Daniel Hope's Blog

February 4, 2014

Appearance on HuffPost Live, or, You Got Some Shia in My Interview

I had a wonderful opportunity today to appear on HuffPost Live and discuss a topics that I find fascinating: What is creativity, where does it come from, and what happens if someone has the same idea? While it was immensely fun to both contribute and listen to the other guests, it did cause me to break my personal rule against talking about Shia LaBeouf.


Oh well, we all make sacrifices, I guess.


You may have heard me cover some of these ideas in previous articles I have written, both about comb...

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Published on February 04, 2014 20:41

January 20, 2014

More Reviews of The Inevitable

The reviews of my novel, The Inevitable, are still rolling in. If you still doubt the lovability of my book, then you are clearly a jaded and hard-hearted person. Perhaps some more positive reviews will help change your mind.


The thing that I love the most is that nearly every reviewer has pointed out the characterization is their favorite part. This means so much to me as an author because I believe that good characters make great stories.


Michael Brookes called it a fantastic read (5 out of 5...

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Published on January 20, 2014 13:59

November 14, 2013

Creativity Isn’t about Ideas; It’s about Execution

Where does your creativity come from? Do you believe in a muse who touches your mind? It’s pretty easy to think that our best ideas come straight out of the aether, especially the ones that seem to jump into our mind fully formed. The most creative people seem to have original ideas pop into their brains on a regular basis.


But that’s wrong.


I’ll make two very inflammatory remarks, and we’ll see if you stick around to hear the explanation.


#1 – There are no original ideas.


#2 – Every creator has...

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Published on November 14, 2013 17:25

November 4, 2013

Guest Post Roundup: Submission Tips and the Power of Sci-Fi

In a fit of literary infidelity, I’ve written a few guest posts for other sites recently. Don’t think that means I’ve left you hanging, dear reader of Speculative Intent. I’ve got links to two of the most useful ones below. If you were looking for some other kind of link, I suggest you try Scroll Down to Riker. It changed my life in a way that only Jonathan Frakes can.


Now, back to the writing-related stuff.


Over at Dropped Pebbles, I laid down a few ground rules for submitting stories to edito...

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Published on November 04, 2013 13:56

October 14, 2013

On Getting Things Done

A few days ago, renowned fantasy author Brandon Sanderson passed through town on a book tour, and I stopped in to hear him do a reading and get a fresh copy of Steelheart signed. He spoke of many things both interesting and mundane, but one thing in particular has been echoing through my head ever since.


Brandon was talking about how frequently people are amazed at his output (I am one of those people, by the way). He’s ridiculously prolific, especially when you understand how much planning go...

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Published on October 14, 2013 14:46

September 30, 2013

Stick the Landing: Writing Tips for Better Story Endings

One of the interesting things about reading through the slush pile at Fiction Vortex is that I get to see every kind of story in relatively quick succession. After doing this long enough, I started to see a pattern: Writers have awesome stories, but they frequently have no idea how to end them. They spend thousands of words creating great characters and worlds, and then completely flub the ending. Since so few people actually get to see consistent examples of how important a good ending is, I...

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Published on September 30, 2013 15:18

September 24, 2013

Science Fiction Is a Powerful Tool for Reality

A recent interview in The Atlantic did a fantastic job of highlighting one of the reasons science fiction is so important: It allows us to throw away restrictions and fully explore the question “What if …?”


In the interview, MIT Media Lab researchers Dan Novy and Sophia Brueckner say their “Pulp to Prototype” course makes science fiction required reading. Why? Because it gets students to think about possibilities that would otherwise be classified as crazy, too far-fetched, or unimportant.


And...

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Published on September 24, 2013 14:43

September 23, 2013

Wild Speculation: Video Game Edition

I’ve enjoyed being a columnist over at LitReactor, but I felt like I wasn’t making enough inflammatory remarks to really earn the title. So what did I do? I widened my aim. Normally, I focus on topics about books and writing, no surprise, but this time I said things with the potential to offend writers and gamers.


The result is 5 Video Games that Would Have Made Better Novels. In other words, I chose games that were disappointing or underwhelming as games, but had narrative potential that coul...

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Published on September 23, 2013 20:59

September 14, 2013

For the Love of Crazy Covers

There’s nothing quite as hilarious as a weird book cover. To celebrate this, I helped resurrect the Guess the Plot feature series over at LitReactor. It’s an unabashed love story to the most atrocious and misleading book covers, and it’s wonderful.


For the grand return of Guess the Plot, we revamped the rules just a little to make it easier to enjoy. Here’s how it works:



Take a strange old sci-fi book cover
Guess the plot of the book based solely on the cover
Compare the guess against a real plot...
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Published on September 14, 2013 15:03

September 5, 2013

Your Character’s Eye Color Doesn’t Matter

It’s time to air a small grievance I have with writers. Or rather, point out a crutch that seems far too common in fiction: using eye color as shorthand for personality.


It makes sense that this sort of thing pops up because eyes are the most important part of the face. It’s where we look to learn what someone is thinking and feeling. It was the first thing we thought about in English class when we were doing writing exercises about vivid descriptions. But too often writers are using eye color...

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Published on September 05, 2013 16:30