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- 24. January 2012: Self-Publishing Picture Books?
- 6. January 2012: CICADA is publishing my short story!
- 10. December 2011: I’m Not Proud: All the Wrong Ways to Deal with an Agent
- 27. November 2011: Why I Struggle While Reading Self-Published Work
- 7. November 2011: Hiatus on my Education
- 26. October 2011: Should You Pay to Have Your Work Critiqued?
- 17. October 2011: The New Face of Publishing?
- 4. October 2011: Revision 411
- 9. September 2011: Sentimental Writing
- 1. September 2011: Getting my Masters Degree Part 1
Alert! Beginner!
As a creative writing instructor, I see the same mistakes made by beginning writers. First, let me say as an aside: this is a good thing! Excellent, even. Why? Because unless you make mistakes, you will not learn. It means you are discovering a path towards understanding how to give your creation legs so it can carry out your intention. My classes are strongest when people who have never written a word in their life attend. It brings about wonderful discussion and I tend to learn from the experience, as well.
That said, here I will list the top five mistakes beginning writers taking my classes make, and how to avoid them.
1) Describing far too much in the first several pages of the story.
What do I mean? Let’s break this down. Most writers want to explain what the characters look like, their main characters’ backgrounds, what the protagonist thinks about the other people in the story, what’s happened in the past to bring about the situation the characters are in, and several paragraphs of environmental description. All in the first three or four pages. Whew! That’s a lot to absorb, and we still haven’t gotten to the plot yet. A good rule of thumb is to write whatever you feel you need to in order to get the story straight in your head, then reread it to find where the main action begins. Edit the rest of the story out. You will probably find your entire first chapter will be gone. And that’s okay. Just hold onto the information in case it comes into play later in the book.
2) Using cliches and ‘ly’ adverbs instead of using creative word play.
My first drafts are full of cliches and ‘ly’ adverbs. Later, I seek these out and find a more imaginative way to reword portions of my story. Some ‘ly’ adverbs are essential for brevity, so I’m not insisting you take every single one out. But use them sparingly. Saying: “She walked happily down the sidewalk” sounds better as: “She skipped down the sidewalk.” Or be inventive: “She traipsed down the sidewalk, a crazy grin decorating her face.”Just keep in line with the tone of your story. One odd but clever sentence woven through paragraphs of less colorful language will sound awkward. As for cliches…unless a character speaks in cliches, leave them out. Overused phrases have lost their spark. (Yes, That was a cliche! Wanted to see if you were paying attention.) In other, and better, words: Overused phrases are like dull knives: they still do the job, but not as well as something shiny and sharp.
3) Not writing in the genre they enjoy reading.
This may seem out of place, when all my other advice sounds to technical, but it’s very important. For one thing, you won’t finish writing that novel or short story you aren’t passionate about. If you love vampire stories…I don’t care how saturated editors say the market is…write about vampires. If you love mysteries, learn how to write them and go for it! Trust me, you will be happier in the long run.
4) Not giving each character their own personality and voice.
I can not stress this enough. Many years ago, I had an agent critique my manuscript (Mark McVeigh, a wonderful person, I might add). He read the first ten pages of my middle grade manuscript and pointed out he couldn’t tell the difference between my two female protagonists. To him, they sounded one and the same. But they are very different! I wanted to point out. But I held my tongue because I couldn’t back up the claim. Weeks later, when my bruised ego was ready to pick up the manuscript again, I looked at it with new eyes and had to agree…there wasn’t much to differentiate them. So I got busy developing their personalities, and my novel is so much better for it (Thank you, Mr. McVeigh!).
The last and final problem that occurs with the beginning writers I meet is:
5) Too much telling!
You will see this over and over again in my posts. Why? Because it is the number one thing you can do to bore your reader. I once gave a workshop presentation teaching people how to engage the reader using the five senses: touch, taste, smell, hearing, seeing. With every paragraph you write, make sure there is something there that the reader can identify with. A reader’s eyes will quickly glaze over with the sentence: “He ate the fruit. It tasted delicious. He ate another.” (Yawn.) I’m bored typing it. But what about: “The first bite was an explosion of sweet and sour, the yin and yang of the fruit world. The juices dribbled down his chin, but he couldn’t stop eating. He grabbed the second fruit, its red flesh so sinful he almost felt guilty touching it.” What sentence tells us more about this character and what he’s doing? I used the senses of touch, taste, and added how he felt. Wham! Instant interest.
So there you have it, the most common mistakes I’ve seen teaching my writing classes. Hopefully you will apply my advice to your own writing, but if not, take a creative writing class. You, too, can be a teacher’s delight!
22. August 2010 at 20:55
In reference to #3, I think you need to make it clear that your statement is far more encompassing than it sounds. I reference you to a wonderful bog I read the other day. Look at Tuesday, April 20, 2010 on http://writingsbysay.blogspot.com/
I think you will find that people know more than they know they know — and need to be encouraged to look beyond the obvious.
(LOVE the blog. Thank you for writing it.)
23. August 2010 at 05:22
Hi Kim,
I’m not a beginning writer, but I have a hard time finding people who write (and read) at the same level as me. So do I have to lower my vocabulary, cut back on the ideas and references and put more emphasis on word count (i.e less quantity means more quality)? I’m not an advanced writer because I don’t have the experience of being acknowledged as an ‘accepted’ writer.
So, basically, am I in literary limbo? I can’t be in Hell, because the doorway over the entrance to Hell (In Dante’s Inferno) read “Abandon All Hope, All Ye Who Enter)and I still have hope that I can be a good writer. Sinvce I still have hope, do I just need to find new readers?
23. August 2010 at 19:47
Thanks for your response, Steve. (And yes, he is a friend of mine! I recommend his blog.)
Hi Dave (another friend of mine!). Never “write down” to your perceived audience. No matter how heightened and metaphoric your work, you will find an audience for it. I’m not quite sure what you mean by “accepted” writer. Certainly it has nothing to do with being an advanced writer. Unless, of course, you’re relating that with mass market publishing. And in that case, you’re equating being published with being a successful writer, which isn’t always the case. My best advice is to follow your gut. If you feel you’ve written to the best of your abilities and the problem now lies in the reader, and not in what you have written, it’s time to seek different counsel. Seek out authors who write in your scope. Find out who their editors and agents are. Submit your work to them. Some of them may attend writer’s conferences, and sometimes for a fee you can receive a ten-page critique from them. Search for these opportunities. Same goes for literary journal contests. Sometimes the participants receive critiques (again, for a nominal fee). But if you aren’t getting what you want from the people reading your work, it’s time to search for people who are more like-minded. Hope this helps!
31. August 2010 at 04:15
Hi Kim,
I was wondering, because you wanted us to ask some questions about the writing process, how does an author write under a pseudonym, or pen name? Does he or she submit under one name, but request it be published under another name? The only reason to worry about this I suppose, is if you want to get paid. Having a check in a name you could cash is helpful.
31. August 2010 at 22:18
Dave,
Every story I have submitted has dealt with the pen-name issue during the submission process and/or after the story has been accepted. Just follow the guidelines to the letter and you will be able to address the pseudonym issue at a later date.
(Kim, I’m sorry if I intruded on your territory.)
1. September 2010 at 02:24
No problem, Steve.
What I have learned as far as novels go is that on the cover sheet of your novel, if you are without agent representation, place your real name along with your contact information in the upper left hand corner (or wherever the submission guidelines asks you to place it). Then, below where you type your title (around the middle of the page), write “by (your pseudonym).”
If you have agent representation, simply use your pseudonym. You won’t need your contact information, because you will have your agent’s contact information on the cover sheet instead.
As far as magazines go, again, use your real name with the contact information at the upper left hand corner of the first page of your story (no cover sheets necessary for a magazine submission). Then, a third of the way down type your title and “by (your pseudonym).”