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National Writer’s Block Month

Nov, 2009 (2009-11-11 07:07)

Yes, it’s that time of year again: The month when writers everywhere suddenly loose their mojo and forget how to type letters that accumulate into words.

I was over on Lylurn Enclave and found this lament about writer’s block:

So I’ve been stuck for three days, haven’t written a word. They just wouldn’t come out.

I’m sure none of these will be a paradigm shift for established writers, but I find that confirmation other writers are using a tool encourages me to try them too. Here are some of the ones I’ve employed to success against the November Beast of Writerly Agony:

  • Surf the web for images that fit my story; get inspired about some character or locale and write on it for a bit;  flesh out some back story
  • Write legends about their great uncles or long dead warriors or cultures they idolize or despise
  • Rewrite the current chapter from an antagonist’s POV or a minor character’s ( I tend to neglect the villains most)
  • Have a written conversation (because that way it’s not crazy) with one of my characters, if two of them are particularly caustic together, talk to them both at the same time; ask how the story is going and what they think I should do (then do the exact opposite of course)
  • Pull out the mood music, get some music that really gets me brooding or pumped up; write whatever comes to mind–poetry, battle scenes, crap that won’t be in the book, who cares
  • Start the next book. I know that can sound absurd, but often I write books in series out of order. It gives me great insight to where I want the characters to go in the future (and if they should even live this book).
  • Pull out one of my favorite books and read the passages I love most; find some technique or characterization that just absolutely works, get inspired, and then make my current sucky scene work like that (maybe even insert a new scene to do it).

There you have it. The wulfish cure to Black November.



Mind Mapping Software: Mindomo

Jul, 2009 (2009-07-31 09:00)

Since brainstorming and outlining are such important activities for writers, I am cross-posting this article about Mind Mapping Tools from my tech blog.

Give it a peek.



I found a great idea trove today enumerating medieval torture methods. Apparently it can take thirty minutes and even upwards of two hours to burn at the stake–yikes!


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