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Science Fiction & Fantasy author

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creative writing

Tuesday prompt: #47 2012

November 20, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Write about appreciation.  Not just appreciating any old thing, but about appreciating the people in your life. Imagine what it would be like to go through tomorrow without them.

This evening I was driving into town along dark roads, tightened by a serious case of forever road construction, to pick up my daughter at school.  We hadn’t been sure when she would be done with her practice, so we had waited for her call telling us she would be hanging out in the parking lot of the school. So as I drove I thought for just a moment what I would do if I arrived and she wasn’t there.  I wasn’t really worried as I knew she was waiting with friends who lived close by the school, but all the same, for a moment I thought about her and how much I do appreciate her giggly hello, the way she jumps into the passenger seat as though we were off to some wild, long-awaited adventure, and the habitual slamming of the door, eliciting my usual rebuke about killing our old car.  My daughter has a habit of starting off her tales of the day with, “Guess what?”  I can never guess, but I usually supply her with some sort of outrageous, impossible event:  giant ants carried off Coach Fisher or Mindy has dyed her hair florescent pink, again, by accident.  She gives me her usual rolled eye glance, slowly shaking head of exasperation, followed by the true life events that colored her evening.  Yes, I want tomorrow to contain the giggle, the bounce, slam, “Guess what?, rolling eyes, shaking head and a new set of teenage angst stories, and the day after, too.  I would appreciate that.

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

Quick list of the books I have recommended on my blog

November 14, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

I have posted about many of the books I consider useful.  So this post is sort of a gathering of those posts in one place.  Now you don’t have to search about for them.

Grammar and revision:
Eats, Shoots and Leaves

A Writer’s Reference
Spell Friendly Dictionaries

Creative inspiration:
A Writer’s Book of Days
Lu Chi’s Wen Fu
Lu Chi’s Wen Fu 2
The Worst Case Scenario 

Good books to read:
The Catcher in the Rye
Tale of Two Cities
You’ve Got to Read This

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: advice, book, Books and blogs, creative writing, Editing, grammar, Lu Chi's Wen Fu, punctuation, redraft, resource, spelling, Tools for writing, Writing

Tuesday prompt: #46 2012

November 13, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

What’s upstairs?  Take your reader up those stairs, barefoot.  Let them feel every creak, rough edge, small nail poking up.  Make each step an adventure in itself.  Then show them what is on the second floor (or third floor, or in the attic).  But make is a slow trip where every word is ultimately connected to the object or place you will take them to. 

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

Sometimes the liars reveal the most truth: Holden Caulfield, Salinger’s Monster

November 7, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

I recently started rereading Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye.  Even though I know where Holden Caulfield is in his journey of self-deception and punishment, I still get caught up with the slow reveal of his anger.  Salinger in the first three sentences tells the reader exactly where Caulfield is and how he has yet to find balance. Still, I find myself walking along beside this struggling character, listening to what he hates in his effort to avoid what he loves.  That ongoing chatter the first person narrative provides that begins so truly as teenage angst before it begins its slow, slick slide into, well read and see for yourself.

Every writer should read it for the lesson alone of how to create a character that tells all while he thinks he has hidden all his best secrets, the quintessential unreliable narrator.  Every reader over the age of 15 should read this book.  It’s makes one grin at first hearing him say all the things every polite individual wishes he could belt out so unconsciously and honestly.  Somewhere along the line, the reader comes to a realization: Holden is not chatting at length for every teenager who wishes he could speak his mind so easily, but for his own salvation, his own need to divorce himself from his shortcomings, his desire for forgiveness, presumably from the reader, but in reality from himself.  Reader or writer, read it, read it more than once.

Filed Under: Writing Meditations Tagged With: book, Books and blogs, Catcher in the Rye, creative writing, Salinger, Tools for writing, unreliable narrator, Writing

Tuesday prompt: #44 2012

October 30, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Think about a dream you had recently (if you remember your dreams).  What about it carried the strongest emotional tug.  Focus in on that and describe it with as much detail as you can.  Try to recapture everything that carried emotion, evoked emotion or still creates a stir in your mind.  If you are not a person who remembers your dreams, how about a day dream?  The main point is to locate the strongest point of emotion and put that across.

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

Tuesday Prompt: #43 2012

October 24, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Dig out an old photo of when you were a kid.  Write about the moment it was taken. Imagine the image in black and white whether it is or not.  Keep your descriptions of colors in the grey scale. Go for the shadows, the bright spots; enrich your description by looking at the sharpness of the lines, the feelings the picture evokes and the story it is ready to tell.

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

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