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Everything that doesn't fit into the other F.A.Q.s
Question
On Writing

Answer

How do you get published?

Two secrets:
Write the story.
Submit the story.

All the rest is where it gets complicated. I never particularly cared for English teachers, either, but if you haven't picked up a modicum of grammar and spelling at this point, you're going to have a hard time getting published. Don't think that you can get away with writing "any old way" when you write on-line, either. I'm willing to pony up serious cred to the first person who shows they've sent me a letter like the below, much less L33tsqek (which I've gotten) who gets published by an actual for-pay house. You may feel free to take that as a massive fucking whap from a clue-bat. A friendly one, but massive.

How you write, any time, is how you're going to write stories. If you don't care about sentence structure, grammar, flow, spelling, when you write things like, oh, an email, you're not going to get them right in a book, either. So make it a habit to try to write as well as you possibly CAN no matter what the medium. Train yourself to get rid of your bad habits, first. You might find your writing improving when you write fiction as well.

Think of it this way: It's like muscle memory. Muscle memory is why special operations guys train and train and train with their weapons. They want to know that when they draw, they draw smoothly and accurately, when they point they point at the target. So they practice and practice and practice. But if they practice wrong , when it comes time to go mano y mano, they lose.

Writing is the same damned thing. If you train to miss you're going to miss. If you train to write poorly, you're going to write poorly. Period fucking dot.

That's my first and major lesson. If you look at what you wrote and what I wrote, you'll see the difference. For one thing, there are paragraphs.

You read alot and that's good. But you have to take what you've read, how authors write (their style) and draw on that to learn to write. The best example I can point to is actually WEB Griffin, who in the beginning I copied slavishly. Clear, simple prose, fairly effortlessly patterned, good character description, excellent dialogue.

Take a short story idea, this can be as simple as retelling something interesting that happened to you in third person, and try to write it as if you were an author you read. Copy a style first, your own will naturally change that and then you'll slowly transform into who "you" are stylistically. But copy, first.

"The mocha latte dripped. It dripped from condensation. The mocha was cold. The air in the room was a rich wet velvet furnace. Drips like tears of the Madonna rolled down its clear glass surface."

(Me preparing to drink a Starbucks mocha as written by Hemingway.) :-)

Dialogue and characterization. Characters are what people are going to identify with. If you don't have good characters, you're going to have one hell of a time. There's a simple trick to good characters, though: Pay Attention To People.

For Dialogue, listen to how people REALLY talk. Then write it close, but not exactly. Some people you know talk in staccato, I'm sure. Others just sort of loaf along. Grab that and use it.

Beverly's voice was like the flurry of a hummingbird wing, constant, rhythmic and mildly annoying especially when you thought it was an overlarge bee.

"Rachel stopped by today," she spat out, so fast it made me wonder why she didn't get tongue burn. "She was looking for you. She wondered where you were. Where were you?"

"Out," I muttered, slumping through the reception area.

"Have you broken up with her?" the receptionist continued, blurting the words so fast I couldn't even make it through the safety of the security gate. "Is there a security problem? Should I have her escorted out next time? She seems very dangerous."

"If I'd broken up with her, she wouldn't have been here," I muttered, swiping my card. "You'd have gotten a two kilogram C-4 care package instead."

Notice that the staccato secretary speaks in short, declarative sentences. They're actually probably too long. The point-of-view (POV) character is more long winded and uses words that are less definitive.

Characterization: Notice people's mannerisms as well. People may have a hard time remembering characters, separating them out, but if you include mannerisms they get almost subconscious clues who is talking.

"Mike pulled off his helmet then pulled the dip out from between his upper lip and gum..."

"Roger reached into a pouch and slowly removed a long leather thong. He pulled his hair back and tied it in place, carefully ensuring he got every hair in place by pulling it back one strand at a time..."

Don't be afraid to do something like take a notepad to the mall and wander around looking for good characters. I got the "pulling his hair back one strand at a time" from a guy installing a stereo in my car.

Readers also want to know where they are. There are these characters and even if they can separate them out, they want to know where they are. So add sensory data to every page. Smell, sound, touch, taste, sight. I generally tend to cluster that towards the beginning of a scene. Get the reader grounded in a reality then take them into unreality.

There are about a billion different levels and parts to a story. The prose is the bricks and mortar. You have to have good materials to make a good house. Then there's the flow. Beyond simple sentence structure (prose) there is how something flows. Are the walls straight? Does this hallway lead anywhere or does it end in a blank wall? Paragraphs let people separate disjoining ideas.

"When the alarm went off, John knew it was going to be a fucked up day. He could feel it in the overheated air of the apartment. He could smell it wafting from the overloaded cat boxes. He could taste it in the cat fur stuck to his tongue. Bad. Bad. Bad on toast with a shit cracker..."

Then on to another thought, drawing from that one but not continuing it. If you look at the sentences, you'll see that they're long at first then shorter and shorter. This is flow. People think of one thing then narrow down. Your job is to take that method of thought and use telepathy, via the written word, to get it in their heads.

The second part of flow is transitions. Repeat after me. Transitions. Good transitions are what make for a "page turner." You want to avoid breaking the reader's trance, so that they send you emails complaining about being up all night reading when they were supposed to be at work.

A wonderful example of a transition is in Tom Clancy's Red Storm Rising. An American unit and a Russian unit are about to face off in battle. The weather is wet and rainy with low clouds.

The Russian: "I hate this weather. The American aircraft can drop out of the clouds without warning, ravage our formation and then escape..." About two thousand words of them preparing for battle then kicking off then...

The American: "I hate this weather. Our planes can't see shit until they break out of the clouds..." :-)

And never end a chapter at a good stopping point. :-)

Then there's plot. Stephen King was apparently bitten by a plot as a child and thus refuses to admit that plot and story are the same thing. If you're writing story based...stories, then they have a beginning a middle and an end. In general, at the beginning the main character is in status quo, then you take them down as low as you can get them then you bring them back up to victory.

There are two forms of victory, though, physical and moral. If you're writing a series, I generally end with one or the other until the last book that "caps" either the series or a portion of the series. Thus in We Few, the end of the "coming of age" part of the Prince Roger series, Roger finally sustained a fairly clear physical and moral victory. Mike O'Neal has yet to. Mike Harmon has a physical victory in Unto the Breach but sustains a huge moral loss. It's also possible (I'll do it later in the Mike O'Neal books) to sustain a physical loss and a moral victory.

So, story is the design of the house. High, low, High. Start off with the character fairly high, drag them low then bring them back up to victory of one sort or another.

Flow is how the prose works. Set up a rhythm and only vary it when you want to emphasize something.

Ensure smooth transitions between POVs and chapters.

Work on characterizations. Listen to people. Record experiences. Live life. Remember.

Then there's the simple aspects of prose. That's just pure ass training. But train right. If you ever send out another letter like the one below, forget ever being a published author. You're refusing to train and you don't get to Carnegie Hall without practice practice practice.

(Unless you're doing stream of consciousness, but that's out of my area of expertise.)

Last lesson, padwan:

"Good writers create. Great writers steal." All truly good writing comes from life. Go live it. Hemingway didn't sit on the internet all day and night.

Take care,

John

PS: When you get to the point of thinking about submitting a book, get the Writer's Market. You can find it in most libraries.


Question
In response to a question from the bar: Books similar to John's

Answer

Well, I tend to write what I'd like to read so I'll make some suggestions from what I've read. Bridge of Birds. If you pick up only one book, find this one! Just thinking about it brings tears to my eyes.

Lois Bujold's Miles Vorkosigan series. Again, if you are looking for really good writing, these are it. It is collected in omnibus additions. If you only read one short story, read "The Borders of Infinity."

Most of David Weber, especially Path of the Fury, Mutineer's Moon, Armageddon Inheritance, Insurrection, Crusade and the first four books of the Honor Harrington Series. The latter books don't stand on their own well without reading the earlier ones.

The early Bolos stories. Just pick up the anthology "Bolo!" and go from there. The anthologies and stories have high and low points, but I can definitely recommend the anthology "Honor of the Regiment."

WEB Griffin's Brotherhood of War series. Roger was consciously modeled on Lowell with a few of his rough points either enhanced (shortness with idiots) or detracted (womanizing.)

Early Tom Clancy. Hunt For Red October, Patriot Games, Red Storm Rising and Without Remorse. The later ones devolve extremely.

Robert Heinlein. I would say "everything" but he has distinct forms and periods. So I'll list only those I enjoyed (uncomprehensively.) Citizen of the Galaxy, Moon is a Harsh Mistress, STARSHIP TROOPERS (I agree, ignore the movie/s), the short stories collections Green Hills of Earth and Methuselah's Children, Orphans of the Sky, Time Enough For Love. He has a vast number of other books, all of them excellent, but his "earlier" works I find most appealing.

John Steakley's Armor. This is more along the lines of Gust Front, sort of. Fairly nihilistic for much of the book but the ending makes it all worthwhile.

I disagree with Forever War. Far too nihilistic. Nihilism is one of the things I consciously avoid in my novels. For the same reason, based upon what you liked and didn't,

I'm not recommending most Drake, although I quite like Dave's stuff. If you want to give it a whirl, I'd suggest starting with the short story series Hammer's Slammers and then The Sharp End. Take it from there.

For the There Will Be Dragons stories, I have no suggestions. They're just too different from most of the stuff out there. They're a bit of high fantasy, a bit of high tech and the characters act too "mundane" to make the connection to most fantasy. However, if you want to give fantasy a buzz, The Earth Masters trilogy by Patricia McKillip, Riddlemaster of Hed, Heir of Sea and Fire and Harpist in the Wind. Absolutely the best fantasy trilogy ever written. Try _only_ the first three books of the Wheel of Time series. The rest are dreck.

The Belgariad. Mercedes Lackey's "Last Herald Mage" trilogy. The Winds of Change books are good as well and the Dianne Tregard series. You can take or leave the rest of Mercedes' ouevre. David Weber's Bazel series. David Drake's Isles series is very very good. I won't recommend Lord of the Rings. Why? Because when people try to read it after their reading muscles have been formed it tends to come across as too florid. Ditto on the Lensman series by Doc Smith and various other "Golden Age" writing. The prose tends to throw people off. That should more than cover things for a while. Much of this can be found in the library or used bookstores to cut down on the costs.


Question
From the bar: David B asks where to get a small book of Kipling's Barracks Room Ballads that could go into a sea bag or a duffel.


Answer

Rudyard Kipling: Complete Verse. Trade Paper. Published by Anchor, in 1989. 864 pages. 038526089X

There's also The Portable Kipling.

The Portable Kipling is not the choices I'd make. Complete Verse is too large. What is needed is a combination of Barrack Room Ballads and a few others.