Writing Excuses

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 324:29:26
  • Mais informações

Informações:

Sinopse

Fifteen minutes long, because you're in a hurry, and we're not that smart.

Episódios

  • Writing Excuses 10.9: Where is My Story Coming From?

    02/03/2015 Duração: 20min

    This month's syllabus topic is story structure, and we'll be starting with the part we start with. And that part usually isn't the beginning -- that's where the story starts for the reader. We're going to talk about where the story starts for you. It's the answer to questions like "where is my story coming from?", "What kind of a story is this?", or  "What questions does it seek to raise, and subsequently answer for the readers?" Structurally, it may help to revisit our discussion of the M.I.C.E. quotient. Knowing that your story is primarily a milieu story, as opposed to a character story, is a pretty big thing to know before you start writing. Of course, if you're not outlining, this whole discussion may seem irrelevant to you, but ultimately if you discovery-write your way into a good story, you'll have answered these questions during that process. Knowing that this is a thing you do will likely help you do it better. The Sherlock Episode Howard re

  • Writing Excuses 10.8: Q&A on Character

    22/02/2015 Duração: 23min

    It's time for a Q&A on characters! The questions for this episode were provided by the attendees at the 2014 Out of Excuses Workshop and Retreat: How do you have a character grow in power and/or expertise without needing to ridiculously overpower the villains? How do you give a flawed character a growth arc without changing what originally made that character likable? When you have a 1st person POV, how do you convey the emotional complexity of the non-POV characters? How do you create an interesting an engaging story with a main character who is not the protagonist or hero of the story? Is there an easy way to tell when the plot is driving the character instead of the other way around? How do you write a character with egregiously offensive views without you, as the author, appearing to espouse or condone those views? How do you write a character who has a belief that is different from your own? What are some tips for writing a sympathetic antagonist?   Liner Note: The Tumbler to which Mar

  • Writing Excuses 10.7: Who Are All These People?

    16/02/2015 Duração: 17min

    Our character-focused month continues with an exploration of the challenges involved in building a cast for your story. Whether you're building a large or small cast, you need to know why you're putting these people in the book, whether they're main characters, secondary characters, or spear-carriers, and what purpose each of them actually serves in your story.

  • Writing Excuses 10.6: The Worldbuilding Revolves Around Me (“The Magical 1%”)

    09/02/2015 Duração: 17min

    In which Max Gladstone introduces us to the concept of the Magical 1%

  • Writing Excuses 10.5: What Do You Mean My Main Character is Boring?

    02/02/2015 Duração: 19min

    Does your draft have a boring main character? You're not alone! Also, the problem can be solved.

  • Writing Excuses 10.4: Q&A on Ideas

    25/01/2015 Duração: 16min

    At the Out of Excuses Workshop and Retreat we premiered the Season 10 concept, and we invited our attendees to give us the questions we need this month. (They'll also be the ones providing our questions for February, but we'll cast our net wide for questions in March.) Ideas are hard! Is it ever acceptable for inexperienced writers to write derivative works? How do you keep from being discouraged when something similar to your idea comes out? How do you know when your idea is a novel, vs. when it's a short story? Should you only write for themed anthologies if you already have an idea ready in that theme? How can you practice description when your idea is set someplace completely unfamiliar to you? When should you abandon an idea you love? Liner Notes: We talked about novel-length vs short-story-length ideas in Season 6, Episode 10 when we covered the M.I.C.E. quotient, and again in Season 8, Episode 20, when Mary talked about short story structure. Also, the anthology into which Howard wa

  • 2015 Hugo Award Eligibility – SHADOWS BENEATH

    21/01/2015 Duração: 01min

    Don't forget to nominate for the 2015 Hugo Ballot, and if you like Writing Excuses, please consider nominating Shadows Beneath for Best Related Work.

  • Writing Excuses 10.3: Lovecraftian Horror

    20/01/2015 Duração: 19min

    Cherie Priest joins us for a discussion of Lovecraftian horror.

  • Writing Excuses 10.2: I Have an Idea; What Do I Do Now?

    12/01/2015 Duração: 18min

    Writing Excuses Season 10, the podcasted master-class, continues with this exploration of that critical second step: what do do once you've got an idea that has story-legs. (Note: When we say "two weeks ago" over and over, that's just bad math. You haven't missed an episode.) We talk about our various approaches to this, many of which center around finding the person or people who are most affected by the thing our idea conjures into their world, but that's really only the very beginning of it.

  • Writing Excuses 10.1: Seriously, Where Do You Get Your Ideas?

    05/01/2015 Duração: 19min

    Brandon, Howard, Mary, and Dan offer useful answers to that age-old question: "Where do you get your ideas?"

  • Writing Excuses 9.54: Capstone to Season 9

    29/12/2014 Duração: 29min

    As 2014 draws to a close we say goodbye to Season 9, and talk a bit about what we've each learned this year. Howard explained the surprising changes that came with a change in his work space Mary told us how she reached a new understanding of pacing Brandon talked about how recent time pressures have informed his writing process Dan learned why he is writing Hopefully our discussions of how we've changed as writers this year will offer you some insight into how your own writing has developed, and how you might take steps to develop it in the future. We also talk about how Season 10 is coming, and is going to be a bit different than seasons past. Thing We Failed To Do: get a picture of the possum. It turns out that those things are sneaky, and none of us a very good photographers. Can of Already Open Worms: Writing for fun. "Didn't you guys just talk about that?" Yes, we did, in an episode that was recorded 3 months later, but which aired just last week.  

  • Writing Excuses 9.53: Writing For Fun

    22/12/2014 Duração: 15min

    You know what's fun? WRITING! Writing is fun. And that, more than anything else, is why we do it. Or at least it's why we decided to do it. Making sure that it is still fun is kind of tricky. Also tricky? Writing for nothing more than the fun of it. And this episode is about that. Missing from this episode: Mary. For contractual reasons we found ourselves in need of 54 episodes during Season 9, and that meant an emergency recording session while Mary was on the road. It also meant you got 54 weekly episodes this year!

  • Writing Excuses Season 9.52: From the Page to the Stage

    15/12/2014 Duração: 20min

    Allison W. Hill and C. Austin Hill joined us at the Out of Excuses Retreat to talk about turning A Night of Blacker Darkness, by Dan Wells, into a stage play. "From the page to the stage" is a thing that theater people actually say to describe this, so the process is one that has a lot of precedent behind it. We talk about the guiding principles behind adaptation, and then dive into the challenges that our guests face with this particular project. (Note: We may be tweaking the audio on this episode in the future to remove the "Season 10" references right at the end. They're confusing, and you don't need that.)

  • Writing Excuses 9.51: Q&A At The Retreat

    08/12/2014 Duração: 19min

    If there's a crowd with good questions, it's the Out of Excuses Workshop and Retreat attendees. Given the trend toward moral ambiguity, is there still a place for an unquestionably evil character? Should you publish a first book that isn't in the style or genre that you're ultimately interested in? Is it possible to write epic fantasy with a single POV? Of all of the myriad talents of the literary agents you work with, what's the one that makes you stick with your agent? How do you maintain your writing chops when you're buried in the research phase of a project? What are some issues a short story writer should be aware of when tackling a novel? How do you go about discovery writing characters? When you build a story, does the foreshadowing go in during the first pass, or in later edits? Our sponsor, Audible, is giving away Legion: Skin Deep, by Brandon Sanderson between now and December 24th. Follow that link and get a free audio book!

  • Writing Excuses 9.50: Writing for the Enfranchised Reader

    04/12/2014 Duração: 18min

    Recorded live in front of the Out of Excuses students, a crowd of savvy readers if ever there was one, we talk about how to effectively write for readers who are familiar with the genre or story structure in which we're writing. It's a tricky problem, since genre fiction is supported in large part by the very tropes that prove problematic. Sometimes the solution is trope subversion, but that brings its own problems. Dave Farland’s Writing Workshops sponsored us for this episode! Both Brandon and Dan have studied under Dave, and we’re all happy to wholeheartedly recommend his workshops to you. If you can’t fly to his place, well, visit MyStoryDoctor.com and take the online course. The coupon code for your Writing Excuses discount is EXCUSES, but don't think that means you actually HAVE any of those...

  • Writing Excuses 9.48: Neurobolics of Characters

    01/12/2014 Duração: 19min

    As authors we spend a lot of time trying to make our readers care about the characters we create. We have a wide variety of techniques at our disposal to accomplish this. But do we ever ask ourselves why any of this is possible in the first place? What is it about our brains that makes us care about fictional characters? Enter Cory Doctorow, who posed this question to us at Westercon 67. If you like the episodes where a guest comes in and blows our minds (and they're some of our favorites) you need to put this one on the list. Audiobook Pick of the Week: Homeland, by Cory Doctorow, narrated by Wil Wheaton, with Noah Swartz and Jacob Applebaum. (Note:  Cory Doctorow's titles aren't carried by Audible, but you can find all of them here and buy them DRM-free directly from Cory.)

  • Writing Excuses 9.49: Hiding the Open Grave

    24/11/2014 Duração: 18min

    So, you're planning to kill somebody, but you don't want anyone to see it coming. How do you make that happen? We begin by talking about the hints that writers inadvertently drop, and why they drop those hints. Then we look at how to write without sending those cues, and how to get away with that while still fulfilling promises made to the reader. Special Offer: Our sponsor, Audible, is giving away Legion: Skin Deep, by Brandon Sanderson between now and December 24th. Follow that link and get a free audio book!

  • Writing Excuses 9.47: Conversation With a Bookseller

    18/11/2014 Duração: 16min

    Sara Glassman joins us to talk about back cover copy, covers, query letters, signings, and what booksellers look for on page one.

  • Writing Excuses 9.46: Disability in Narrative

    09/11/2014 Duração: 14min

    Charlie Harmon, one of the luminaries of Utah area fandom, joined us to talk about disability in narrative. She's been going blind gradually since she was a child, and these days while she can see some colored blurs, she cannot read, or recognize faces. We talk about some of the nuances of disability that many writers fail to capture, and how we can learn to write those things more convincingly.

  • Writing Excuses 9.45: Tools for Writing from Oral Storytelling

    03/11/2014 Duração: 17min

    M. Todd Gallowglas is a writer and a storyteller who has spent years doing traditional oral storytelling at renaissance fairs. He joined us at FantasyCon/Westercon 67 before a live audience and talked to us about how this tradition has informed his writing, and how these principles can inform our writing as well. He also schools us (okay, mostly Howard) about how these principles should be informing parts of our podcast.

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