My Inspirations

Nothing makes sense without the whole picture presented

24 notes

Darth Phasmatos: Depictions of physical beauty in people’s writings always piss me off....

il-tenore-regina:

Depictions of physical beauty in people’s writings always piss me off. I get this irrational annoyance that, if not tended to carefully, will burn into a huge plume of rage. Unless a protagonist is admiring someone’s appearance, I think you should let the readers decide if a character is beautiful or not. And no, having blonde hair and “eyes as blue as the sea” doesn’t mean they’d be automatically beautiful in my vision. Not even beautiful. Just something to look at. There’s more to a person than their hair or eye colour. 

Describe their chin. Is it long or cleft? Do they have a strong jaw? 

Broad eyebrows? Prominent nostrils? Is the colour of their bottom lip different from their upper lip? Any freckles or an interesting birthmark on their face? Don’t tell me about the colour of their eyes at first. Describe the shape. Are they round as melons or almond-shaped? Deep-set? Are they close together or further apart? 

What does their neck look like? Can you see their clavicles? If it’s a man, is his Adam’s Apple at all noticeable? Does their head sit comfortably on their shoulders or does it look like its about to fall off? (one of my characters has a head that looks like that lol). 

Really tell me about them, you know? 

(via eshusplayground)

Filed under writing advice

103,069 notes

Ultimate Writing Resource List

disabilityinthemedia:

the-fandoms-are-cool:

a massively extended version of ruthlesscalculus’ post

General Tips

Character Development

Female Characters

Male Characters

Tips for Specific Characters

Dialogue

Point of View

Plot, Conflict, Structure and Outline

Setting & Worldbuilding

Creativity Boosters* denotes prompts

Revision & Grammar

Tools & Software

Specific Help

Whelp, time to be a famous writer.

(via droo216)

Filed under writing advice

332 notes

A real writer shouldn’t need a cup of tea at his side or a cabin with a view of the ocean or things just so in his own mind in order to get his work done.

In this beautiful essay for The Millions, Kevin Hartnett echoes Tchaikovsky, Jack WhiteChuck Close, and David Carr.

E. B. White put it even better: “A writer who waits for ideal conditions under which to work will die without putting a word on paper.”

(via explore-blog)

(Source: , via kaskuin)

Filed under quote writing