Introducing Morgen Bailey!
Today, I'm joined by Morgen Bailey, who has agreed to share some writing tips. At Riverside Writers, new members often ask about the best ways to go about learning their craft, having been left bewildered by a huge array of 'how to' books which trot out vast lists of Dos and Don'ts. Here, Morgen keeps things simple.
Based
in Northamptonshire, England, Morgen Bailey is a prolific blogger, podcaster,
editor/critiquer, Chair of NWG (which runs the annual H.E.
Bates Short Story Competition), Head Judge for the NLG
Flash Fiction Competition and creative writing tutor for her local council.
She is also a freelance author of numerous ‘dark and light’ short stories,
novels, articles, and very occasional dabbler of poetry. Like her, her blog, http://morgenbailey.wordpress.com,
is consumed by all things literary. She is also active on Twitter, Facebook along with many
others (listed on her blog’s Contact
page).
She
also recently created five online writing
groups and an interview-only
blog. Her debut novel is the chick lit eBook The
Serial Dater’s Shopping List and she has six others (mostly crime) in the
works.
American
science-fiction novelist Jerry Pournell is reported to have said, “I think it
takes about a million words to make a writer. I mean that you're going to throw
away.” I started writing for fun seven years ago and more seriously four years
ago and with three NaNoWriMo novels, one-and-a-half novels in between, three
NaNoWriMo story collections (a cheat on doing a novel November 2011 but I still
made the 50,000-word minimum), part of a script, some poetry and loads of short
stories under my belt, including one and a bit 31-story collections for Story A Day May, I’m pretty sure I’ve
reached that target. How much of them I’ve thrown away I couldn’t tell you but
it’s only a fraction, and if like me, you’ve dabbled before really knuckling
down, you’ll feel better for it. It’s all about practice. If someone sat you in
front of a piano, would they expect you to play a concerto? Would you expect
that of yourself?
In my experience
too many novice writers worry about finding their ‘voice’ and understanding
their ‘craft’ early on. It can be a long journey, perhaps not as long as a
million words but providing you write regularly (daily is the ideal but when
does life afford that luxury, although 300 words equates to 100,000 words a
year so a great incentive) you’ll get there… and here are a few basics to put
in your suitcase:
·
Probably
the most used phrase when teaching writing is ‘show don’t tell’. If you have a
character who is angry for some reason, saying ‘Andy was angry’ is a classic
example of ‘tell’. Simply put, you’re not showing us how. If you wrote ‘Andy
slammed his fist onto the table’ you are.
·
Dialogue
tags – it’s recommended that you can only go up to six pieces of dialogue
(between no more than two people) without attributing it to someone. And
there's nothing wrong with ‘said’. Don’t be tempted to look at your thesaurus
and say ‘Andy postulated’. You could also avoid tags by another character
saying “Oh Andy, that’s…” or in the description; ‘Andy laughed. “That’s…”
·
Character
names are important as we often get a sense of their personality by what
they’re called. A Mavis is likely to be older than a Britney and would,
usually, act differently. Avoid having names starting with the same letter; if
you have a Todd talking to a Ted, the reader can easily get confused. Bill and
Ted would be fine and as we know, they had a wonderful time back in the late
1980s.
·
I’m
a big fan of repetition… of not doing it. Unless it’s ‘the’, ‘and’ etc, a word
should only be repeated if the second instance is to emphasise or clarify the
first. For example, ‘Andy sat in the car. He beeped the horn of the car.’ You
don’t need ‘of the car’ because we already know he’s in the car. If you said ‘Andy
sat in the car. He beeped the horn and the car shook’ that would be fine
because you’re clarifying that it’s the car and not the horn (because it’s the
last object you mentioned) that’s shaking.
·
Stephen
King’s writing guide / autobiography ‘On writing’ has been the most suggested book
in the interviews I’ve conducted. Amongst other things he’s notoriously against
adverbs (‘ly’) and fair enough – in ‘completely dead’ you wouldn’t need the
completely because dead says it all, and a character doesn’t need to be
‘sighing wearily’ because the sighing tells us enough, but adverbs are
necessary in the right context. Again it’s all about clarification and fine-tuning.
·
Every
word has to count; does it move the story along or tell us about your
characters? If not, the chances are it can be chopped.
·
If
you’re having trouble with a passage move on or leave it and return later with
‘fresh eyes’.
·
Read.
It doesn’t matter whether it’s your genre or not (one of my Monday nighters
writes amazing sci-fi but has never read a word of it) but reading will help
you see how a story is structured and balanced between dialogue and
description; short sentences speed the pace, long passages slow it down.
·
Join
a writing group, get your work critiqued. Read your work out loud. It’s amazing
what you’ll pick up when you hear it outside your head.
·
Subscribe
to writing magazines, go to workshops, literary festivals. If you really want
to write immerse yourself in all things literary.
There are many
more examples I could give you but all you need to remember is that it’s not
about clever words (because that ends up becoming ‘purple prose’) but just
getting pen to paper, or fingers to keyboard and having fun. When your
characters take over (and they will) you’ll have the time of your life!
Morgen Bailey
Adele says: Thanks for sharing this advice with new writers, Morgen. I'm sure they'll find it useful. I've recommended Stephen King's On Writing so many times I ought to have shares in it! The only other 'how to' book which I recommend is Writers Workshop of Horror edited by Michael Knost. Each chapter of this is written by a different author and deals with every aspect of writing, and it's not just for horror writers either.
I'd encourage any would-be writer to join a writing group but do make sure its members actually write, rather than just talk about writing! Many libraries already have subscriptions to some literary magazines, and your local library is a good place to ask about writing groups, too.
The only other thing I'll add is this: If you want to be a writer, write! No need to research your book endlessly, or attend 2,000 courses - just get on with the writing!
Comments
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