Showing posts with label laie young writers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laie young writers. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

AUTHOR SKYPE WITH THE AMAZING CHRISTINE HAYES!!!!(the takeaway!!! DUN! DUN! DUN!)

Todayness we were able to skype with the awesome face of Christine Hayes, author of Mothman's Curse, which, if you haven't, please read it.
Image result for jedi mind trick hand gesture
YOU WILL READ THIS AWESOME BOOK!!!!
Any of the ways (Ways of the any?) here is the awesome (very summarized) answers that she gave to our questions! 
  • On Writers Block: Take a walk, do writing prompts, or just sit down and force yourself to write. 
  • On Fan Fiction: Fan Fiction is good practise.
  • On Writing a Story Idea, Writing the Beginning, Getting Stuck in the Middle, then Getting Another Shiny Story Thing But Actually Finishing the First One: If you love it enough you will go back to it until it is done. Also, set goals, like, "I'll do two pages of this story today". 
We humbly thank with humbleness with all humbility in the most humbleded way possible Christine Hayes for taking the time to talk to our small group of crazy writing people! 

Many stuff,
Chrys!!! 

Friday, August 29, 2014

Irony

What's irony all about? Most simply put, irony happens when there's a gap between what's stated on the surface and what's meant deep down at the heart of things. It's a powerful force in storytelling, so know it and use it well.

In our lesson we talked about four major kinds of irony, with examples. There are other types of irony, but these are the ones we see most often:

  • Verbal Irony - this is where you say the opposite of what you mean. Suppose your friend drops a hammer on your foot and through your tears and clenched teeth you say, "Oh, no, that didn't hurt at all." That's verbal irony.
  • Dramatic Irony - this kind of irony happens when there's an audience who knows more than the characters do. For instance, if a character is making what he thinks is a good decision, but the audience can see it's a really stupid move, that's dramatic irony.
  • Situational Irony - in this kind of irony, someone does something in order to get a certain result, but it turns out to be totally counter-productive. Sort of like pumping up a slightly under-inflated car tire, only to make the stem valve blow out, and thus the tire becomes completely flat. Yeah, it's happened to me.
  • Cosmic Irony - in this kind of irony, the universe itself seems to be out to thwart your intentions. For example, we could try to save the world by putting a stop to global warming, only to unwittingly plunge the planet into an ice age.
Next week's lesson: Betrayal