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Showing posts with label write. Show all posts
Showing posts with label write. Show all posts

Friday, June 24, 2011

29 days of giving challenge - celebrating someone else's muse ... day 8

Nothing makes a writer happier than knowing that his/her work has brought something to the reader.  [Ok, so I was going to say joy but if the writer did something angsty, that's just not right.]

I have several friends who write, most do it for pleasure.

Sometimes I'm lucky and I get to pre-read a sample of something and offer input.  Other times, I an lucky and I get to read the finished product.

Today I had the gift from two such friends.  The pieces were great, made me think, and offered details and perspectives I wouldn't have come up with.

My gift to them?  Easy.  I told them what I thought.  It isn't much, I mean, that and $10 will buy you a fancy coffee drink (or maybe two). But, and there is a but, isn't there always, sharing my ideas and reflections on their wok feeds their muses and mine.

Besides, who doesn't like a pat on the back once in a while?

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Who do we remember in the stories we read?


I've been pondering my lack of character development (in my written characters - I already know I'm woefully behind in my own development).

The real question is: Who do we remember most from a story and why?

I remember Cruella D'Ville from 101 Dalmations and have no idea who the human couple were.

The witch who gave Snow White the apple stands out far more than does Prince Charming at the end, right?

Rumpelstiltskin or the princess?

The bad guys with the warts are the ones we want to see either 1) get it in the end 2) become reformed before the story is over

What about 'regular' fiction and not just the fairy tales? I love books that are in a series because it gives me the reader a chance to see where the author's imagination will take a character. Is he/she exactly the same in book one as in book seven?

If the book is a single title, will the character change much over the course of the book or will I get to see more than just the surface?

I recently read a James Patterson book, Sam's Letters to Jennifer. It is a quiet book that made a lot of points about love, life, change, and the ability to be who you are and not who the rest of the world wants you to be.

I will always love a happily ever after ending. I was raised on Walt Disney's version of fairy tales and the impression stuck.

Change is good, right?