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Inkabout L. Darby Gibbs

Science Fiction & Fantasy author

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  • Annals of the Dragon Dreamer
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What I’m (th)Inkingabout

Appearances are important to characterization

December 12, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Recently some of my students have been following the “scene” mode of styling their hair. I don’t fully understand the term, but it appears to be a kinder, gentler version of emo, not dark or requiring heavy makeup or dyed hair.  But it does create a look that tends to ride the edge of the norm.  So I was thinking how one day a student can look like the average girl next door, reliable, kind, quiet.  The next day she walks in and a statement is made that marks her as not one of the group, not the girl next door but the one across the street that people make up rumors about.  The girl that is not “bad” but is not greeted by everyone.

That is what characterization is.  Small shifts from the norm that make the character stand out with a certain image immediately created by a part in the hair made so far to the left that the bangs must lay low across the forehead. The long hair is all brought forward to the front, so a split occurs in the back at the neck line, as though the person only has a front she shows to everyone, the back similar to the facade of a building put up for a movie set.  The front looks real enough, but the back lacks all the depth of a real building.  This can be used to create character.  Certainly the real live girl, has depth, but in the novel or short story, such a “front” can act as a thin veneer hiding the reality within.  It builds mystery, which one might believe is the purpose of the “scene” image for these teenage girls I teach.

Filed Under: Writing Meditations Tagged With: characterization, creative writing, description, plots, scene, Tools for writing, Writing

Tuesday prompt: #51 2012

December 11, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

For today’s prompt, go a little Gothic.  Poem or short story, throw in some mystery, a dash of ghostly visitations, a good dollop of stormy weather, a secret and for the climax, conflagration.  If it helps, add some heavy eyeliner to put yourself in the mood.  Think dark, stormy and someone hiding in the attic.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, plots, Tools for writing, Writing, Writing prompt

My internal critic knows no bounderies

December 5, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

I have only been writing to publish for about a year and a half.  But in that time, I have noticed an interesting phenomenon:  My internal critic is after everybody.  In the past, when I was just thinking about writing but not really giving it much of my time, I could just sit back and enjoy reading a book. Sure some books disappointed me, but they were few and far between, and the writer really had to falter in some way.  But now that I am writing my books and putting them out there for others to read, it seems I have become a lot more alert to slipping plots, weak dialogue or dropped details that seemed important but never grew into anything.  I wonder if those same books would have been a fun reading experience if I wasn’t so often editing my own work and developing my internal critic to pick up my own slipping plots, weak dialogue, dropped details or undeveloped characters and scenes. 

Have I grown an eye that cannot discern between my own work and others?  It is an interesting dilemma because I don’t want to be less alert in my own work, yet I do want to enjoy what I read.  I imagine being an English teacher isn’t giving this attentive critic any rest either or training it to take a temporary vacation.  I am reviewing some form of writing pretty much daily.  My colleagues are known to come up to me and ask if I would look over their aunt’s autobiography that she has been working on for years. Truly, I say, “No, thank you.  I have more than enough on my plate to go through.”  And I am talking about student work and have not said a single word about my own efforts to publish.   I really haven’t put out any signs saying, “Feed my obsession for editing.”  Is this a common ailment of writers?  Am I doomed to examine the bones of every book I read?

It’s one thing when I am reading A Tale of Two Cities; that one demands a deep read, but I read books just as often for entertainment at the skin deep level. In fact, I know my books are not for x-ray examination, just a sit back and take a break from reality read is what I am going for.

Writers out there, have you run into this same issue?  Is there a cure that won’t wipe out that needed critic when my own work is before me?

Filed Under: Writing Meditations Tagged With: authors, Editing, internal critic, Reading, redraft, Writing

Tuesday prompt: #50 2012

December 4, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

perfume

Think of an odor, a sensation, and an article of clothing.  Write out for each a detailed description.  Once you have each one well developed, combine them in a short scene or poem.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, Tools for writing, Writing, Writing prompt

What a writer needs along with time to write, redraft and edit:

November 29, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

  • sufficient daily exercise to keep muscle mass and tone up to snuff
  • relaxed meals which don’t require a person to determine if ten minutes is enough time to eat adequately
  • time with the people he/she loves, making sure they know they are loved
  • a chance to read a book for fun
  • opportunity to get well
  • some off time with friends, and no time limit
  • less guilt 
  • more sleep
  • a computer that behaves itself and will print when required
  • space on the desktop (one with wooden legs and drawers)
  • a pen that is not running out of ink
  • ideas sooner than just when sitting down to write a post
  • not having to schedule in a chance to brush the dog
  • more than a few minutes to play with his/her child
  • a clean house
  • writer friends
  • readers
  • less work to do after work
  • win a little lottery (a lot would just create new problems)
  • a chance to visit mom and dad
  • not feeling like one must multitask at all times (sleeping and cleaning just don’t mix)

What would you add?

Filed Under: Writing Meditations Tagged With: authors, Writing

Tuesday prompt: #49 2012

November 27, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Write in a gender different from your own and an age past your own (add or subtract about 20 years).  In this voice write about some thing of particular concern: global warming, retirement income, home loans, pet care, hair dye.  Keep it in first person and work on creating a distinct voice for your character.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, Tools for writing, Writing, Writing prompt

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