Saturday, 26 November 2016

When you retire and you have generous colleagues

... this happens:



I haven't finished teaching by any stretch of the imagination  and of course I'm sneaking back to the University of Salford for a few weeks January 2017. 

But yeah, afternoon tea is one of my pleasures.Cake and writers, don't you know? 

It was fab. Thank you all so much.

Tuesday, 15 November 2016

Fiction Workshop 1 Character Magic



Think of four main characters in your story:
The hero – the person whose story it is e.g. Harry Potter
The friend – totally on their side but just or almost as powerless e.g. Ron, Hermione, Hagrid
The mentor – someone who can help and who does teach them e.g. Dumbledore
The enemy – Voldemort

Sometimes the mentor and the enemy may not be human.

Anyway, take your hero and one of the other characters. Think about them for a while. Make notes if it helps. This is the sort of exercise you can do whilst waiting for a train or whilst sitting in a cafĂ© . Or even if you’re stuck in a traffic jam.
You must know:

  • What your character is like physically, emotionally, intellectually
  • What their personality is like
  • What they most desire in the world
  • What they are most afraid of
  • What is their motivation in this story ( if you don’t have a story yet, what is their motivation right now)

When you know your characters well, put them together in a short scene and see what happens. Spend no more than thirty minutes writing. You may even have enough within ten. Up to you.       

Now show your scene to a writing buddy. Ask them what they’ve understood. Are they getting the same picture in their head as you had when you started?

Then ask them some specific questions about the characters, INCLUDING MATERIAL YOU’VE NOT SHOWN IN THIE BRIEF EXTRACT. For instance, you might ask what colour hair they have, even if you haven’t mentioned it.

Now, here is the spooky bit. If you’ve spent enough time on your character your writing buddy will get at least 70% of the answers right. I’ve used this exercise for ten years and only had one fail. Most people get more that 70% right. That extract carries all the DNA of your character.

Please share your experiences of doing this exercise in the comments box.    

If you would like me to give feedback on this story send £5 via the pay pal button below, email me on gill dot james at btinternet dot com, quoting your paypal receipt number.
      

Wednesday, 2 November 2016

A slight change: free creative writing ideas to follow soon



I’m not actually teaching at the moment – expert in the sense that I’m writing a lot of posts about writing and in a way that is teaching.
 I return to the University of Salford in January 2017 and no doubt then I shall have some more to say then. 
I do want to keep this blog live, so from now on, every time I post here I shall be offering a writing tip or idea. Do feel free to use them.   
Once I have posted a substantial number, I’ll gather them all up into a book.
So watch this space – the first one goes up in a about a week’s time. In the meantime, happy writing.