Jeff Bjune's Blog - Posts Tagged "reader"

Wasteland

Take out a piece of paper and write. Jot down anything that comes to mind. There are a ton of subjects that make interesting topics. Find a subject that you are familiar with and write about it. If you choose a subject that you aren't familiar with then research the topic.
Make sure the topic you choose has enough material to have an engaging piece of writing. You want tight writing that will keep the reader focused to the end. Value will hold the reader's attention. . The reader will be able to judge the strength of the writing in the first sentence. Don't let your writing become a wasteland of useless verbage.
Flip open to a clean notebook page and jot down ten subjects that immediately come to mind. Look at your list and number them in the order of most important to least important. Take the most important subject, and write down five important points. Guess what the five important points are? Who, what, when, where, and why? Those are the basic elements of writing.
I find this formula to be a writer's great asset. These five points are the standard behind great writing. Readers always follow this method. We are an extremely inquisitive group, and want to know as much as possible. Give the reader what they want.
Fill up that subject with as much detail as possible. Let the reader be informed without killing their interest. The information you provide will give credibility to the writing. They will be engaged and satisfied. Create worthy writing and not a blob of waste.
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Published on November 18, 2014 12:34 Tags: attetion, elements, engaging, list, material, notebook, page, points, reader, readers, sentence, subjects, topic

Chop

Chop up the character to get a better perspective on who he or she is. I’m not talking about finding some crazy person on the street and doing away with them. The character in your story needs to be pulled apart so you can understand what they are all about. If you don’t delve into the inner mindset of your character they won’t be believable. Get to know them.
Live their life as though they are your closest friend. Give them emotions, faults, accomplishments, and eccentricities. The reader has many of the same traits that maybe the character has. The reality of a character that copes with the same issues that the reader has brings the story more meaning. There is a sense of purpose for the reader to bond with the character.
The character has to struggle to create the path that brings about the resolution. When a character has a perfect life the reader will be disappointed. Real life is far from a Utopia. The reader wants to cheer on the character till the end. The thrill of the struggle will keep the reader poised on the edge of their seat.
The reader wants to be scared when the character gets scared. There has to be a sense of urgency for the reader to continue reading the story. They want to cry when the character breaks down. The character will tug at the heart of the reader creating all kinds of emotions. Readers enjoy a character whom has issues.
Don’t disappoint the reader with a perfect character. Give the reader an opportunity to savor the character’s routine. The reader will dislike a character with no issues. A character with no flaws has no place in fiction. I will never have a character who doesn’t struggle in any of my writing.
A character needs to be torn in to little pieces. The little pieces that create the character will build a strong protagonist. Cutting up the character is the foundation of finding out what makes them do what they do. Your reader wants to know what the character is about. The reader wants to hold hands with the character.
Let the reader be led by the character. The reader will get to know the character. Don’t let the fans be disappointed in a transparent character. Pull that character apart, get to know them, and cheer them on till the resolution.
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Published on December 03, 2014 11:10 Tags: build, character, fans, fiction, flaws, foundation, know, needs, pieces, pull, reader, writing