotional state of the protagonist is.
- More Action - What they do about it.
- Deepening - This happens only in the most dramatic scenes.
- Do you have a great hook, intensity, and a good setup for the next scene?
Complexity
- What value are you supplying to your reader (values can be life lessons or new opinions)?
- Is there a sub-plot that could be added that would give your protagonist (or antagonist) more depth?
- How will any sub-plots assist you in changing the values of your character?
Dialogue
- Have you used a lot of he said, she said?
- Can you turn any of the dialogue tags into action tags?
- Are you using the proper dialect?
- Contractions. Do you use them?
Characters (this is broken out in the checklists)
- Full Name - First, middle, and last along with any other names they've had along the way.
- Location - Where they live, where they were born, if different, why it changed.
- Age - Includes birthday, zodiac sign, and recent celebrations.
- Physical Description - Height, weight, hair color, eye color, shoe size, skin color, manicure?, pedicure?, hair length, eyebrows (V shaped, bushy, pencil thin, etc...), identifying marks, for women: bra size.
- Mental Description - Self centered, egotistical, timid, brash, vengeful, etc...
- Reasons for Mental Description - What happened in life to make them that way.
- Friends - Other characters. Are they major? Minor? Plot changing?
- Relationships - Spouse, kids, parents - with names and nature of relationship.
- Goals - What their ultimate life goal is.
- Career - What they do or want to do.
- Skills - Any skills they may have.
- Magical Powers - For fantasy or paranormal. Can they shoot fire from their asses? Lightning bolts from their eyes? Levitate? See through peoples' clothing?
- Sexual Orientation - Straight, gay, bisexual, etc...
- Fun - What they do to let their hair down.
Here's the link to the full PDF that has tweaks and little boxes to put checks in: GIMMIE MY FREEBIE!
Enjoy and share!
Have these changed the way you look at your novels?
Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!
Jo
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