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Your character is in a lot of debt and has to pay up quick! How do they go about repaying the money? How does this effect their relationships with other characters?
Your character is in a lot of debt and has to pay up quick! How do they go about repaying the money? How does this effect their relationships with other characters?
I get why a lot of people hate the whole princess culture aimed at little girls. There’s a hell of a lot of toxic bullshit in there.
But when I was a tiny princess, my dad used to be my royal advisor. He would come to me, and over tea we would discuss the problems of the kingdom. He would tell me that new people wanted to move to the kingdom, and ask me what we should do. Or he would tell me that the teddybears and the dolls were fighting over the enchanted forest, and ask me what to do. Basically, he took the trappings of the princess culture, and used it as a tool to teach me about leadership, civic responsibility, and compassion.
So if you have a little princess around, consider helping her figure out how to run her kingdom. There’s no sense in telling a kid they can’t be a leader, or that they can’t wear sparkles while they do it.
Parenting: You’re doing it right.
Character charts are a way to get to know your own characters. You can keep track of basic information, physical, psychological and social traits, and important events and situations.
While there are character charts where you only write basic information such as names, siblings, age, among others, there are character charts where you can answer questions related to situations and how your character would respond to them. In other words, there are characters charts for everyone. And you can even make your own chart or add questions.
There are two ends to a character chart. The first one is to use all the information on your story and the second one is to use the information as a reference without adding it in your story. If you use all the information in your story you have to be careful and remember it. If you described your character as introverted in both, the CC and the story, you have to develop your character as an introverted person, in other words, they don’t have to act out of character. Using the same example with the difference that here you wrote on your CC that your character is introverted but didn’t write it in the story, there has to be a consistency in your character development. This applies mostly to psychological, social and emotional traits.
If you’re starting your novel, planning it, already on it, stuck on it, here’s a little exercise to check if character charts with psychological traits can help you or not.
Write a story, one or two pages long, about a person who has to go back to the doctor’s office because they forgot their glasses there. On their way back, make your character interact with a security guard who doesn’t want to let your character get in the building but finally does, with someone on the elevator who hates elevators but has to use them anyway, and with the doctor who doesn’t remember seeing your MC with their glasses on. Use a character chart to describe everyone’s personality and write the story according to the psychological, social and emotional traits you gave them.
If you had a problem or got stuck in the middle of the story because of the traits you gave your characters before the story began, it’s alright, defining your characters before the plot begins is a way to limit them. On the other hand, if you had no problem with keeping your characters inside the traits you gave them and still worked on character development, congratulations!
The plot moves your characters and your characters move the plot. Both elements are necessary when it comes to advance the story.
L.-
These are what I would consider to be the most basic, bare-bones questions of character creation.
why the tyrannosaurus rex from jurassic movies is important for feminism
legit-writing-tips
World Building Worksheet (Great for Fantasy/Science Fiction)
Types of Art - Perhaps the culture you’ve built doesn’t emphasize painting and drawing, but glasswork or sand art as an art form. Be creative.
7 Deadly Sins of Worldbuilding - What NOT to Do
Cyberpunk Derivatives (Steampunk, Clockpunk, etc.)
Rules of Building Believable Mythology
Fantasy Resources
Medieval Demographics Calculator
Fantasy Calendar Generator - (Can also be used for Sci-Fi)
Social Organization - List of Worldbuilding Questions
Magic in Fiction - Wikipedia, discusses ways characters can use magic.
Science Fiction Resources
Designing a Hypothetical Alien World
List of Emerging Technologies - Wikipedia
Applications for Artificial Intelligence
Misc.
Things to Remember When Writing Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
10 Universal Myths of the Ancient World
Future Timeline - Predictions technology, natural disasters, etc., for future; organized by year. An easy to use resource.
Who knew?
To save a life and a child from an ass whipping
BOOOOOOSST!!!!!!!!!!
10 Questions to Ask When You Create a Fictional Culture
The way I build worlds is by collecting cool stuff from the history, myth and people around me. I blend these details with my own imagination, and create my own cultures.
Normally there are a few particular cultures that interest me at a given time. I read whatever I can find about them, their environment, their traditions and their myths. The interesting details filter into the new world I’m creating (example: at one time, Venetian widows could only remarry on the stroke of midnight).
In the long term, there is nothing more inspiring and challenging than visiting foreign cultures yourself (especially if you can get far beyond your comfort zone to do it). This is the truest way to experience culture, and I really believe it shows in your writing.
But reading (non-fiction, myth/legend/fairytales, as well as the classics like Dune and Lord of the Rings) and watching documentaries/films can get you a long way toward filling up on your inspiration tank.
It’s important to remember: Culture in fiction isn’t a rod to get a point across. At its best, it is something beautiful, otherworldly, amusing, and sobering. The more layers and contradictions your culture has, the more real it will be.
Some questions you might ask yourself are:
This seems to be a recurring question - both one of general curiosity and, specifically, one that has been asked about the Numair books.
First, please remember that while machines are involved in publishing, those involved in publishing are not machines. Every single person involved in the process has a life with complications, setbacks, personal concerns–not to mention other books they’re working on–and every one of those things can drag out or disrupt the process. Because it is a process. Even at the best of times, a book typically takes a year to go from finished draft to bookstore shelf - finished final draft.
We’re talking about the post-author-sale process, here - you have an agent, you have an editor. You’ve given the editor the manuscript you’ve labored over to get to this point. And now the first round of waiting. Once your editor is finished reading and making notations on your manuscript, they’ll send you an editorial letter that sums up the “big picture” changes suggested, as well as any major plot holes or character inconsistencies. They’ll also mark up the manuscript pages with more minor questions and corrections, requests for clarity, or recommendations of areas to cut or tighten up.
Initial rewrites can be more or less severe. Sometimes there are plot holes that require a huge amount of correction, sometimes things are pretty decent and only need a round or two of polishing. Sometimes the editor will suggest changes to make the story stronger, to bring out what seems to be your central theme, or to make your characters and setting shine.
The editor is not your enemy. You don’t have to take every suggestion that they make, of course, but they aren’t trying to undermine the integrity of your work, claim it for their own, or force you to rewrite until your story is unrecognizable. If they paid you for your manuscript, it’s because they saw a good story and they want to help you make it better.
Once you’ve worked through that first round of feedback and made the suggested changes (or discussed with your editor why you don’t want to make them), congratulations! You have your first draft.
Yes, your first draft.
Doesn’t matter how many versions of the story you’ve written before this point. As far as the publishing process is concerned, that there is your first.
Then comes another round of editorial commentary, more discussion, more ideas, blood, sweat, tears, rewrites. And at the end of all of that, you have draft number two.
Lather, rinse, possibly repeat. Tammy usually goes through 2-3 drafts before the editor sends their final round of commentary. Along with the editor’s final commentary comes the copyeditor’s notes. They’ll check for spelling, grammar, and inconsistencies (Like Pounce sitting on the window sill at the beginning of a scene and reclining on the desk at the end of it). You can accept the changes, tweak things yourself, or deny the changes. Tammy frequently rejects spelling and grammatical changes to her dialogue. If someone uses slang, local colloqualisms, and bad grammar while they talk, she intends it!
While the editing, editing, editing goes on, the marketing and sales people are working on jacket flap copy, an author bio for the back of the book (often they ask for these), and cover/promotional art. Unless you’re a Big Deal author, you probably won’t see the cover until it’s been finalized. Unless you’re a Huge Deal author, you’ll get little to no input on what the cover looks like. Sorry!
Right around when they’re finishing the cover designs, you’ll receive a typeset manuscript. This typically has two pages to a sheet, and looks as it will on the bound pages of your future book. This is your last chance to go over it for typos and minor mistakes and to make small changes. The editor and copyeditor will also go over this to check for the same things. The more eyes, the fewer typos get through. And some will still get through.
Then comes the sales meetings. You get to go in to a team of people who want to sell your book and talk about all the reasons you loved it when you started writing it! Try to remember what they were. They’ll be there, somewhere, buried in the deep recesses of your mind, beyond the desire to throw the entire manuscript into the air and take a flamethrower to it.
Engage the sales people! They’re nice, enthusiastic, and they want your work to succeed. The better they get to know you, and the more they like you, the harder they’ll push to get your work on the shelves. That’s the next phase: the publicity circuit, book fairs, catalogues sent to stores and libraries.
Then, at some point, you will get a box. Inside that box will be shiny new author copies of your work. It will be surreal. Bask in it.
About a month later, your books will hit the shelves.
To recap: it’s about a year from final draft to bookstore shelves. Tammy has at this point written three entirely new first drafts of the Numair books, backing up and adding material as it expanded from one volume into a three-book series. This is when she’s not doing author visits, down with a cold or a migraine, dealing with unexpected life events…. You get the picture. So hopefully that answers the question of why there has been such a stretch of time between when she started work and when the books will hit shelves! She really appreciates the excitement and the patience you’ve had, and is doing her best to get things done as quickly and as well as possible.