Chapter 7, Part 1: Writing Setting

In today’s Journal * Quote of the Day * Chapter 7, Part 1: Writing Setting * Of Interest * The Numbers Quote of the Day “Creative writing is about possibilities, not about restrictions and limitations.” Jane Friedman And then she immediately missed the point of her entire quote and talked about rewriting, etc. Chapter 7, Part 1: Writing Setting Note: If you’re confused because this isn’t Chapter 6, please read the Updates in yesterday’s post. So What Is the Setting? This will be a deep dive. And this entire chapter, like the entire book, applies to all genres across the … Read more

Chapter 5: Writing the Hook

In today’s Journal * Correction * Chapter 5: Writing the Hook * Of Interest * The Numbers Correction This is what I meant to write toward the end of yesterday’s post. “It’s completely up to you. The story you write can have authenticity that you can see, hear, smell, touch and taste, or you can write one more bland, made-up, cookie-cutter story from your conscious, critical mind.” I sent a second, updated post, so if you got two, keep the second one. Update 1. First, the book you have been reading excerpts from in this series of posts is tentatively … Read more

Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 4, Part 2

In today’s Journal * Quote of the Day * The Bradbury Challenge Writers Reporting * Writing the Opening: Another Case in Point * Of Interest * The Numbers Quote of the Day “When tackling the art of fiction writing, it’s common to immerse yourself in the fundamentals: plot, structure, characters—the building blocks that demand time and mastery.” CS Lakin Thing is, you’ve been “immersed” in those fundamentals all your life with your reading, sitcoms and dramas and movies on TV. All you have to do to “master” them is practice. And that means trusting that the knowledge is there and … Read more

Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 4, Part 1

In today’s Journal * Short Video * Writing the Opening * Of Interest * The Numbers Short Video on my YouTube channel: Yes, this is southeast Arizona! Still thinking about reviving the channel to talk about writing. But I already do that in the Journal, so…. Thoughts? Leave a comment. Writing the Opening As I mentioned in the Definitions section of the Introduction, the opening is the introductory scene of whatever you’re writing. The sole purpose of the opening is to introduce the reader to a character with a problem in a particular setting. That’s it. Well, and to pull … Read more

An Important Breather

In today’s Journal * Bradbury Challenge Reminder * A New Story * An Important Breather * A Revelation * Notes: You Want to Read This * Of Interest * The Numbers Bradbury Challenge Reminder Anyone can jump in at any time. You aren’t competing with anyone but yourself. Just sayin’. Please be sure to get your story info into my before the Journal goes live on Monday morning. A New Story “The Dawn of Rigoberto,” the sixth story in an interconnected series of ten magic realism stories, went live yesterday on my Stanbrough Writes Substack. If you enjoy magic realism, … Read more

Story Ideas and Where to Get Them

In today’s Journal * Quote of the Day * The Writing * Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 3, Part 2 * Of Interest * The Numbers Quote of the Day “What I turn away for one of the 20 or so reasons I have written about in this series, [another] editor might snap up. Does not mean they are less an editor or have lower standards, it simply means they are looking for something different than I am. Nothing less and nothing more. That’s why you send stories to lots of markets, one right after another.” Dean Wesley Smith Ah. … Read more

Story Starters and Where to Get Them

In today’s Journal * Quotes of the Day * Note * Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 3, Part 1 * Of Interest * The Numbers Quotes of the Day “Even when an outline was a homework assignment, I’d write the story, then do the outline to turn in.” KC Riggs “If you ground the reader as you run through the story with the characters, write the truth of what happens and write the truth of how the characters react and what happens as a result of that reaction, you cannot write a bad story.” from Chapter 6 of the forthcoming … Read more

Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 2, Part 2

In today’s Journal * Quote of the Day * Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 2, Part 2 * Of Interest * The Numbers Quote of the Day “Be honest about the words and actions of your characters, and they will not lead your story astray.” Stephen King Chapter 2, Part 2: BEING the Almighty Writer on High First, if you do not outline and simply serve your characters as their Recorder or Stenographer or Friend with a Keyboard, you can skip this part of the chapter. There is no reason to subject yourself to the horrors that will follow. (grin) … Read more

Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 2, Part 1

In today’s Journal * Quote of the Day * Writing the Character-Driven Story: Chapter 2 * Of Interest * The Numbers Quote of the Day “Be honest about the words and actions of your characters, and they will not lead your story astray.” Stephen King Chapter 2, Part 1: Determining Your Role in the Story This is a difficult concept for many writers to grasp. Why? because of the myths of fiction writing that have been drummed into us during our entire life. The big myth here is that writing fiction is some sort of high calling. It isn’t. I’ll … Read more

A Great (and Helpful) Comment

In today’s Journal * Quotes of the Day * Clarification on the Blackwell Ops Sale * The Bradbury Challenge Writers Reporting * A Great (and Helpful) Comment * Of Interest * The Numbers Quotes of the Day “The soil of a man’s heart is stonier, Louis. A man grows what he can, and he tends it. ‘Cause what you buy, is what you own. And what you own… always comes home to you.” Gravedigger to Louis Creed in Stephen King’s Pet Sematary “There’s a trite old saying that people are meant to blossom where they’re planted. I’ve come to believe … Read more