7 Common Mistakes New Writers Make

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2017
  • In this video I will go over 7 common mistakes newbie writers tend to make, especially when it comes to characters, conflict & pacing!
    Related videos that go more in-depth into some of these topics:
    What is info-dumping & how to fix it: • What is Info Dumping &...
    White room syndrome & how to fix it: • White Room Syndrome & ...
    How to nail conflict & stakes: • How to Nail Conflict &...
    How to properly format dialogue tags: • How to Properly Format...
    Choosing the right POV for your novel: • Choosing the Right POV...
    Pre-Order BRIGHTLY BURNING: www.amazon.com/Brightly-Burni...
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 926

  • @kingkiitt7355
    @kingkiitt7355 Před 6 lety +2227

    "Killing people in the books is fun."
    Well, I guess George R.R. Martin is having *too* much fun

    • @supershinigami1
      @supershinigami1 Před 5 lety +41

      Martin isn't even killing that many people. It's Benioff and Weiss that are the real monsters.

    • @kathryneverett3210
      @kathryneverett3210 Před 5 lety +49

      I hit mine with a bus in the first chapter

    • @rea124
      @rea124 Před 5 lety +12

      And James Dashner

    • @morganmccann7743
      @morganmccann7743 Před 5 lety +14

      Kathryn Everett, is it bad that my response to reading that was “good for you”?

    • @kathryneverett3210
      @kathryneverett3210 Před 5 lety +5

      @@morganmccann7743 not at all. :)

  • @nixutree1578
    @nixutree1578 Před 6 lety +1617

    Here is a reason a lot of newer writers use "whispered", "grunted", or "articulate" etc.
    English teachers tell you to not use "said" as it is used too "often" and the authors/writers just think 'I should use said less often because it's bad.'

    • @AlexaDonne
      @AlexaDonne  Před 6 lety +471

      Exactly! My high school teachers did it, too. Many teachers inadvertently ingrain bad habits in young writers :D

    • @jesterssketchbook
      @jesterssketchbook Před 6 lety +225

      yup, Stephen king is right on this one - "said" runs right through your mind and is immediately understood, anything else causes the reader to have to stop and "understand" the word. Also, the reader should be able to "hear" how the character is saying something through context and history, you shouldnt have to specifically *tell* them.

    • @LydiaTarine12
      @LydiaTarine12 Před 6 lety +66

      Indeed! Using another word should be reserved for added emphasis either due to importance or because the character's tone is that marked (which is usually important in that moment). The rest of the time, a reader will develop a voice for a well-written character that carries most dialogue.
      Though that makes me wonder what Alexa Donne's thoughts on italics in dialogue are.

    • @hahanicebroskie
      @hahanicebroskie Před 6 lety +28

      I write in first person, from my characters perspective. For example. Character dialog: I can't believe he did that to me. I turn to him and say, 'hey man, that was complete bullshit.' -- END. I constantly use, "I say. He says, she says." What else is there to use?

    • @GamingandMore95
      @GamingandMore95 Před 5 lety +15

      Omg yes I've heard this so many times throughout school but the best books I've read use said a lot and it doesnt bother me.

  • @ryujin7213
    @ryujin7213 Před 6 lety +771

    it was drilled into me as a kid that using said was bad, its nice to know that I dont have to avoid it like the plague

    • @10feralratsinacoat76
      @10feralratsinacoat76 Před 5 lety +11

      Definition1 dude I know!! It too me until recently to understand that and it has greatly improved the way my writing sounds.

    • @aryahengle2530
      @aryahengle2530 Před 4 lety +5

      Same but I would still do it but add a lot of words onto the end "She spoke softly" "He said harshly"

    • @ahsinoe4
      @ahsinoe4 Před 4 lety

      @@qold5900 This is exactly Stephen King's advice, ditto R.R. Martin and others!

    • @jeannedesouzaetchells5762
      @jeannedesouzaetchells5762 Před 4 lety +3

      Plus "it was all a dream", man they hated that one

    • @savior5225
      @savior5225 Před 4 lety +3

      Please dont avoid it. Any book you read you'll see 'said' in it. Try using 'said she/he'

  • @keithbrannon251
    @keithbrannon251 Před 4 lety +272

    "We like our characters! We don't want anything bad to happen to them!"
    Ha ha.

    • @memeosaurusrex3382
      @memeosaurusrex3382 Před 4 lety +5

      ha

    • @jeannedesouzaetchells5762
      @jeannedesouzaetchells5762 Před 4 lety +16

      In the book I'm writing, the character looks for her biological mother the entire book only to find that she was hours too late from her mother's DEATH.

    • @sanne8287
      @sanne8287 Před 4 lety +6

      Jeanne de Souza Etchells I’d love to read that 😁

    • @jirahjashmiermacalino7556
      @jirahjashmiermacalino7556 Před 4 lety +1

      Jeanne de Souza Etchells could I read it?

    • @jeannedesouzaetchells5762
      @jeannedesouzaetchells5762 Před 4 lety +5

      @@jirahjashmiermacalino7556 and @Sanne it's not ready for the world to see just yet but I have high hopes for it. (I've already written the first very bad book you see.)

  • @leonaluna3307
    @leonaluna3307 Před 6 lety +856

    My characters have too many flaws honestly, their made up lives are so brutal.

    • @najibcasa2745
      @najibcasa2745 Před 6 lety +18

      This was great, I have been researching "how to sell ebooks on your own website" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Have you ever come across - Zansabella Zondalyn Scheme - (just google it ) ? Ive heard some super things about it and my partner got excellent success with it.

    • @killerzen-minecraftrobloxa6826
    • @BologneyT
      @BologneyT Před 5 lety +9

      +Najib Casa
      Wow your comment basically comes up in google because if I google that I get a bunch of results that read just like your comment

    • @writingwithkatelyn
      @writingwithkatelyn Před 5 lety +1

      Lol. Yea I'm mean to my characters sometimes😂

    • @hiimlynxakita
      @hiimlynxakita Před 5 lety +8

      Honestly same. My MC is not only a cigarette smoker but a weed connosoir because he saw his mom get beheaded by a truck. Not to mention, almost everyone he knows is an addict aaaand he gets to see 10 people die. And witness a triple homicide.

  • @lowrez1646
    @lowrez1646 Před 6 lety +1217

    1. Info dumping: too much info, or back-story, esp. in the beginning. Better to spread the info out throughout the book via character interaction or action.
    2. Describing everything: books are not a play-by-play of real-life. It's boring, it slows down the plot.
    3. Not enough conflict: Story should be driven by conflict-resolution-conflict-resoltuion. Conflict is a continuing racketing of tension as the story continues.
    4. Nothing Bad Happens to Main Character, or is Perfect, has no Flaws: This will put an artificial limit on how much conflict and/or bad events that drive the story forward.
    5. Really Messy Dialog Tags: every dialog has a 'he said', or '[name] spoke'. Just use 'said'. Nothing more is needed. It's not detracting. Use any additional description very sparingly, when absolutely needed. Get your punctuation right, it's a simply thing to get down.
    6. Too Many Points of View: Stories don't need extra POV; this drains the tension. It's also very difficult to execute well. Keep it simple, single POV from the main character.
    7: White Room Syndrome: Variant on 'show don't tell'; aka when characters are in a scene but no description or detail has been provided. Story ends up feeling generic.

  • @iamjohnlocked3783
    @iamjohnlocked3783 Před 5 lety +338

    In elementary school they taught us "said is dead" and I believed it. I began watching CZcams videos and reading blogs to help improve my writing. That's when I learned that you, as Alexa says, should use "said" 95% of the time.

    • @gowrialla3533
      @gowrialla3533 Před 5 lety +2

      omg! same, it took me soooo long to realize this

    • @TheGeorgeD13
      @TheGeorgeD13 Před 5 lety +14

      Most of the all time great authors use only said about 95% of the time. Every ten years or so, somebody comes out of the woodworks to say that said is dead.
      Don’t know why, but that’s what happens.
      In general with writing fiction, let the reader do 2+2. Do not give them 4.
      Using only said most of the time is an example of giving them 2+2.

    • @OddlyElly
      @OddlyElly Před 4 lety +4

      That is a great explanation. Trust the reader!

    • @TheGeorgeD13
      @TheGeorgeD13 Před 4 lety +5

      @@OddlyElly Yes, trust the reader. But I really learned this lesson actually from screenwriting. One of the first screenplays I wrote had an abundance of acting direction. And one of the first notes I got on it was to trust the actors and let them act.
      If you dictate how they say something, you may not get the best delivery of the line.

    • @em-vo4ml
      @em-vo4ml Před 4 lety

      School teaches you this because in essay work, said is dead. If you’re writing a narrative as an essay, you may not want to use said all the time, as it doesn’t express your vocabulary and understanding. Writing a novel though- USE SAID. I love wattpad but I can never get into a story if every dialogue ends in ‘he exclaimed. She murmured.’ Of course there’s appropriate times but use it sparingly

  • @Chris_Cross
    @Chris_Cross Před 6 lety +775

    Her: "What's the worst thing that could happen to my character?"
    Me: "He gets hit by a truck and dies."
    Her: "Do that thing!"
    Me: "But then I don't have a protagonist, or a plot, or a hero, or... or a book..."

    • @AlexaDonne
      @AlexaDonne  Před 6 lety +205

      Haha, I see what you mean :P In most cases, though, what I mean is... what's the worst thing someone could say in this moment--what would really upset my MC, or spur them into action? If my character really wants X, I should do Y to prevent them from having that thing. And so on :)

    • @Chris_Cross
      @Chris_Cross Před 6 lety +18

      Oh, right. Makes sense. Thanks.

    • @westeast3169
      @westeast3169 Před 6 lety +41

      Ever heard about truck-kun and isekai stories?

    • @Chris_Cross
      @Chris_Cross Před 6 lety +1

      Nope.

    • @westeast3169
      @westeast3169 Před 6 lety +22

      Christopher Dibbs
      Isekai was in 2017 a very popular genre in Japanese novels and mangas.
      Isekai literary means another world.
      The most common way to kill ppl is by truck-kun (kun refers to a male in japanese) and they get reincarnated in another world.
      Other ways are summons, vase-chan (chan refers to a lower ranked female or a close friend) or just a mistake from kami-sama (kami=god sama = someone with a higher rank)

  • @GrahamConnor
    @GrahamConnor Před 5 lety +103

    Just started watching these. I've just started writing my book today and, even though I think all that you mention are things that I already subconsciously knew, this video is great help. Wish me luck :)

    • @ilyanemuno5427
      @ilyanemuno5427 Před 3 lety +3

      Go off ^^ keep going, I'm writing too and it's really not simple

    • @MrDevil-jb1fl
      @MrDevil-jb1fl Před 2 lety +2

      Writing update?

    • @clxv
      @clxv Před 2 lety +2

      How is your story going?

    • @morpheusgrace1071
      @morpheusgrace1071 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm VERY late, but I wish you the best of luck man!! Hopefully you don't even need it anymore :)
      May I ask, how are you doing since?

    • @morpheusgrace1071
      @morpheusgrace1071 Před 2 lety +2

      Oh, just noticed that people already asked the same thing.
      Well, all of us are curious I guess :)

  • @OverratedPerson22
    @OverratedPerson22 Před 5 lety +291

    "Bc we like our character, we don't want to do bad things to them"
    Me: *is writing a book about a traumatizing experience to my character and how she gets crazy over time after killing her own best friend accidentally*
    Me: oh well, so true

    • @angelinaelchammas2506
      @angelinaelchammas2506 Před 5 lety +13

      I don't have creativity ooh, nice. I make mine forced to kill her little brother

    • @OverratedPerson22
      @OverratedPerson22 Před 5 lety +8

      @@angelinaelchammas2506 Nooooo, that's way too cruel! Children are off limits

    • @angelinaelchammas2506
      @angelinaelchammas2506 Před 5 lety +6

      Hes 12 and shes 16 and at the time she doesn't remember that there siblings cos her bf was forced to make her forget (he has powers) but she remembers later

    • @angelinaelchammas2506
      @angelinaelchammas2506 Před 5 lety +4

      I also kill an OTP in the huge war at the end and her gf just about looses the will to live

    • @angelinaelchammas2506
      @angelinaelchammas2506 Před 5 lety +3

      And the dead girls sister gets depression and ptsd. Shes also 12/13

  • @Kat_ko_02
    @Kat_ko_02 Před 5 lety +216

    "He edjaculated…don't use that". Hahaha, well that depends on what type of story you want ;)
    (Though it does make for an interesting conversational tag…context people!)

  • @littleearth488
    @littleearth488 Před 4 lety +37

    I read a fanfic (so it kinda gets a pass but still) that used “uttered” a little too much. Like I’m sorry, but usually I don’t read books that have dialogue like this:
    “Where is it?” Sue uttered.
    “Over there, behind the shelf,” Bob replied.
    “I saw it on the kitchen table earlier,” Jimmy mumbled. He smirked, knowing he hid it earlier.
    I usually hear “uttered” like:
    As blood flowed from her chest, right where her heart was, she uttered her final words and took her last breath.
    “It was under the doormat.”
    But I’m a newbie to writing. So...yep. Let me know if I’m totally wrong and using uttered like a normal dialogue tag is okay. (You know when you DO use dialog tags)
    Edit: another one I read (on wattpad or tumblr or something)
    And I (not really) quote:
    “You’re so sweet!” I *verbalized* as I sat down.
    “Something something,” He *opined* as he ate.
    *hazed*
    *issued*
    *announced*
    Like, ZERO “said” in there.

    • @elenam5214
      @elenam5214 Před 4 lety

      What about “mumbled”?

    • @khatunamezvrishvili6211
      @khatunamezvrishvili6211 Před 4 lety

      @@elenam5214 they already mentioned mumbled kinda

    • @khatunamezvrishvili6211
      @khatunamezvrishvili6211 Před 4 lety +2

      It sucks because said and utter are kinda different. At least I think so

    • @vloggerbonakid6178
      @vloggerbonakid6178 Před 3 lety +1

      You should use the word "said" as the main word to avoid complications from the readers,but not too much to prevent the dialogue tag sounding too faulty.Only use understandable special words to emphasize the tone in which they speak.Too many Special words each and after every dialogue will make the reader confused,slowing the experience down.If I was a reader,I would ask myself "What does Verbalised and Opined even mean?".Special Words should always be supported by context clues so that readers can understand it a bit without the confusion.Here is an example i thought off:
      They walked around the unfamiliarity of the place.Where are they? Why was it so dark?? He looked visibly scared,holding his flashlight tightly as he shun a dark room with it.
      "Why is this place so terrifying?",He whimpered,keeping his pace.
      "I don't know,but I don't like it.It feels too...quiet.We have to find our friend and get out of here,who knows what may happen in this place.." "I...I guess,but I wished we brought some useful things to make things easier,L-Like a knife,or food..." "Sheesh,Even in this dark place,you still want to eat? Quite a hungry guy.",She joked while giggling.He almost dropped his flashlight as he saw something small and fast crawling Infront of him."I-I Saw something!",He said,Terrified."It was just a rat,relax! You're not in any trouble,you know!",She said,Putting her hand on his shoulder in an attempt to calm him...
      -----------
      You should also note that you shouldn't use too many dialogue tags or else it'd be annoying,like what I did in the example.You could use them if you feel like readers are starting to lose track of the speaker behind the dialogue (If there are multiple characters who are talking).
      You would also put dialogue tags if there's an additional action after it,like "He proudly exaggerated while he put one of the boxes where he thinks it belongs." or "I said,Trying hard to not lose sight of the guiding path".
      This is my personal opinion and a thought,so please listen to other writers' advices before you determine whether mine is good or bad.Her video should be able to help you figure out some more mistakes in writing to avoid.

    • @novemberninth4392
      @novemberninth4392 Před 3 lety +5

      *v e r b a l i z e d*
      ...why

  • @pupukachu
    @pupukachu Před 5 lety +201

    "what's the worst thing that could happen to your character? Do that thing"
    greg walked into the street and was hit by a bus, story over

  • @walexander000
    @walexander000 Před 5 lety +10

    so guilty of white room syndrome. I get so caught up in the dialogue and character interactions and I forget to actually explain/describe where they are in the scene. interestingly enough, I started to attempt writing screen plays since they are mostly based on dialogue with brief set descriptions in the header. but that was even MORE difficult. it's really a double edged sword.

  • @ellie_shrug
    @ellie_shrug Před 6 lety +129

    Well, the killing off characters thing is kind of common in my books. Like a lot. No one is safe.

  • @Ace_2
    @Ace_2 Před 5 lety +17

    I’ve been working on a book series for almost three years now, I started writing it on my iPod but then moved on to a new computer after a year. I completely re-wrote everything and worked on characters and conflicts. It’s a sci fi series about aliens and stuff
    I really put a lot of effort into it and I’m sure everybody here has too. It’s so great to see others like me writing stories🙂
    But I have to say...killing off characters is fun

  • @violetlavi2207
    @violetlavi2207 Před 5 lety +11

    Rick Riordan does multiple POVs though, and I kinda envy him for balancing so many characters XD

  • @ashnikfield4224
    @ashnikfield4224 Před 5 lety +15

    In my fantasy world, a lot of bad things happen to my characters! One of them gets really bad heat stroke and passes out for a long time, one gets their leg smashed by a rock, my main character gets bit by a poisonous spider and almost dies, one gets her foot slashed by a sharp tree branch, etc. I’m not afraid to give them injuries or conflict. It’s fun to put that in since it makes the story exciting

    • @ashnikfield4224
      @ashnikfield4224 Před 5 lety +3

      I’m not gonna kill them off YET

    • @thecakegarden5324
      @thecakegarden5324 Před 5 lety +1

      Yet

    • @user-ud7pt9bo8w
      @user-ud7pt9bo8w Před 4 lety

      This is great, sometimes I'm scared to twist my characters, but I read this tip somehere that you should sometimes be careful with all the damage, because too many tragedies with no consequences to the story makes readers less scared for the characters.

  • @Emo_Squirtle
    @Emo_Squirtle Před 7 lety +191

    I feel like the Info dumping thing is a first book first draft must, especially if you don't yet know your book and the world yet. The real problem is when it stays there in the second draft and beyond.
    "Murder is fun! MuRdEr!!" Hahahahaha yes
    Also dying at the dialogue tag example and grammar lesson
    I'm hella guilty of most of these at one point in my writing or another.

    • @kaidrewry4378
      @kaidrewry4378 Před 6 lety +1

      Alex Tamburro agreed

    • @harveythepooka
      @harveythepooka Před 6 lety +12

      It depends on how much planning you do before you start. If you have everything planned out there's no reason to info dump. Honestly, even in a 1st draft there is no excuse. Just write your info dump, and then cut it and put it in a notes or world building file and that's that. If you know you're writing something you're going to take out later then why leave it?

    • @grizzly228
      @grizzly228 Před 6 lety +7

      Alex Tamburro I use multiple spreadsheets and outlines to figure out my fantasy world so that it is written out and planned. But I try not to bring it up on the story unless it adds to it. For instance my world has different month names and names of days and holidays, but it never came up in the story. Only once did I mention the name of a month. But it was good to have it in my head so I knew what it was and it flowed naturally. Wasn’t forced into a “info dump.” Just my two cents.

    • @flyflittyfleefly2125
      @flyflittyfleefly2125 Před 6 lety +7

      Alex Tamburro I absolutely agree. Info dumping in the first draft actually helps me so much. It’s so helpful to get everything down on paper. It might not be pleasant to read, but you can fix it all in the second drafts

    • @kaitzi
      @kaitzi Před 6 lety +5

      I agree harvey - it's so much easier to add than detract, and although we know a draft is just that, you shouldn't put anything in your draft you absolutely know wouldn't be in your final. Like, stuff where you're not sure, or stuff you'll definitely need to clean up, sure, but stuff where you say, "I'm going to write this then definitely cut this" why write it (there) at all? I think it's much better to keep a background page or file - if the stuff isn't going to be in the end story anyway, it allows you to reference your world without slogging through the story, and doesn't allow you to forget to cut things out.

  • @kevinpickell715
    @kevinpickell715 Před 5 lety +10

    I do single character POV per scene. It is actually sorta like first person POV disguised as third-person POV. Each scene is written with one character's POV no exceptions. I do switch POV from character to character but never do I have multiple POV in any one scene. If I wanna switch POV to another character I go four spaces down and start a new scene. Totally agree with your advice on dialogue tags; 95% of time it is he said or she said, very few adverbs added. Some good advice I would add is never contract words in narration. It's good to do it in dialogue but in narration I always write could not instead of couldn't or did not instead of didn't. It drives me bananas to see writers writing the narrative so similar to dialogue. You want definition between narration, description, and dialogue, which are the three pillars of fiction.

  • @lharamae5775
    @lharamae5775 Před 6 lety +164

    When you're a tragedy fan who's planning to start a book😈

  • @ImmortalSelkie
    @ImmortalSelkie Před 4 lety +6

    This is great, all through English class when learning to write all my teacher preached was DONT USE SAID ANYTHING BUT SAID.
    Apparently it was for people who don't know how to use a dictionary.
    Said is a good word.

  • @IceRiver1020
    @IceRiver1020 Před 6 lety +12

    When I'm reading a book and the word "ejaculated" comes up as a dialogue tag it takes me out of the story for a moment, it's such a weird word to use for a dialogue tag. Literally, I've seen that word used in a published piece of work.
    White room syndrome is something I struggle with too, I tend to focus so much on the characters that I forget to write about the environment.

    • @rullahalhassan6686
      @rullahalhassan6686 Před 4 lety

      Have the characters interact with the environment, Like when they look away they see the paintings on the wall, or when their angry they throw books off the bookshelf. Not too much tho

  • @katsukibakugou170
    @katsukibakugou170 Před 4 lety +4

    I’ve been writing ever since i was 9, I’m 29 right now, and i still suck at writing, i sometimes don’t even place a POV in my drafted fanfics.
    "SANS, WAKE UP LAZYBONES" Papyrus said in annoyance. Sans was still asleep peacefully on the living room couch for the past 7 hours even he knew that he had to go to sentry duty. as much as Papyrus loved his brother, he sometimes wished that he would be more active when it came to sentry duty.
    I also use a story circle called "The Heroes Journey" by John Campbell whenever i make sci-fi, adventure, fantasy, and/or romance fanfics

  • @cvhoneybee
    @cvhoneybee Před 7 lety +68

    Ugh! Info-dumping...first draft I feel it is inevitable and it'll be there, but I think once you recognize it then it's easier to cut out.
    When I first started writing my main character was always beautiful/hunky and handsome and had no flaws, but now I've grown out of that and it all came with practice. And you are so right when I first start writing I never wanted anything too terrible to happen to them and now I'm like abusing them lol! Oh and I strongly dislike when a book has multiple POV, like two or three fine, but more than that ugh I have a lot of opinions and feelings on that as well, so I look for to a video on that.
    He ejaculated! HAHAHAHA! :):):)
    Great video, Alexa!

    • @AlexaDonne
      @AlexaDonne  Před 7 lety +11

      Thank you! And YES I think these are things we naturally grow out of, and then it's SO FUN to torture characters haha. :D

    • @Megameatloaf
      @Megameatloaf Před 6 lety +3

      It's really refreshing to see this first draft info-dumping thing is way more common then I thought. Sometimes I find it easier to just intentionally start off with over the top info dumping and world building almost as a... pre-first draft? Like zero effort into even making it an entertaining story. That way I can use it as a kinda reference to build a first draft from.
      Also I can relate to the perfect main character thing. I KNOW they need flaws but I often have a hard time making them not flawed enough... like Oh here's this space marine that has been genetically created by the army to be the perfect soldier... oh and lol he lost his arm but its ok because now he has a cyborg arm that's even stronger and even has a built in coffee machine.

    • @lyricbot8513
      @lyricbot8513 Před 5 lety +1

      I used to have a problem with this but I worked through it by the time I was 17

  • @iloveyourunclebob
    @iloveyourunclebob Před 6 lety +5

    I will say that sometimes adding an extra POV or two can save a series. I'm talking about the Red Queen. I'm obviously also talking about my own personal experience reading it. It wasn't until Evangeline that I was like okay I don't mind this anymore.

  • @mikeytheeagle510
    @mikeytheeagle510 Před 2 lety +2

    Biggest mistake is procrastinating and making things a bigger deal than they are =) Just go with the flow and create a lot! :D

  • @darrowoflykos4909
    @darrowoflykos4909 Před 4 lety +2

    I seriously love your videos. I’ve learned so much and you’ve helped give me the confidence to finally begin writing after years of putting it off. Thank you for taking the time to do these. 🙏🏼

  • @333pinkelephant333
    @333pinkelephant333 Před 6 lety +6

    I'm not a creative writer and I'm not planning on becoming one but I found this really interesting.
    I guess the problem with new writers using a lot of specific and active dialogue tags is because most of us are trained to use them in school papers. I was always searching through thesaurus when writing school papers because I thought using the same word twice was a sin worthy of F lol

    • @vantianhergheligiu12
      @vantianhergheligiu12 Před 5 lety

      As a reader I can testify that I don't really register when the writer uses "said" and whenever I pay extra attention i'm surprised how much it is used in my favorite books.

  • @jasminefeles5062
    @jasminefeles5062 Před 4 lety +74

    Alexa: so you have a male and a female character
    me: *looking at all the Drarry fanfics I wrote*

    • @ardin1437
      @ardin1437 Před 4 lety +9

      I have so many story ideas, and NONE OF THE MAIN CHARACTERS ARE STRAIGHT.

    • @Nobody-hc3fp
      @Nobody-hc3fp Před 4 lety +2

      well..all of my characters are lesbian & bi

  • @SensibleSoulHealing
    @SensibleSoulHealing Před 2 lety +2

    Your older videos are just as good as your newer ones. ❤❤❤ Thank you for being you. I love listening to you, but especially when I'm in a mental health slump and trying to get out and motivated to write. ❤

  • @suebentleyofficial3934
    @suebentleyofficial3934 Před 4 lety +2

    Still telling myself this stuff after being traditionally published for adults and children - forever. Each novel throws up new challenges. Thanks for the reminders! Appreciate it xx

  • @michelleMc2024
    @michelleMc2024 Před 5 lety +21

    Love this. White room syndrome. Oh Lord. Yes.

  • @lothcatrun4147
    @lothcatrun4147 Před 4 lety +5

    8:00
    Oo I felt that one.
    Having read the Star Wars book "A New Dawn" recently, I can say it suffered the same problem for me. Maybe because I'm biased towards one of the main characters already, but the chapters in the villain and supporting character's point of view was just... boring. LIKE WE GET IT, YOURE A CLUTZ AND KANAN HATES YOU.
    It got better about it near the end, though and I still liked the book, (I think it had a great message, "Hey, maybe Im not going to be alright, but when has it not worked out for us? I'll just have to go along with it.", basically) I just wish it actually focused on the main character more.

  • @donnaharrison636
    @donnaharrison636 Před 6 lety +2

    You are wonderful! Thank you for this. Some of these things I never would have thought of until I waded hip deep into them. A couple of these I now see I am guilty of and can start working to curb the tendency. I have liked & subscribed & will also share.

  • @meepbeep2029
    @meepbeep2029 Před 4 lety +1

    I gotta say I really enjoy your content, Im not planning on writing any books but I have a shit-ton of OCs and your advice gives me a hell of a lot of help in writing characters and stories! Keep up the good work!

  • @midnight-light
    @midnight-light Před 2 lety +7

    The more I watch your videos, the more I realize that my first story actually doesn't suck as much as I thought it would 😂 but I'm still new to writing stories (´∩。 ᵕ 。∩`) thanks for your guidance

  • @pokelynke8232
    @pokelynke8232 Před 5 lety +4

    I know I've got something bad happening to my characters when I want to cry. I don't cry often.
    I still have white room syndrome. I understand the rough draft being like that, but, usually in editing some places can stay like that... Okay most. Don't judge me.

  • @dairefaust1185
    @dairefaust1185 Před 4 lety +2

    Love these tips. The multiple POV issue drives me nuts even with big name authors. I have skipped whole chapters in some books because I really could not bring myself to care about that person (sometimes I have to go back and drum up some give-a-damn because I missed some key information in that chapter). Its just frustrating and I love that you acknowledged it.

  • @hannahjcattanach3324
    @hannahjcattanach3324 Před 4 lety +1

    Great list :) I'm halfway through my own first novel and information like this in one place is so helpful!

  • @skylar7720
    @skylar7720 Před 5 lety +82

    I killed one of my main characters in the first 30 pages whoops

    • @emvuosku4219
      @emvuosku4219 Před 5 lety +7

      @Blood in the Water well, Magnus Chase is a trilogy where basically all characters are either dead or immortal..

    • @robinlawnmower42
      @robinlawnmower42 Před 4 lety +1

      @@emvuosku4219 yes, but dying is part of their characters. They technically have to die in order to be a part of the series.

    • @emvuosku4219
      @emvuosku4219 Před 4 lety +4

      @@robinlawnmower42 exactly, that's why writing advice should never be taken as rock-hard rules. Pretty much everything works when the writer knows what they're doing.

    • @Ashley-zh4qj
      @Ashley-zh4qj Před 4 lety +3

      I killed one of my main characters after like fifteen pages. Poor, poor River. So misunderstood.

    • @jirahjashmiermacalino7556
      @jirahjashmiermacalino7556 Před 4 lety

      .......I am so happy I’m not one of your guys characters....

  • @evieni1465
    @evieni1465 Před 4 lety +3

    If I had never heard or read a single piece of writing advice, by now I'd probably have been a published author.

  • @lindsayh.8503
    @lindsayh.8503 Před 5 lety +1

    “Walk before you run!” Yup, you just sold me on POV narrative’s! You’re so right! All the other videos that discuss this doesn’t quite hit the nail on the head like you do. Thanks! 😘💕👍🏻

  • @rachela2659
    @rachela2659 Před 4 lety +1

    8:06 YES. I am SO guilty of skipping through uninteresting character pov's when I read. Watching the video, I am pretty glad that I've conquered most of these things in my writing! Still, I have a long way to go. I am procrastinating writing right now.
    Side note: I love that you support fanfic, Alexa Donne. It's what made me want to write, read, and discover. After watching a few of your videos and thinking about it, I think I have conquered most of these issues by binge-reading fanfic. It's a great never-ending cycle: I read one, search for better ones, search through fic recs, and then when I can't find the writing I'm looking for, I write it myself.

    • @rachela2659
      @rachela2659 Před 4 lety

      @Riley Harper Correction: I used to do it. Now, I think I'm better at it. Although I usually avoid reading poorly done pov's because that is generally what happens. I get frustrated or bored.

  • @Gummybunnybearsmiles
    @Gummybunnybearsmiles Před 6 lety +4

    I read a book once with 5 different points of views and I just had to scrap reading it despite liking the plot because it was just impossible to follow 🙄

  • @dariakey5318
    @dariakey5318 Před 6 lety +26

    Really useful and nesessary (nope) remark from a foreigner. I liked how you explained the punctuation in dialogue, because in my native language it is completely different. If we use quotation mark, we should put a comma after it, It is so annoying when people confuse them. Pleasing to know that in English it is also this irritating,)))

  • @hannahmorgan2256
    @hannahmorgan2256 Před 4 lety

    Such good points! I love your spunk and personality. Thank you so much for these tips, they're so helpful!

  • @englishnerd5580
    @englishnerd5580 Před 5 lety +1

    These are great! My list would look really similar. I see these things all the time.

  • @pmvids739
    @pmvids739 Před 4 lety +3

    4:58 I'm thinking the same exact way! Hmmm How to make her suffer? What's the most awful thing that could happen.... All day and night I'm thinking about continuing the story in my book. I can't live without writing. That's me❤️🙄

  • @wizcoolc1
    @wizcoolc1 Před 6 lety +3

    excellent video very helpful

  • @reina4770
    @reina4770 Před 5 lety

    YOU ARE SO HELPFUL! Your videos are literally a godsend for me!

  • @Ldychubb
    @Ldychubb Před 6 lety +2

    Great video! Thank you so much!!!!! I’m so nervous to start writing an idea that I have, because of a few of these things. 😍

  • @Faerieshimmer
    @Faerieshimmer Před 5 lety +4

    Alexa, how do you now when you chapter is complete? How do you know if your characters are over dramatic? If the dialogue is interesting? If the characters are three dimensional? I am having trouble expressing emotions when’s i write facial and body language.

  • @Vickynger
    @Vickynger Před 6 lety +34

    the pov thing really drives me nuts lately... especially when ppl write smth thats mainly a romance. unless you do something really creative with the povs, we dont need more than one pov in a romance lol

  • @laurenlege3313
    @laurenlege3313 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you, very helpful and direct!

  • @s_nfl0w3r68
    @s_nfl0w3r68 Před 4 lety +2

    I’ve Been Writing Since I Was 7 Or 8 And Now I’m 11. When I Was 7 Or 8, I Made A lot Of Mistakes But Now I Make Way Less Mistakes.

  • @Mr.Lunafish
    @Mr.Lunafish Před 4 lety +3

    "Murder is fun"
    - Alexa Donne
    Love it, lol

  • @ArtyBilli
    @ArtyBilli Před 6 lety +37

    My Characters are never flawless (I figured that out 1 year ago), I come up with good plots, I describe my surroundings and everything is ready. in fact my chapter 1 always turns out strong.... But, that's it. from the second chapter, I go blank. T.T I cant come up with anything after the first chapter, even after doing all the prior homework.
    Please give me some tips to get out of that chapter 1

    • @hahanicebroskie
      @hahanicebroskie Před 6 lety +2

      Write from the character's perspective. What excites them?

    • @elliotross3217
      @elliotross3217 Před 5 lety +13

      Maybe just ignore chapters and write in scenes instead? So you're not bogged down by what should go where, and how to format, instead you're just focused on the story

    • @lizzyweber1003
      @lizzyweber1003 Před 5 lety +9

      Keep writing, even if it's rubbish, instead of trying to make your first chapter perfect before you move on. You can fix mistakes in the second draft, but first you have to actually write it!

    • @em-vo4ml
      @em-vo4ml Před 4 lety

      One thing I love to do is think about my plot and a possible scene. I don’t care where in the story it falls, but write it. I work backwards sometimes. Write ending alternatives, climax alternatives. Save them in a separate doc to refer to later on. I feel this helps you see direction a lot and motivate you forward.

    • @Ashley-zh4qj
      @Ashley-zh4qj Před 4 lety

      I suggest to give up. It's easier that way. And yes, I'm joking. Never give up on a book!

  • @GuessWho195
    @GuessWho195 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for making such a refreshing list! I've listened to a dozen that just seem to cover the same lines (don't go overboard on the adverbs!) so listening to something a little different was actually pretty helpful. I'll definitely take this into consideration

  • @McSqueeb
    @McSqueeb Před 5 lety +1

    I know this is an older video, but your bit about punctuation in dialogue tags is a thing I get just so much. Just, punctuation really gets me, lol.
    Also, you make a very good point about the multiple POV. I had an idea concerning the concept earlier tonight. Then I remembered when I read Eldest (the second book in the Eragon series), and how I really identified with only one of the couple different POVs, which made the other ones boring to me. When I read the book in 7th grade, I skipped the chapters with POVs I found boring and came back to them at the end, which was really dumb, I think.
    Also, yay for being trained in journalism! I was an editor for my college newspaper's opinions section for three years. I also dabbled in news writing.

  • @katrinamartinez8796
    @katrinamartinez8796 Před 6 lety +34

    I 've been trying to write a book for 2 years and I'm still working on my characters 😂😂😂😂 HELP ME😐

    • @walexander000
      @walexander000 Před 5 lety +9

      I've been trying to write mine for 10 :) and am slowly dying inside.....

    • @clarewithoutthei7497
      @clarewithoutthei7497 Před 5 lety

      I'll help if you still need it.

    • @luna34
      @luna34 Před 5 lety

      @@walexander000 me too...

    • @MrMuel1205
      @MrMuel1205 Před 5 lety +3

      Have a good sketch of your characters, but don't get too obsessed with mapping them out in advance. Allow their voice and personality to emerge organically - in other words, just write. As you do, you'll get a better, more natural feel for who they are as people.

    • @LadyOfTheEdits
      @LadyOfTheEdits Před 4 lety

      Well if you're passionate about it you can finish a book within a year like how I did. Though I was planning it out in my head before I started it. I mainly focused on one character. I usually make side ones up as the story moved forward. It works.

  • @MagicalSoulMindStorm
    @MagicalSoulMindStorm Před 6 lety +9

    I need to go back and look at my dialogue tags. Thanks for the informative videos. Could you do a video about standard manuscript format for fiction books? I've read many different versions of this and I'm not sure which to do. Can you just keep using a Word document or need a program like Scrivener? Chapter headings two thirds down the page, spacing, margins, and boring fonts?

    • @AlexaDonne
      @AlexaDonne  Před 6 lety

      Sure, I can do something on that! I can show everyone how I format... I do use Scrivener to export to a Word Doc, and so it does a lot of stuff for me. I don't know if my way is the way but my agent/editor haven't disowned me yet :) Great idea!

  • @summerbreeze6567
    @summerbreeze6567 Před 3 lety

    I've just found your channel thanks. The first one I watched was the "nobody cares" one, and I was hooked. I'm hoping you've nipped a few of my bad habits in the bud. Love your honest and entertaining delivery

  • @mads8301
    @mads8301 Před 4 lety

    i need to watch your whole channel omg

  • @otherlen4917
    @otherlen4917 Před 6 lety +7

    one of my fave book series had multiple povs,
    There were two characters that I just hated but there were five others that I loved and it wasnt that big of a deal untill the final book when it was mainly just the two characters I hated and my favourite characters pov wasnt even in the book even though he was one of the most important characters. I glossed over it ans dont remeber how it ended but the ones with the least amount of the two characters are fan favourites.

    • @ilariaalaimo7098
      @ilariaalaimo7098 Před 6 lety

      hi there, can you tell me the name of the series?

    • @lnopgdniii3449
      @lnopgdniii3449 Před 6 lety

      Is this tower of dawn? Yeah I know, tod isnt the last book but....😂

    • @otherlen4917
      @otherlen4917 Před 6 lety

      LNO PGDN III its not what I was talking about but yeah, I didnt like chaol much originally. I was looking forward to seeing Yrene towers though,

    • @celinegilded535
      @celinegilded535 Před 6 lety +3

      Other Helen Let me guess: you're referring to the Heroes of Olympus series, you hate Jason and Piper, and you really wanted to have a Percy POV but Blood of Olympus didn't have one

  • @ishaadhikari362
    @ishaadhikari362 Před 5 lety +3

    I am writing from the love interest(boy's) POV while I wanna keep the main character's POV(girl's) as a special element as it'd turn the table around. So is it okay or should I write it from the boy's POV only?

    • @khatunamezvrishvili6211
      @khatunamezvrishvili6211 Před 4 lety

      I think you should do both POVs. I mean, 2 aren't that many and if it adds to the story, you should.

  • @LunaVespertine
    @LunaVespertine Před 3 lety +1

    As a new writer, your channel is a breath of fresh air! I am someone who has always naturally gravitated towards writing, but I was afraid to dive in deep, do some research and actually practice writing because... well, I was afraid to discover I suck 😂. The way you talk about it is comprehensible, light-hearted and honest, making me a bit less scared to just go ahead and suck sometimes 😉

  • @PHE4_
    @PHE4_ Před 3 lety

    I love you. You're just what I've been needing.

  • @Fatcatmurph
    @Fatcatmurph Před 6 lety +8

    Hey, there's one thing I don't get about dialogue punctuation. So if a character asks a question, is the "he" or "she" capitalized? Like, is it: "Who are you?" she asked -- or is it: "Who are you?" She asked.

    • @Hoveai
      @Hoveai Před 5 lety +6

      The quotation mark replaces the comma, so it becomes a lower s. 'Who are you?' she asked. In replacing the comma it shows that it's part of the same sentence.

    • @Fatcatmurph
      @Fatcatmurph Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks for that.

    • @orpheuseclipse4236
      @orpheuseclipse4236 Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks.i didn’t even know this.damn

  • @bouenyfolefack3489
    @bouenyfolefack3489 Před 6 lety +86

    FINALLY ANOTHER WRITER WHO LIKES KILLING CHARACTERS AS MUCH AS ME!!!

    • @benfarmer-webb1016
      @benfarmer-webb1016 Před 6 lety +3

      The Last Dragon I am very new to this but I have an idea and already I know that it is probably going to be a bloodbath at the end

    • @florencepalco8081
      @florencepalco8081 Před 5 lety +1

      My friends has a problem with my stories cause I like to kill off my characters or the story would end up tragic.

    • @furiousviolet
      @furiousviolet Před 4 lety +3

      I literally love killing characters. I can’t get through an angst fic without getting the urge to make one of them die.

  • @savior5225
    @savior5225 Před 4 lety

    This really helped me 💀💀👍 all of it, JUST got started on chapter two and now have to edit it

  • @GeorginasJourney
    @GeorginasJourney Před 2 lety

    This is really helpful, thanks!

  • @cherminatorDR
    @cherminatorDR Před 6 lety +6

    Also, I don't know how to write casual dialogue between normal people.

    • @luna34
      @luna34 Před 5 lety +1

      Just think about how people talk in real life or in movies. In movies, think of a scene where two characters are talking casually. That's my two cents. :)

  • @EmaA-pu7nc
    @EmaA-pu7nc Před 5 lety +30

    So what you're saying is that some writers are sadists.
    And I'm one of them.

  • @lovegood5353
    @lovegood5353 Před 4 lety

    This was incredibly helpful!

  • @medievalterrence9691
    @medievalterrence9691 Před 5 lety +1

    I watched ONE of your videos and instantly subscribed. Now I'm committed to watching all of them. I love "no nonsense" criticism!

  • @norahughes7901
    @norahughes7901 Před 4 lety +3

    “Killing people in book is fun.”
    *WELL STEVEN KING CAN STOP HAVING FUN AND BRING MY BOI EDDIE BACK-*

  • @fourcatsandagarden
    @fourcatsandagarden Před 6 lety +30

    Watson (yes, sir Arthur conan doyle's sherlock Holmes's watson) wasn't the first time I encountered "he ejaculated" and I burst out laughing. I was in a church at the time (already an atheist but forced to go because I was sti in high school). And he ejaculated very, very often.

    • @AlexaDonne
      @AlexaDonne  Před 6 lety +9

      Yeah they used it A LOT in old books. I can't help but snort-laugh every time :D

    • @asingularity9050
      @asingularity9050 Před 6 lety +5

      I remember reading that as an adult and dying laughing. Something I didn't catch as a fourth grader.

    • @kingkiitt7355
      @kingkiitt7355 Před 6 lety +4

      The what?! Really? Oh, my.

    • @bombyx2447
      @bombyx2447 Před 6 lety +4

      First time i read it was in Tale of Two Cities. I read over it, looked back and just stared a good ten seconds before going into hysterics lmao

  • @laurenmcdonald2091
    @laurenmcdonald2091 Před 4 lety

    Thank you! This is super helpful!

  • @evelynhail9534
    @evelynhail9534 Před rokem

    What a powerful video. I feel like we all have our pet peeves and mistakes we commit, in my case I am specifically very prone to the white-room syndrome you mention.
    I adore dialogues but I am not including enough descriptions to make the reader imagine the scenery and it feels like the characters are talking floating in a white room xD
    I also overwrite: some scenes I create have no tension/conflict, people just talk and nothing happens xD They could comfortably be cut!
    Another thing I do and am not sure how it is called is when I force the characters into my plot-outline even if they might not do or say some things do to their personalities. Perhaps this is something that Architect writers do.

  • @rokzila
    @rokzila Před 6 lety +9

    IM 11 YEARS OLD AND I TRYING TO WRITE MY OWN BOOK BUT I DON T KNOWN WHAT TO WRITE.

    • @AlexaDonne
      @AlexaDonne  Před 6 lety +13

      If you don't have any specific ideas, what about writing some fanfic? It's fun and can help you learn a lot about writing, while you wait for your own ideas to come :)

    • @js-lj6tl
      @js-lj6tl Před 6 lety +5

      Also, if you don't One I what to write, or have a writers block, you could go to a random word generator and grab five or six words and string a story out of it. It might bring a really good idea to mind or you can just use it for warm-up.

    • @clarewithoutthei7497
      @clarewithoutthei7497 Před 5 lety +1

      Or you can also create a hook. A hook is like one sentence that kind of describes your book. A hook can be "a human girl gets recruited into a gang of aliens" or something. Then you ask yourself questions like "why is this good/bad?" "what was the girl like before this?" "what was she doing to find herself in this situation?"
      Take some time to think about all these questions. Develop a beginning, middle and end before diving deeper into the plot, outlining fine detail and character traits and before you know it, you have a story!

    • @ResidentEvilBiohazard
      @ResidentEvilBiohazard Před 5 lety +1

      Take a moment you remember feeling really sad. Think about how you handled it...but then think about someone with a different gender, different family life, different friends may handle it. Then keep building from there. You may just stumble across a character you want to learn more about and see how they resolve the situation you faced and the problems they face.

  • @nikolagacek2348
    @nikolagacek2348 Před 6 lety +2

    I kind of disagree (somewhat agree) the the multiple points of views; i think that if your story is complex enough where there are multiple large subplots linking in to make a large main plot then multiple points of views are warranted. I also think it depends on genre. I have never read a good fantasy book with ine point of view. Ever. And 70%of my 200 book collection is fantasy.
    Books like that where worlds are complex, the plot is complex need more than one view point. How else are you supposed to move the plot along? The issue is that most nee writers don't do it well. Fantasy is a hard genre to write in, especially with multiple povs.
    But i do agree that in some cases, more like genres, there should only be one pov; contemporary, historical, romance etc. They rarely need 2, never mind five.
    Sorry i rambled lol! I'm plotting a fantasy trilogy and I've planned to chapter 40 so I'm just over wired and my brain is a little like mush.

    • @99PercentOffFreeHugs
      @99PercentOffFreeHugs Před 6 lety

      I for sure think this is a fantasy thing. More so if you are used to reading non YA fantasy novels. I'm a fan of both at the moment but I grew up on things like A Spell for Chameleon which would have been impossible without multiple POV. I believe though this writer is giving advice based on the kind of stories she writes and it's nice to hear :) I think she means not to add POV just for the sake of it. If it adds something or is necessary then you are certainly correct.

    • @teganmartin8751
      @teganmartin8751 Před 5 lety

      Totally agree - it is a stylistic choice that can be used really effectively, and done well you should want to return to the character POV you just read as each chapter ends

  • @strawberry.sunshine
    @strawberry.sunshine Před 5 lety +1

    This was cool. It actually made me feel more confident about my plans.

  • @kassimkhankhan3875
    @kassimkhankhan3875 Před 6 lety

    I am guilty of everyone of the mistakes that you pointed out. Thanks and I will love to see the video on white room syndrome

  • @EmaA-pu7nc
    @EmaA-pu7nc Před 5 lety +3

    I also have a problem with the shit-ton of POVs. Usually it's because I have three main characters who are facing different dilemmas in life.

  • @delta_yd
    @delta_yd Před 5 lety +3

    Book: "He eJACULATED!"
    Me: "Uhh ok"

  • @RichardLoweJr1
    @RichardLoweJr1 Před 5 lety

    Yep, most stories need a LOT more conflict. Great video.

  • @catcreme
    @catcreme Před 6 lety +1

    I'm slowly getting better at all of these the more I write, even if it's just a tiny snippet of something or an idea. But since English is my second language I think it's a lot harder to get everything right, bc I love pretty words and I want to include them EVERYWHERE

  • @WrenchMonkey91
    @WrenchMonkey91 Před 5 lety +12

    god i think stephen king needs to take the first two points to heart, i hate so many of his books because he has to over describe everything to death. he could turn a simple uneventful trip to the kitchen to make a sandwhich into a whole chapter.

    • @morbid333
      @morbid333 Před 5 lety

      And how many books has he sold?

    • @WrenchMonkey91
      @WrenchMonkey91 Před 5 lety +1

      @@morbid333 I don't care how many books he's sold. A lot of his writing is boring and just a chore to read through.

  • @atlasssss6471
    @atlasssss6471 Před 5 lety +4

    Teachers are always like "NEVER USE SAID ITS SATANS WORD!" like i swear to god

  • @AucklandNZ1
    @AucklandNZ1 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for this informative video, much appreciated.

  • @chibaemi00009
    @chibaemi00009 Před 4 lety

    How I wish I have someone like you that I could consult from time to time. But all your videos will definitely make a lot of change in my first book. Thanks.

  • @lisaanderson8113
    @lisaanderson8113 Před 5 lety +1

    Love all the ideas here, although as both a reader and author, I'm not as down on creative dialog tags. There's a vast difference between a shy man saying "I love you" and whispering it. 😉 Other than that, totally agree with you. Especially about punctuation!

  • @kaylaures720
    @kaylaures720 Před 2 lety

    My huge thing is just not having conflict, thank you for this.

  • @andraspongracz5996
    @andraspongracz5996 Před 5 lety

    The title made me skeptical. Usually such videos oversimplify and don't provide too much good advice.
    It was a very good surprise, great post. Thanks a lot!

  • @marymohr2799
    @marymohr2799 Před 5 lety +1

    I love this channel, even though for the most part I write scripts instead of actual book books. I just think it's a fun format to explore a story.

  • @vivveene
    @vivveene Před 5 lety

    A novel writer is not my dream. I do want to look at other writing opportunities and for that reason I am checking out your channel. So many great nuggets.

  • @ChristopherLongAuthor
    @ChristopherLongAuthor Před 6 lety

    So helpful -- thanks!

  • @VileStorms
    @VileStorms Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the videos they are really helping me improve in my story writing abilities.

  • @bookishwriter9460
    @bookishwriter9460 Před 2 lety +1

    Fun fact, in German, the quotation mark comes first and then the comma, followed by the dialog tag. :)