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keyboard & quill

@keyboardandquill / keyboardandquill.tumblr.com

~a writeblr~ name jade pronouns she/her genres sci-fi, science fantasy wips rocket boosters, athenaeum I follow back from @jadefyre

Introduction

Hello writeblr community! I'm Jade, I'm in my 30s, I'm Canadian, and I've been creating stories for as long as I can remember.

I currently have two WIPs which you can find here (mobile-friendly links below under My Writing).

In addition to writing, I love to draw, make handmade stationery and stickers, and create RPGs and board games.

I follow back from my main, @jadefyre.

My Writing

I love writing sci-fi, especially anything to do with space or futuristic technology. Some of my favourite subgenres include cyberpunk, solarpunk, and apocalyptic fiction. I also enjoy reading or writing a good science fantasy story now and then!

Check out my current WIPs below!

  • Intro post for Athenaeum, a distantly-post-apocalyptic solarpunk science fantasy story about mending the world with the power of friendship and also the lifeblood of the planet or whatever.
  • Intro post for Rocket Boosters and Other Things You Can Find in a Post-Apocalyptic Junkyard, another post-"apocalyptic" story about a grouchy wasteland survivalist who gets saddled with a 12-year-old and two grown-ass men on a trip to the coast in search of a doctor.

I also write the occasional fanfic. :)

Resources

One of my goals in creating this writeblr is to create a series of "craft of writing" guides to help both new and seasoned writers get even better at what they do.

You can find various resources in my tag directory, linked below!

Or check out the tag #resource by keyboardandquill for my original content resources.

Tags

I try to keep everything as categorized in the tags as I can! You can check out my directory here (and if you can't access that page for whatever reason, you can also see it in post form here)

Asks/Being Tagged

Feel free to slide into my asks to tell me about your WIP! Really, you don't need an excuse. I love hearing about what other people create. (I'm also open to talking about my WIPs and OCs at any time if any of them happen to interest you ;D)

I'm also happy to be tagged in tag games (even if we aren't mutuals/haven't interacted) and am happy to participate in sending/receiving ask games too.

(Just a note: I can be quite slow to respond to asks and I'll do my best to get to them! Tag games are a hit or miss for me because sometimes they don't apply well to my WIPs or I don't have the spoons, but please don't let that stop you from tagging me :3)

Anonymous asked:
hi. can i ask how to make a good murder mystery plot twists? to add on, how to come up with a good plot twist? that's all. keep safe~

Hi Anon :)

Here are a few murder mystery prompts I just posted.

And here are some tips for plot twists.

Plot Twists

Tips

  • plot twists should grab the reader’s attention and make them second guess everything they thought they knew to be true
  • you can put them in the middle to change the course of your story and make the reader more attentive to everything that is going on
  • or you can put them at the end which would probably leave a lasting impression on the reader, because they read the whole story and thought they had it all figured out, just to be shocked and proven wrong at the very end
  • write a smaller plot twist and catch the reader off guard when you introduce the real plot twist just moments later
  • use foreshadowing. while a completely shocking plot twist can be fun, it’s even more fun when the reader didn’t expect it at all, but then realizes the clues to what was going to happen were there the whole time

Examples

  • a character the reader thought was the protagonist dies pretty early and the story just goes on
  • an unimportant character suddenly becomes very important
  • the reader gets important information that the character doesn’t have and realized where they are heading to
  • what the reader thought would be the plot suddenly turns into something else
  • a dead person suddenly comes back to life
  • a person the character thought they were communicating with turns out to have been dead the entire time
  • the major problem is solved, but it just leads into an even bigger problem
  • they had to sacrifice a lot but the world was saved - but on the last page the characters realize that it’s even worse than they thought and doom is now inevitable
  • the one sane person turns out to be the biggest psycho
  • make it seem like someone is definitely going to die in this scene, they just can’t make it out alive - but then, like a miracle, they all live. but while the characters and the reader are finally catching a breath, the character who wasn’t even in danger gets killed

I had fun with this, I love plot twists! If you want to know one of my favourite plot twists in literature, check out Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s Die Physiker (The Physicists). It’s from the 60s and a short read, because it’s a play originally, but it’s still so good and relevant today.

Hope you like this and have fun writing it!

- Jana

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Passing this info along from Bluesky at the request of a tumblr mutual who’d like to reblog it since a bunch of us found out today via some reporting in The Atlantic (which included a search link to the LibGen database) that we had at least one novel or other book stolen:

IF YOU FOUND YOUR NOVEL IN THE LIBGEN DATABASE, YOU MAY BE A CLASS MEMBER FOR THE KADREY ET AL V. META CLASS ACTION

Law firms you can contact if you're a potential class member:

Joseph Saveri Law Firm, LLP

(415) 500-6800

jsaveri@saverilawfirm.com

Mathew Butterick

(323) 968-2632

mb@buttericklaw.com

So, so many works I’ve read could be vastly improved with tightening and shaving of superfluous words. Wordiness is an easy stumbling block, as we’re used to how we talk. We’re used to how others (long ago) wrote. But times change, my friend, and so do expectations of the writer. We don’t get paid by the word in fiction. So show your smarts and say as much as you can with as much power as you can in as few words as possible.

Here are a few things you can cut without reserve to help shorten your story right now. And as you catch yourself using these words in your next draft, hit that backspace before you finish the sentence! It’s okay if you already have. You can go delete them now. No one will ever know.

Moment/Second/Minute

It’s so tempting. I am guilty of using this word like fertilizer in my first drafts. But most of the time, these words aren’t needed at all. They add nothing.

He sat down for a moment, sipping his coffee. vs. He sat down and sipped at his coffee.

But he only did it for a moment, you say!

He sat down for a moment, sipping his coffee. When the door opened a second later, he shot to his feet. vs. He sat down and sipped his coffee. The door opened, and before he could swallow his first sip, he shot to his feet.

I know, this is about making your writing more concise and my “right” example has more words than the first example. But what’s the difference? The words used in the second sentence are more tangible. They give a visual that “a second later” and “for a moment” don’t. And you could leave that part out, of course, if you’re really going for trimming word count. It doesn’t paint quite the same image, but “The door opened and he shot to his feet.” is a perfectly good sentence.

Suddenly/All of a sudden

You’ve heard this one, before, surely. These words are used…when? When you’re trying to portray suddenness. Surprise, perhaps. So why are you adding in extra words to slow down the pace?

She flipped on the TV and reclined in her chair. All of sudden, the TV flashed a bright light and the power went out. vs. She flipped on the TV and reclined in her chair. The TV flashed once before the lights went dark. The power was out.

That sense of immediacy is felt when stuff just happens. So let it happen. If it’s rhythm you’re worried about, then find more useful words to create the rhythm. Notice that I didn’t just cut “All of a sudden” out of the sentence and leave it. I reworded it a bit to make it stronger.

Finally

It can be a useful word, but more often than not, it’s just taking up space.

Really/Very

Just…delete them.

To alter a Mark Twain quote:

“Substitute ’[fucking]’ every time you’re inclined to write ‘very;’ your editor will delete it and the writing will be just as it should be.”

But seriously, if you’re saying, “She was breathing very hard.” You could just cut the “very” and say, “She was breathing hard.” Or, even better, “She was panting.” Or, EVEN BETTER: “She panted.”

Himself/herself/myself/themselves

Reflexive nouns have a specific purpose, though they can still often be avoided. They fall into the category of “use only when it’s confusing otherwise.”

Correct: He looked at himself in the mirror. Better: He looked in the mirror.
Incorrect: She gave them to Andrew and myself before leaving. Correct: She gave them to Andrew and me before leaving.
Technically correct I guess: I haven’t eaten lunch myself. (Intensive pronoun; aka waste of words) Better: I haven’t eaten lunch.

Intensive pronouns add emphasis, but that emphasis is negligible and often negated by the power of tightening your narrative.

That

You can likely cut 60% of your “that"s and your story will be unaffected. Sometimes, you do need to add a “that” here and there for clarification, but not always. And sometimes it’s just plain incorrect.

The jacket was the coolest one that he’d ever owned. vs. The jacket was the coolest one he’d ever owned.

In other cases, you might do well to substitute “that” with “which.” Though, if you’re doing this, make sure you do it properly. That change can often alter the meaning of your sentence. That can be for the better, though.

The vandalism that read “Bad Wolf” made Rose nervous. vs. The vandalism, which read “Bad Wolf,” made Rose nervous.

Do you see the difference? In the first sentence, the words are what make Rose nervous. In the second, the vandalism itself makes Rose nervous, and it happens to say “Bad Wolf.” In this case, if you’ve watched Doctor Who, then you know the first example is the correct one.

So when you’re sharing details using “that” or “which,” contemplate how important they are to meaning of the sentence to determine which type of clause you need to use.

Then

Or worse, “And then.”

It makes your writing sound a bit juvenile. Either cut it entirely, or substitute “and.”

She jumped into the pool, then hit her head on the bottom. vs. She jumped into the pool and hit her head on the bottom.
And then, after all that time, she fell asleep. vs. After all that time, she fell asleep.

Even

Sometime “even” can help emphasize a situation or behavior, but when it’s used in narrative improperly, it sounds childish and silly.

He couldn’t even breathe. vs. He couldn’t breathe.
Even with the new hair gel, his hair was terrible. (This one is fine, though you could still cut that “even” if you really wanted to…)

Just

Just…Delete it.

Breathe/breath/exhale/inhale/sigh/nod/shrug

Another one I’m so guilty of. In my first drafts, I tend to talk about how a character is breathing, or when they’re sighing like nobody’s business. I know a lot of writers who are guilty of this, too. It’s a great tool to use scarcely. In intense moments, you can let your character take a final deep breath to calm themselves. When a character almost drowns, those first few sweet breaths are important. But you readers know that people breath all the time. And just because you need a beat in your dialogue doesn’t mean you need to remind your reader that the character is still breathing or moving.

Rather/quite/somewhat

She was rather tall. She was tall. He was quite idiotic. He was idiotic. They were somewhat snazzy. They were snazzy. Why do you need those words? Kill ‘em.

Start/begin

This is a great example of fluff.

She started to run toward the shop. vs. She ran toward the shop.
He began scolding them for their performance. vs. He scolded them for their performance.

There are obviously uses for this word, like anything. He started the car. Begin your tests! But when you’re using it to slow the action and the pace of your narrative, then consider heavily if you need it. You probably don’t.

In order to/in an attempt to

Phrases that add unneeded complications, cumbersome wording…kill ‘em!

She bit down in an attempt to stop herself from screaming. vs. She bit down to stop herself from screaming.

Was able to

He was able to call. vs. He could call. OR He called.

This is one that isn’t inherently bad, but it can easily be overused and cutting it will help simplify your narrative.

Due to

Ugh. Are you trying to sound proper and stuffy? Because that’s a reason, I guess, to use this phrase…and yet it sounds like doodoo. (Yes. I’m an adult.) Rephrase. Use “Because of” or just avoid the need altogether.

We stopped due to traffic. vs. We stopped because of traffic. OR (Strength of narrative!) We stopped mid-highway. The parked cars went on beyond the curve of the road, out of sight.

Visibly/obviously/apparently/audibly

These are a sign of telling in your narrative when you should probably be showing.

She was visibly shaking. –> She shivered, hugging her upper arms. He was obviously tired. –> He yawned and tripped on his own feet as he crossed the room. They were apparently angry. –> They stomped and shouted, demanding attention. She screamed audibly. (Really?) –> She screamed.

Don’t tell your readers what emotion a character is feeling. Instead, give a few clues that they can see/hear/feel the emotion too.

While

This word has lots of legitimate uses. However, if you’re using it poorly, then your narrative reads like an Early Reader’s book, and you (unless that’s what you’re writing) probably don’t want that.

“Get it together,” he said while flipping them off. vs. “Get it together,” he said, flipping them off.

Turned

One of the classics. So overused, my friends. It’s needed on occasion, but not nearly as often as we use it. Just cut it out.

They turned toward her as they spoke. vs. They gave her their full attention as they spoke. OR They looked into her eyes. OR (Nothing. Readers don’t have to be updated on every little movement.)

Saw/looked/regarded

UGH. Regarded:Looked::Mentioned:Said

And, like “said,” many, many instances of these words can be nixed.

She saw them run for the hills. vs. They ran for the hills.

This can be tricky, I know, when you’re writing in limited-third or first POV. It’s tempting to put every action directly through your POV character’s filter. But resist that temptation! There are times when it’s appropriate, occasionally, but it can be overdone so easily.

I looked at her and said, “Please.” vs. I said,“ Please.” OR. I took her hand. “Please.”

This example sides with the breathing and the turning. It’s often an unneeded update on the tiny movements of the characters. And, again, sometimes you need that beat or that little detail in an intense moment, but not often.

Said/replied/stated/spoke/mentioned/asked/commented/yelled/cried/shouted

I’m not here to tell you to cut all your dialogue tags (please don’t). I’m also going to the last person who insists you get rid of “said.” In fact, I’m in the “said is invisible” party of writing nerds and I think, if you’re going to use a standard tag, it should be “said” 90% of the time. 

But aside from that, using as few dialogue tags as possible is a good thing. I’ll do a full post on this soon, but for now, be aware of how often you rely on these words in your dialogue and do your best not to overuse them. Use surrounding action and context to take some of the reliance off of these words. 

To-Be in all its conjugated forms

If you’re using any of this list:

am, is, are, was, were, be, being, had been

Then check yo'self. Some tenses call for an auxiliary verb. Some types of sentence do, too, not doubt about it. But many don’t, and cutting to-be verbs when you can will help tighten your writing.

We were going to the store. vs. We went to the store.
Sounds were echoing through the chamber. vs. Sounds echoed through the chamber.

To-be verbs can also be an indicator of passive voice, though they aren’t always.

He was hit by the ball. vs. The ball hit him.

Last but not least, check all of your adverbs.

Chances are, if you’re using an adverb, you could be using a single strong verb instead and giving each sentence more punch.

He ran quickly. –> He sprinted. I hit him hard. –> I socked him. She spoke quietly. –> She whispered. They ran into each other fast. –> They crashed.

So what am I supposed to do about this?

Take it to heart. Try not to let these words take over your brain as you write. Once your manuscript is finished, try this method:

Use Find and Replace. Replace any and all of the aforementioned words in ALL-CAPS. Now, if you’ve paid attention to my advice in using emphasis, then those all-caps will really stick out as you’re reading over your work and you can decide at each instance whether your usage is appropriate, or if it needs to be rewritten. As I did to this very old draft of mine from my first NaNoWriMo (in which I used every single word on this list, I’m sure).

When I used this method with my most recent WIP, I was able to cut my word count from 105k to 93k without cutting any content whatsoever. It takes a lot of work and it’s pretty tedious but the results are amazing!

It wouldn’t be the English language without exceptions, would it?

Now, there is actually an important time for intentionally using any or all of the words on this list. You know when that is?

When it fits the character’s voice. - More on this in my next post!

🎟️ this ticket is valid for abandoning one (1) WIP you’ve been feeling guilty about letting go.

one per person but if you come back in line wearing a fake mustache I definitely won’t notice

If you want to write as a job, you need to treat it like a job

Write even when you don't want to

It's true! Back before I developed my writing habits, I solved not wanting to write by having one hour per day that was Writing Software Time. At seven each afternoon, I'd open my word processor on my manuscript document, and whether I wrote or not, that window would stay open and maximized for the full hour. Now staring at an empty page isn't very fun, so I'd more often than not try writing something just to have something to do. More often than not, I'd end up writing some semi-decent stuff.

writing prompts! "young man" situations™️ edition

  1. Young man turned into goat must climb a tall mountain
  2. Flannel shirts have curse blocking abilities apparently, young man reports
  3. Young man can only get one place even if he walks in any direction
  4. Young man discovers all his sisters are witches
  5. Go wester than that, young man, this ain't the edge of the world
  6. Only a young man can enter the cave where people definitely always die
  7. Young man catches what he doesn't know is a bewitched rabbit
  8. Out in the big world, young man discovers the cost of living
  9. Really suspicious items found in young man's trashy apartment
  10. Young man could commit to becoming assassin but no
  11. Young man is but a court jester, or maybe he's just an idiot
  12. After birthday debacle, young man resolves to never age
  13. Maybe young man could find an appropriate wedding present
  14. Young man drives car so badly it becomes sentient
  15. Unicorn herder requests young man stop trying to steal one

Writers: What’s Your Biggest Struggle?

I’m working on a new class for writers, and I want to make sure it’s on a topic that actually helps. So tell me: what’s your biggest problem right now?

Got more to say or another problem I haven't listed here? Let me know in a reblog, comment, or message. I really want to make sure that my first class touches on a helpful issue.

Thanks!

Too many writers are using generative 'AI' to make their book covers, so I've written a guide on how to make your own cover for free or cheap without turning to a machine.

If you can't afford to pay an artist, you CAN make your own!

I hope this is a helpful overview that covers the basics and points to some free resources.

I annoyed my cat by writing this and not playing with her; you might find it useful?

This is a fantastic guide not only to the technical aspect of cover design but the aesthetic aspect as well!

This is GREAT STUFF. Highly recommend! Exactly the techniques I have used on covers in the past, and they look great!

Nuts and bolts

I've been using the Story Grid method for editing my latest novel and the one before it, and I have to say, I am thrilled.

I used a combination of the Story Grid and Save the Cat! Writes a Novel plotting methods, and I loved how that came out. It made writing the novel itself -- not exactly easy, but easier, and it made sure I had all the working parts of a story in place before I began.

The Story Grid's Youtube channel has been focused more on scene writing lately than overall whole novel writing, and I'm digging it. Right now I am going through my book scene by scene and filling out this very simple formula: "The MC wants X without having to Y." By the end of the scene, the MC has to either do Y to get X or refuse and do without. The tension comes from wanting something and not being able to get it without making some sort of sacrifice, no matter how small.

The thing I love the most about this is that the formula comes from years of reading and analyzing scenes, and figuring out what works in a scene and what doesn't, why a scene seems boring or flat and why other scenes pop and keep one reading. I've been able to look at scenes in my own favorite books and movies and do this little exercise and see exactly what's going on and moving the story.

In my own work, I had thought at least one chapter needed to be cut, because it didn't seem to be doing any work. But upon filling out this formula, I realized my main character does indeed have a solid want and a solid aversion. (Sebastian wants to protect Ian without letting her know he is trying to do that, because he told her he wouldn't be able to and she'd be on her own.) The want and aversion are more emotional, and he isn't even especially aware of them himself, but they are present, they are clear enough to the reader, and they add depth to the character and thus to the story. The chapter stays. Without this formula, I would have cut it without really seeing the work it was actually doing. (Spoiler alert, Sebastian isn't able to protect Ian very well without tipping his hand about what he's trying to do -- so he doesn't give up Y, and he doesn't get X.)

I'm having a lot of fun doing this, actually. I love telling stories. I want them to be the best they can be. This is helpful.

Lincoln Michel Dec 12, 2024

I’m using “TV” as a shorthand for any visual narrative art from feature length films to video games. A lot of fiction these days reads as if—as I saw Peter Raleigh put it the other day, and as I’ve discussed it before—the author is trying to describe a video playing in their mind. Often there is little or no interiority. Scenes play out in “real time” without summary. First-person POV stories describe things the character can’t see, but a distant camera could. There’s an overemphasis on characters’ outfits and facial expressions, including my personal pet peeve: the “reaction shot round-up” in which we get a description of every character’s reaction to something as if a camera was cutting between sitcom actors.

[...]

My theory is that we live in the age of visual narratives and that increasingly warps how we write. Film, TV, TikToks, and video games are culturally dominant. Most of us learn how stories work through visual mediums. This is how our brains have been taught to think about story. And so, this is how we write. I’m not suggesting there is any problem in being influenced by these artforms. I certainly am. The problem is that if you’re “thinking in TV” while writing prose, you abandon the advantages of prose without getting the advantages of TV.

[...]

When I talk with other creative writing professors, we all seem to agree that interiority is disappearing. Even in first-person POV stories, younger writers often skip describing their character’s hopes, dreams, fears, thoughts, memories, or reactions. This trend is hardly limited to young writers though. I was speaking to an editor yesterday who agreed interiority has largely vanished from commercial fiction, and I think you increasingly notice its absence even in works shelved as “literary fiction.” When interiority does appear on the page, it is often brief and redundant with the dialogue and action. All of this is a great shame. Interiority is perhaps the prime example of an advantage prose as a medium holds over other artforms.

oooh have you ever done a post about the ridiculous mandatory twist endings in old sci-fi and horror comics? Like when the guy at the end would be like "I saved the Earth from Martians because I am in fact a Vensuvian who has sworn to protect our sister planet!" with no build up whatsoever.

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Yeah, that is a good question - why do some scifi twist endings fail?

As a teenager obsessed with Rod Serling and the Twilight Zone, I bought every single one of Rod Serling’s guides to writing. I wanted to know what he knew.

The reason that Rod Serling’s twist endings work is because they “answer the question” that the story raised in the first place. They are connected to the very clear reason to even tell the story at all. Rod’s story structures were all about starting off with a question, the way he did in his script for Planet of the Apes (yes, Rod Serling wrote the script for Planet of the Apes, which makes sense, since it feels like a Twilight Zone episode): “is mankind inherently violent and self-destructive?” The plot of Planet of the Apes argues the point back and forth, and finally, we get an answer to the question: the Planet of the Apes was earth, after we destroyed ourselves. The reason the ending has “oomph” is because it answers the question that the story asked. 

My friend and fellow Rod Serling fan Brian McDonald wrote an article about this where he explains everything beautifully. Check it out. His articles are all worth reading and he’s one of the most intelligent guys I’ve run into if you want to know how to be a better writer.

According to Rod Serling, every story has three parts: proposal, argument, and conclusion. Proposal is where you express the idea the story will go over, like, “are humans violent and self destructive?” Argument is where the characters go back and forth on this, and conclusion is where you answer the question the story raised in a definitive and clear fashion. 

The reason that a lot of twist endings like those of M. Night Shyamalan’s and a lot of the 1950s horror comics fail is that they’re just a thing that happens instead of being connected to the theme of the story. 

One of the most effective and memorable “final panels” in old scifi comics is EC Comics’ “Judgment Day,” where an astronaut from an enlightened earth visits a backward planet divided between orange and blue robots, where one group has more rights than the other. The point of the story is “is prejudice permanent, and will things ever get better?” And in the final panel, the astronaut from earth takes his helmet off and reveals he is a black man, answering the question the story raised. 

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airyairyquitecontrary

IIRC “Judgment Day” was part of the inspiration for the excellent Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode “Far Beyond the Stars.”

This whole post is liquid gold for writers.

I hate I when I get an idea for a novel. Like oh no here starts the slow sad slip n’ slide to dissapointment again.

You ever been 30,000 words and hundreds of research hours into a project when you realize hey wait a minute. I don’t like this. This is bad.

Ok adding to this though that even though it is extremely relatable, this is a KNOWN thing with professional writing. 10k is often referred to as "having a pot boiling" or "having a stew" - it's the point where you often see an idea coming together and it's exciting! But THEN... 30k-50k is the point where that fun has to start coming together. In theatre, it's usually week 3 of a 5 week rehearsal period where you have to stop talking about the play and really get it all up on its feet and cohesive. In art, it's committing to what are going to be the final visible layers of colour and texture, in sculpture the moment where you're truly at the point of no return with carving out the shape.

It usually feels really bad. Because this is the point it becomes real craft. It's so, so difficult to really be able to identify if it's truly not going to be anything or you're just in the hardest part of the process, and really the only way to know is to... write through it. Write it badly. Or, if you really can't, put it in a drawer and come back to it after a few months of breathing space. Remember, you can fix so much in the edit, but you can't fix nothing!

(I say, fully looking at my latest draft of my book and considering throwing it in the bin. But my editor said exactly this to me, so I'm passing it along.)

There is also the possibility that this isn't a book; this is a component of a different book, or the part of the book that you need to have written but don't need to present to the reader. I have an unknown number of 0.5-30k segments of writing scattered through my hard drives, most of them abandoned. That's fine. When I'm knocking ideas around for a new book (as I unwisely did the other week having not first finished drafting the one I'm currently on) I will mine that deep vein of half-baked ideas and start putting them together or stripping bits out or taking a new perspective on them.

And at worst, it's practice!

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