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Blog postWhen talking about story depth, predominantly, you’re talking about how the author has handled themes in a work. I’ve had a number of writing students who embrace the ideas of planning out character and plot, but totally shy away from discussing theme. The story events are what they are – entertaining, exciting, fun. So why drag things down with something that seems more important to critics than average readers? The simple reason: without depth, stories feel frivolous1 week ago Read more
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Blog postI decided to do a writing challenge on Instagram, where you were supposed to explore different aspects of your writing practice/writing life. I though the results were interesting, especially the way the prompts built on each other. I know not everyone is on Instagram, so I compiled the Insta segments into one long diary-style post. Today was the last day, so imagine this going back over the past two weeks.
Here we go!!!!!
Here’s my day one for @bookishl3 weeks ago Read more -
Blog postIt can take courage to be yourself on the page. If you are writing “primly” or “correctly,” that can feel safe. Who can find fault with a voice that sounds carefully generic? But the story written generically isn’t going to come out very exciting, is it? More likely, your entire book will sound stilted or overwritten.
When I was a new writer, that was me, trying to make sure my books – even my dialogue – sounded grammatically correct. We all know that nob1 month ago Read more -
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Blog postHere it is, the night before my first cozy mystery comes out. This was a fun one to write, and it got me thinking about how story is story, no matter what the genre. Because story always comes down to people, and human nature is the same, whether writing someone who comes from the area where I grew up, or the other side of the world, or the other side of the galaxy. I learned a lot about psychology and writing consistent characters from doing the Chocoverse Trilogy. After all, you have to mak2 months ago Read more
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Blog postI have known Diane Kelly for years. She volunteers to help with literacy and for getting young writers off to a good start. And in addition to being an animal lover, she’s also a prolific mystery writer. Be sure to check out her award-winning Death & Taxes, Paw Enforcement, House Flipper, and Busted mystery series. Since you guys know, I’m all about cooking and I love new recipes, I asked Diane to send one along. She chose to share Lilian Walsh’s Peach3 months ago Read more
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Blog postI’ve designed parts of multiple alien languages for my Chocoverse books. It’s one of the most fun parts of worldbuilding. I love building lexicons and language rules, and thinking about how prefixes and suffixes can affect a basic word’s meaning.
Depending on how much of the language will actually be used in a book or story, I may not work up an entire linguistic pattern. I just need to make sure it is going to sound logical if I use the same language again in a diff3 months ago Read more -
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Blog postHere’s where to find me doing the virtual book tour thing. I will be adding to this post over the next few months, as I am doing a TON of guest posts and interviews relating to the Bean to Bar Mysteries. But I wanted to get everything in one spot, as the links go live. — 12/15/2020: Mystery Fanfare: Chocolate Maker vs. Chocolatier: How Choosing a Protagonist’s Focus Changes the Parameters of Cozy. https://mysteryreadersinc.blogspot.com/2020/12/chocolate-maker-vs-chocolatier-how.3 months ago Read more
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Blog postI’m excited to show you all the book trailer for Grand Openings Can Be Murder. It is the first book in my cozy mystery series starring Felicity Koerber, a Bean to Bar Chocolate maker who becomes an amateur sleuth when one of her employees is murdered. This book will be released February 2.
4 months ago Read more -
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Blog postBear with me. I know most of you are writing for adults, but I want to talk in term of kid’s cartoons for a minute. When it comes to aesthetics, there’s nothing that makes the concept easier to understand than animation meant for developing minds.
The 2019 Dora the Explorer movie played hard into the nods and winks to the aesthetic of the cartoon. It is obviously intended for teens and adults who grew up on the cartoon as much as it is for kids. But at the same4 months ago Read more -
Blog postEarlier this year, Glenn from Chocotastery interviewed me for the Stay Home With Chocolate Festival, and we discussed how chocolate from different craft makers had influenced the creation of the Chocoverse books. I appreciated how knowledgeable Glenn is about flavor – and I got to hear about his inventory of all the different chocolate bars he had on hand for tasting. (Check out these photos of his TWO wine fridges currently full of chocolate.) He certainly isn’t letting COI4 months ago Read more
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An Idyllic Chocolate Shop. An island with dramatic weather. And a murder.
Welcome to Greetings and Felicitations! It is Felicity Koerber’s bean to bar chocolate factory/shop – and her refuge from the pain in her past. When she returned home to open it, she never imagined she’d be solving a murder – but now she will have to, to save her business’s reputation and avoid being framed as a killer.
Felicity Koerber has had a rough year. She's moving back to Galveston Island and opening a bean to bar chocolate factory, fulfilling a dream she and her late husband, Kevin, had shared. Craft chocolate means a chance to travel the world, meeting with farmers and bringing back beans she can turn into little blocks of happiness, right close to home and family.
She thinks trouble has walked into her carefully re-built world when puddle-jump pilot Logan Hanlon shows up at her grand opening to order custom chocolates. Then one of her employees drops dead at the party, and Felicity's one-who-got-away ex-boyfriend - who's now a cop - thinks Felicity is a suspect. As the murder victim's life becomes more and more of a mystery, Felicity realizes that if she's going to clear her name in time to save her business, she might need Logan's help. Though she's not sure if she's ready to let anyone into her life - even if it is to protect her from being the killer's next victim.
For Felicity, Galveston is all about history, and a love-hate relationship with the ocean, which keeps threatening to deliver another hurricane - right into the middle of her investigation. Can she figure it out before all the clues get washed away?
Cozy mystery with a little sweet romance...and a lot of chocolate.FIRST IN A NEW SERIES
The author of the Chocoverse science fiction series brings you a brand new adventure inspired by real-life chocolate makers.
Want to write novels that feel real enough to the reader to have been ripped from the headlines, whatever your genre? Think like a journalist. Looking at the questions journalists ask can help you think of the characters and events in your story as real people, whose lives you are recording, just like you were writing memoir or a news article.
Approach planning your novel the way a journalist plans out writing a news piece. They figure out what they will need to research for the piece, and decide how they will structure that research into a narrative. They decide on a format for the story's lede (opening designed to draw the reader in) and structure the story to follow up on the questions presented in that lede. They document everything, so that they can verify the accuracy of everything they present. You can do the same for your fiction.
This workbook serves as a full self-paced writing course, presenting theory on each aspect of the world/characters you are trying to create - and then offering step-by-step worksheets that allow you to apply what you just learned. The instructional material is designed to give you a basic foundation in creative writing craft so that you understand how to build an effective story using the information you add into the worksheets.
Working through the entire collected workbook will give you a comprehensive Story Bible detailing aspects of your plot and characters to give you a reference source for your world - and the expertise on how to use it.
The Master Collection gives you access to all five Story Like a Journalist volumes, for a total of over 100 worksheets. Get ready to take a deep dive into your story, its characters and its world. The journalistic planning strategies in the book take you from determining the best protagonist for your story to imbuing your work with meaning.
The book walks you through each of these processes:
Who? = Character - WHO are these people who've showed up demanding a place in your novel, anyway? You know they have a story to tell, and for some specific reason, you are the writer in the best position to tell it.
Approach uncovering character the same way a journalist approaches a profile piece.
What? = Premise -- WHAT is this story about? Premise define the heart of your story. You need a keystone to hold onto, so you don't get lost in all the things your story COULD be. Premise is your keystone, and it works like the legend for a road map.
Approach refining premise the same way a journalist approaches a news story.
When? and Where? = Setting - WHEN and WHERE the heck are your characters? They have to be somewhere, waiting for the story to start. And that place shouldn't be random. Setting makes the story specific, and allows readers to feel like your characters are real people, living real lives in a certain time and place.
Approach exploring aspects of your setting the same way a journalist approaches making a documentary.
How? and Why? = Plot and Theme - A plot that doesn't build to a theme is hollow, no matter how much excitement you build into the on-page action, there's no substance so the story won't be memorable. A character contemplating a theme without the framework of a plot is drifting, no matter how much she has to say, there's nothing concrete to prove her points or to challenge them. Her ideas just slip away. But when you get HOW and WHY working together, you can build a pattern of events and meaning that will touch our emotions and maybe even change the way we think.
Latina culinary arts student, Bo Benitez, becomes a fugitive when she’s caught stealing a cacao pod from one of the heavily-defended plantations that keep chocolate, Earth’s sole valuable export, safe from a hungry galaxy.
Forces array against her including her alien boyfriend and a reptilian cop. But when she escapes onto an unmarked starship things go from bad to worse: it belongs to the race famed throughout the galaxy for eating stowaways! Surrounded by dangerous yet hunky aliens, Bo starts to uncover clues that the threat to Earth may be bigger than she first thought.
File Under: Science Fiction [ Heiress Apparent | Sticky Fingers | Pod People | The Milky Way ]
Want to write novels that feel real enough to the reader to have been ripped from the headlines, whatever your genre? Think like a journalist. When you look at the classic questions journalists ask, the first one is generally WHO? In noveling terms WHO relates to character.
Get ready to take a deep dive into the concept of character. WHO are these people who’ve showed up demanding a place in your novel, anyway? You know they have a story to tell, and for some specific reason, you are the writer in the best position to tell it.
In this textbook/workbook you will learn how to build a distinct cast of characters with qualities that can be specifically attacked by your plot. There is instructional material that focuses on understanding the psychological aspects of character building, as well as the importance of physicality. All of this works in tandem with the worksheets.
This workbook serves as a full self-paced writing course, presenting theory on each aspect of character construction - and then offering step-by-step worksheets that allow you to apply what you just learned. The instructional material is designed to give you a basic foundation in creative writing theory regarding character development so that you understand how to build an effective character arc using the information you add into the worksheets.
Working through the entire WHO Relates to Character workbook will give you a comprehensive view of your characters inner life and a dossier to pull from while writing. In short, you get a reference source for your world - and the expertise on how to use it.
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Approach uncovering character the same way a journalist approaches a profile piece.
Delve into understanding who your characters are and what drives them to act with a series of worksheets that will help you determine everything from psychological traits and archetypes to character skills and backstory.
• Define your characters' strengths and flaws, assign them a skill set. then get to know them through interviews and exercises, such as putting them into hypothetical situations through dilemma worksheets and uncovering parts of their backstories with involuntary autobiographical memory worksheets.
NOTE: The e-book version of this workbook links to printable versions of the worksheets. The page count is therefore different than the print book.
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Hemmingway worked as a newspaper journalist before he became a fiction writer. E.B. White did a stint at the New Yorker. L.M. Montgomery was a reporter in Halifax before tackling Anne of Green Gables. Margaret Mitchell got her start as a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Sunday Magazine. What these writers have in common: an excellent sense of character, and the ability to write clean prose that clearly puts forwards the characters’ goals and motivations. This ability may well come from having mastered the journalistic art, which emphasizes creating a sound story that balances logic, research and emotional authenticity.
Even if you’re working in a purely creative world, you can still use those principles, and learn to organize and research like a journalist, and to ask the questions a journalist asks either before or after you write your story.
In a galaxy where chocolate is tied to dark secrets and past wrongs, one celebrity chef has to put things right, in the delectable conclusion to the Chocoverse Trilogy that started with Free Chocolate
When disease ravages Earth's cacao plantations, Bo Benitez returns home to help with the media spin to hide that chocolate is in danger of being lost forever. HGB has come up with a new product - one which doesn't appease the cocoa-addicted murderous, shark-toothed aliens threatening to invade the planet. Someone has to smooth things out. Just when Bo starts to make headway, someone tries to kidnap her. While trying to avoid more would-be-kidnappers, Bo finds out that HGB is developing a cure for withdrawal from the Invincible Heart. Will she let her need to be physically whole again tie her to HGB and its enigmatic CEO? When she gets a key piece of evidence that would unravel secrets from three different planets, she has tough choices to make about the future of her world and its place in the galaxy.
Space Opera Meets Soap Opera in a Galactic War to Control Earth's Greatest Export!
File Under: Science Fiction [ Who's Got Chocolate - Mercy is a Gift - Think We're a Clone Now - No Place Like Home ]
Want to write novels that feel real enough to the reader to have been ripped from the headlines, whatever your genre? Think like a journalist. Journalists carefully consider HOW happened to figure out WHY it happened. Fiction writers need to do the same thing. For novelists HOW and WHY refer to plot and theme.
Get ready to delve into the concepts of plot and theme. Whatever your characters are doing throughout the course of your story – whatever goals they’re working towards – will change them. You want the impact of that change to be huge, right?
In this textbook/workbook you will look at how to build a plot that reveals theme. You will graph your plot to refine a story that resonates. Instructional material covers scene level plotting, and how to weave scenes together to create a pattern that will lead to an artistic statement..
This workbook serves as a full self-paced writing course, presenting theory on outlining a satisfying plot and using character arcs to illuminate theme - and then offering step-by-step worksheets that allow you to apply what you just learned to your own story. The instructional material is designed to give you a basic foundation in creative writing theory regarding the use of a variety of plot models, including genre-specific models for mystery, romance and horror. It also touches on try-fail cycles and the Hero’s Journey so that you can create fiction with meaning using the information you add into the worksheets.
Working through the entire HOW and WHY Relate to Plot and Theme workbook will give you a detailed outline, including a plan for determining the number of scenes you need to write and how you will weave them together that you can pull from while writing. In short, you get a reference source for your world - and the expertise on how to use it.
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Approach intertwining plot and theme the same way a journalist approaches a memoir or biography.
Delve into understanding how to pace the events in your story so that they build to a satisfying conclusion, and the reader achieves catharsis. Learn to uncover meaning by finding the universal in the specific structure, and using emotional beats to guide a reader through your story.
Determine the theme you want to explore in your work and then use one of several plot models to design a coherent set of events that will highlight that theme. Use a beat sheet to make sure your plot's big moments all relate to answering your plot question. Determine how many scenes your book needs and how many should be in each act, as well as how to thread together multiple points of view. Determine how many subplots you need and which characters deserve to star in them.
NOTE: The e-book version of this workbook links to printable versions of the worksheets. The page count is therefore different than the print book.
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Hemmingway worked as a newspaper journalist before he became a fiction writer. E.B. White did a stint at the New Yorker. L.M. Montgomery was a reporter in Halifax before tackling Anne of Green Gables. Margaret Mitchell got her start as a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Sunday Magazine. What these writers have in common: an excellent sense of character, and the ability to write clean prose that clearly puts forwards the characters’ goals and motivations. This ability may well come from having mastered the journalistic art, which emphasizes creating a sound story that balances logic, research and emotional authenticity.
Even if you’re working in a purely creative world, you can still use those principles, and learn to organize and research like a journalist, and to ask the questions
Want to write novels that feel real enough to the reader to have been ripped from the headlines, whatever your genre? Think like a journalist. Journalists consult sources and reference materials to find realistic detail for their stories. But if you’re a novelist – you have to build the reference source for your story world from scratch. Which is why you need to start setting rules and parameters with a STORY BIBLE OVERVIEW.
Get ready to get organized and plan your novel. WHO are your characters going to be and WHAT will they be doing in the story? WHERE are they when the story starts? WHEN did all this happen? HOW will they uncover the bad guy, win someone’s heart, get what they want? WHY bother writing this story in the first place?
In this textbook/workbook you will learn how to apply lessons from the journalism world to fiction writing. You will apply the 5-Ws and H to the building blocks of the novel, in order to create a Story Bible.
This workbook serves as a full self-paced writing course, presenting theory on lessons writers learn in journalism classes - and then offering step-by-step worksheets that allow you to apply what you just learned to your fiction. The instructional material is designed to give you a basic foundation in creative writing theory regarding shaping a story so that you understand how to sift through facts and possibilities to create fiction with meaning using the information you add into the worksheets.
Working through the entire Story Bible Overview workbook will give you a bird’s-eye view of your project, and let you document the basic shape of it to pull from while writing. In short, you get a reference source for your world - and the expertise on how to use it.
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Approach uncovering character the same way a journalist approaches an assignment.
Delve into the world of the journalist, and consider how to write clear, vivid prose that respects your characters, even while challenging them or forcing them to make difficult choices using worksheets to consider everything from which characters will have the most agency to how different characters’ language will be structured.
• Generate ideas. Determine the best way to approach the story with worksheets on ledes, angle, language use, point of view, and the basic rules of your world. Decide which promises to the reader you will make in your opening chapters. Create master lists to start keeping track of named characters and other named places/items in your story world. Log your real-world research.
NOTE: The e-book version of this workbook links to printable versions of the worksheets. The page count is therefore different than the print book.
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Hemmingway worked as a newspaper journalist before he became a fiction writer. E.B. White did a stint at the New Yorker. L.M. Montgomery was a reporter in Halifax before tackling Anne of Green Gables. Margaret Mitchell got her start as a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Sunday Magazine. What these writers have in common: an excellent sense of character, and the ability to write clean prose that clearly puts forwards the characters’ goals and motivations. This ability may well come from having mastered the journalistic art, which emphasizes creating a sound story that balances logic, research and emotional authenticity.
Even if you’re working in a purely creative world, you can still use those principles, and learn to organize and research like a journalist, and to ask the questions a journalist asks either before or after you write your story.
Explore the global kitchen with over 60 delectable herb-infused recipes that feature chocolate – including unexpected savory chocolate appetizers and entrees, decadent chocolate beverages and desserts, and fun chocolaty breads, all paired with a wide variety of culinary herbs.
Chocolate Gingerbread.
Chicken Satay with White Chocolate Peanut Sauce.
Dark Chocolate Mushroom Arancini.
Maybe you didn’t realize these things were missing from your life, but try them, and you may find yourself with some new go-to recipes to impress at dinner parties, or treat yourself or your family at home. Plus, sampling them might change the way you think about chocolate. Chocolate can be earthy, bitter, nutty, subtle or sweet, and it’s not just for dessert. There are Herbs in My Chocolate uses everything from cocoa butter and white chocolate to chocolate infused balsamic vinegar to explore the range of tastes that can come from the seeds of a single tree.
Cooking with herbs connects you to history, and harkens back to a time when kitchen gardens were a staple for every home. Now, more and more culinary herbs are available at supermarkets so even if you don’t have time to maintain a garden, you can still find ways to include them in your diet.
Chocolate is already decadent. Adding herbs can make the experience even more special.
It’s not just a hot chocolate. It’s a thick drinking chocolate, infused with the delicate aroma of lavender and roses.
It’s not just a chocolate cupcake. It’s a cinnamon chocolate cupcake with boozy lemongrass frosting.
It’s not just pumpkin ravioli. It’s pumpkin ravioli with the earthiness of cocoa powder in the brown butter sauce.
In this book, you will learn how to make herbal syrups, sauces, pastes and candied herbs, and to infuse herbs into ice cream, confections, breads and pastries. Most importantly, you will learn how to choose herbs to pair with different types of chocolate to create balanced flavor profiles. The herbs involved may be fresh from the garden, dried, or infused into herbal liqueurs. Techniques for working with chocolate include learning how to temper, which is important for making candies.
These meticulously tested recipes, featuring detailed full-color photographs, will take you on global culinary adventures. This cookbook updates and fuses traditional ingredient combinations.
The author of the Chocoverse science fiction series and the Bean to Bar Mysteries (starring a craft chocolate maker) brings you an out-of-this world delicious cookbook!
To save everyone she loves, Bo Bonitez is touring Zant, home of the murderous, shark-toothed aliens who so recently tried to eat her. In the midst of her stint as Galactic paparazzi princess, she discovers that Earth has been exporting tainted chocolate to the galaxy, and getting aliens hooked on cocoa. Bo must choose whether to go public, or just smile for the cameras and make it home alive. She's already struggling with her withdrawal from the Invincible Heart, and her love life has a life of its own, but when insidious mind worms intervene, things start to get complicated!
File Under: Science Fiction [ Death by Chocolate | Can Cook, Will Cook | Galactic Promise | Addicted to Love ]
Want to write novels that feel real enough to the reader to have been ripped from the headlines, whatever your genre? Think like a journalist. Just like a journalist, as a fiction writer, you will need to define WHAT your story is about. For the novelist WHAT relates to premise.
Get ready to explore the concept of premise. Those people in your head, desperate to be part of a story? They need something to do – and it can’t just be random. It’s the all-important WHAT that your story is about. To stay on track, you need a keystone to hold onto, so you don’t get lost in all the things your story COULD be. Premise is your keystone, and it works like the legend for a road map.
In this textbook/workbook you will look at what you plan to write about from different angles and will use the information you uncover to create a story premise that has an active protagonist in an intriguing story, fighting for high stakes. (These can include both external-world stakes and emotional stakes).
This workbook serves as a full self-paced writing course, presenting theory on writing an effective premise - and then offering step-by-step worksheets that allow you to apply what you just learned to your own story. The instructional material is designed to give you a basic foundation in creative writing theory regarding clearly defining your story’s concept, conflicts and plot question to create fiction with meaning using the information you add into the worksheets.
Working through the entire WHAT Relates to Premiseb workbook will give you a sound thesis statement for the concepts and themes your novel will explore, and define other parameters you can pull from while writing. In short, you get a reference source for your world - and the expertise on how to use it.
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Approach refining premise the same way a journalist approaches a news story.
Delve into understanding how to build a powerful premise and how to make sure your story is sound and will add up to something in which your specific characters overcome one specific problem or person in order to become a better or worse person. Instructional material focuses on building genuine conflict into your story, understanding clear goals and motivations for character action, and making sure that your stakes are high enough. All of this works in tandem with the worksheets.
• Write out your premise to define the heart of what your story is about, and what is at stake in it. Determine what you want to write about, and consider why. Boil that down into a concept. Uncover literary devices that you could use to support your premise.
NOTE: The e-book version of this workbook links to printable versions of the worksheets. The page count is therefore different than the print book.
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Hemmingway worked as a newspaper journalist before he became a fiction writer. E.B. White did a stint at the New Yorker. L.M. Montgomery was a reporter in Halifax before tackling Anne of Green Gables. Margaret Mitchell got her start as a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Sunday Magazine. What these writers have in common: an excellent sense of character, and the ability to write clean prose that clearly puts forwards the characters’ goals and motivations. This ability may well come from having mastered the journalistic art, which emphasizes creating a sound story that balances logic, research and emotional authenticity.
Even if you’re working in a purely creative world, you can still use those principles, and learn to organize and research like a journalist, and to ask the questions a journalist asks either before or after you write your story.
Want to write novels that feel real enough to the reader to have been ripped from the headlines, whatever your genre? Think like a journalist. You want to evoke a feeling of WHEN and WHERE that will make readers feel like they have just taken a walk through your story world. Take a few cues from how journalists do this. For novelists WHEN and WHERE relate to setting.
Get ready to dig into the concept of setting. WHEN and WHERE the heck are your characters? They have to be somewhere, waiting for the story to start. And that place shouldn’t feel random.
In this textbook/workbook you will look at the nuts and bolts of worldbuilding, whether you are writing contemporary fiction, or something set across the galaxy. The worksheets will assist you in everything from deciding what era to set your story in to creating a workable fictional society. There are additional worksheets for worldbuilding speculative fiction.
This workbook serves as a full self-paced writing course, presenting theory on writing vivid, consistent worldbuilding - and then offering step-by-step worksheets that allow you to apply what you just learned to your own story. The instructional material is designed to give you a basic foundation in creative writing theory regarding setting, culture and history to create fiction with meaning using the information you add into the worksheets.
Working through the entire WHEN and WHERE Relate to Setting workbook will give you a an extensive worldbuilding document, including maps, historical overviews, societal structure, and a plan for incorporating these element into the story that you can pull from while writing. In short, you get a reference source for your world - and the expertise on how to use it.
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Approach worldbuilding the same way a journalist approaches making a documentary.
Delve into understanding how to balance your use of worldbuilding and setting details to avoid either confusing or overwhelming the reader. Instructional material focuses on incorporating your setting into the story, how to use setting to create a mood or as an addition character on creating and using maps and lists of details to keep everything consistent. All of this works in tandem with the worksheets.
• Determine the basic when and where your story takes place. Then fill in the details using an extensive worldbuilding worksheet that includes maps, history, economy, and culture. There are also resources for working with real-world contemporary and historical settings.
NOTE: The e-book version of this workbook links to printable versions of the worksheets. The page count is therefore different than the print book.
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Hemmingway worked as a newspaper journalist before he became a fiction writer. E.B. White did a stint at the New Yorker. L.M. Montgomery was a reporter in Halifax before tackling Anne of Green Gables. Margaret Mitchell got her start as a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Sunday Magazine. What these writers have in common: an excellent sense of character, and the ability to write clean prose that clearly puts forwards the characters’ goals and motivations. This ability may well come from having mastered the journalistic art, which emphasizes creating a sound story that balances logic, research and emotional authenticity.
Even if you’re working in a purely creative world, you can still use those principles, and learn to organize and research like a journalist, and to ask the questions a journalist asks either before or after you write your story.