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Literary Musings and Amateur Writing

@well-what-is-much / well-what-is-much.tumblr.com

where I rave about books, how much I love books, and now and again post bits of things I somehow manage to complete writing myself. PS: My original writing posts are tagged under #arshiya-writes
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Werewolf: *transforming* You have to go, now! I don’t want you to see me like this…

Human s/o: Don’t push me away! I’m not afraid of you!!

Werewolf: No no I’m just really dumb as a wolf and I don’t want you to see me bark at a mirror for two hours 

How could you hide this beautiful thing in the tags?

- Mod Naga

werewolf after waking up the next morning: I am going to kill you Human: is it because i threw werewolf: YES ITS BECAUSE YOU THREW THE STICK BUT REALLY JUST HID IT BEHIND YOUR BACK

werewolf: what happened yesterday 

Human : you need to apologize to the mailman

Werewolf: I have a headache, what happened? 

Human: You dented a car bumper with your head. 

Werewolf: I caught the car?! 

Human: It was parked. 

Werewolf: …………….. 

Human: I got it on camera. 

Werewolf: FUUUUUUUUU-

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thinking about how orpheus turning to look back at eurydice isn’t a sign of mortal frailness but a sign of love

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meduseld

“Eurydice, dying now a second time, uttered no complaint against her husband. What was there to complain of, but that she had been loved?” ― Ovid, Metamorphoses

This is true no matter the version you're reading.

1. Eurydice trips and Orpheus turns to help her because he loves her.

2. Orpheus cannot hear Eurydice behind him, and fearing that he's been tricked, turns to make sure she's there.

3. Orpheus makes it out of the Underworld, and so full of love and excitement to be with Eurydice, turns to embrace her, forgetting that they both need to be out of the Underworld.

No matter what happens in the story, Orpheus loses Eurydice because his love for her compels him to look.

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A collection of 20 poems inspired by mythology, including works on Aphrodite, Persephone and Achilles.

In my first ever chapbook publication I hope to explore some of the themes we can see in myths and in the modern world; love and life, empowerment and grief, as well as adding a new spin to the story and personality of several mythical figures. Within this collection of 20 poems 10 are brand new, never before published, and 10 are poems that have been featured on this blog before. 

Bought immediately. Love the concept! Please never stop writing. Your words are magical!

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Your character is driven by 3 emotional motives. See? I even made a graphic.

(I’m proud of the graphic, too.)

Mood: The immediate (and temporary) emotions of your character. A feeling of joy after kissing the girl they like; frustration after a busy day working a summer job at the fair; despair after somebody eats the last Oreo.

Situation: The plot and relationship contexts of your character. The apprehension they feel with a friend in the weeks following a nasty fight; the nerves felt in the week leading up to their big championship game; the frustration and boredom of being grounded after crashing the family car into the county creek.

Struggle: The core, deepfelt pain of your character, which often emerges from their background. The fear of failure from overly demanding parents; a deep longing for a family they never knew; a desperate need to be accepted after spending years as an outcast.

How these 3 motives influence your character

The above emotional motives all play an important role in driving your character’s actions, muddying or even overriding their more logical intentions — just as it happens to the rest of us. (We’re all human, after all.)

That being said, while your character’s mood and situation will shift throughout the story, their struggle will remain constant: their true north, emotionally speaking. This struggle will always be at the root of their actions, even as you swap in new situations and moods.

Take Bethany as an example

Let’s say your character’s name is Bethany, and her struggle is this: a deep fear of failure, stemming from her parents’ impossible academic expectations, which conflicts with her own desire to finally experience the life she sees passing her by.

Her actions, while primarily driven by that struggle, are going to vary quite a bit depending on her situation and mood. For example, if it’s the night before a big test, she might blow off a friend’s invitation to a party so she can study.

But if the party is a week before the big test, and she finds a handwritten invitation in her notebook from Emma (the girl on the lacrosse team she has a crush on), Bethany might act differently. Maybe she feels a lightness and warmth in her cheeks as she reads Emma’s note. Maybe she puts those textbooks away, and maybe, just maybe, she sneaks out the window and goes to the party.

But if Bethany finds the note after her parents just chewed her out for being ungrateful and not studying hard enough? Maybe Bethany doesn’t go to the party. Instead, maybe she reads Emma’s note, trembles, then rips it in two, knowing she can’t disappoint her parents like that. Then she spends the rest of the evening studying. Alone.

Mood. Situation. Struggle.

All three kinds of emotional motives are important. Your character’s struggle is the anchor, but their mood and situation are the ever-shifting masks you use to express their struggle in fresh ways. 

And by the end of the story, hopefully your character will overcome their struggle — putting away the textbooks, sneaking out the window, and meeting their crush at a party. Maybe even having their first kiss.

Whatever the character, and whatever their struggle, I’m sure you’ll do great. 

So good luck! And good writing.

— — —

Your stories are worth telling. For tips on how to craft meaning, build character-driven plots, and grow as a writer, follow my blog.

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65 LGBT Books by Black Authors

In honor of Pride Month obviously, here’s my next list! Please continue to add authors and books to this list! 

  1. The Color Purple by Alice Walker
  2. Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin
  3. Another Country by James Baldwin
  4. Tell Me How Long the Train’s Been Gone by James Baldwin
  5. Invisible Life by E. Lynn Harris
  6. Just as I am (Invisible Life #2) by E. Lynn Harris
  7. I Say a Little Prayer by E. Lynn Harris
  8. Hood Witch by Faylita Hicks
  9. You Should See Me in a Crown by Leah Johnson
  10. Full Disclosure by Camryn Garrett
  11. By Any Means Necessary by Candice Montgomery
  12. A Dream so Dark by LL McKinney
  13. The Stars and the Blackness Between Them by Junauda Petrus
  14. Build Yourself a Boat by Camonghne Felix
  15. Little and Lion by Brandy Colbert
  16. Skin Deep Magic by Craig Laurance Gidney
  17. The Summer We Got Free by Mia McKenzie
  18. Juniper Leaves by Jaz Joyner
  19. Queer Africa - Selected Stories
  20. The Yellow Brownstone by Lisa K. Stephenson
  21. Freedom in This Village by E. Lynn Harris
  22. Black Like Us: A Century of Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual African American Fiction by Devon W. Carbado
  23. In Case You Forgot by Frederick Smith and Chaz Lamar
  24. Mogul by Terrance Dean
  25. Potomac University Series by Rashid Darden
  26. The Secrets of Eden by Brandon Goode
  27. Let’s Talk About Love by Claire Kann
  28. Growing Up Girl: An Anthology of Voices from Marginalized Spaces by Michelle Sewell
  29. Talking at the Gates: A Life of James Baldwin by James Campbell
  30. Black Lesbian in White America by Anita Cornwell**
  31. If We Have to Take Tomorrow by Frank Leon, White Roberts, and Marvin K.
  32. Brother to Brother: New Writings by Black Gay Men edited by Essex Hemphill
  33. In the Life: A Black Gay Anthology by Joseph Beam
  34. Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde
  35. Real Life by Brandon Taylor
  36. Here for It by R. Eric Thomas
  37. Romance in Marseille by Claude McKay
  38. A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James
  39. Under the Udala Trees by Chinelo Okparanta
  40. The House You Pass on the Way by Jacqueline Woodson
  41. Black Deutschland by Darryl Pinckney
  42. A Visitation of Spirits by Randall Kenan
  43. Crossfire: A Litany for Survival by Staceyann Chin
  44. The Other Side of Paradise: A Memoir by Staceyann Chin
  45. Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde
  46. Felix Ever After by Kacen Callender
  47. How We Fight for Our Lives by Saeed Jones
  48. Zami: A New Spelling of My Name by Audre Lorde
  49. Don’t Call Us Dead by Danez Smith
  50. Lives of Great Men by Chike Frankie Edozien
  51. Burnt Men by Oluwasegun Romeo Oriogun**
  52. She Called Me Woman edited by Azeenarh Mohammed, Chitra Nagarajan, and Rafeeat Aliyu
  53. B-Side and Other Misheard Lyrics by L.M. Bennett
  54. For Sizakele by Yvonne “Fly” Onakeme Etaghene
  55. Black Power Barbie Volume 1: Love Lives of Heroes by Shay Youngblood
  56. Loving Her by Ann Allen Shockley
  57. No Telephone to Heaven by Michelle Cliff
  58. Something Better than Home by Leona Beasley
  59. Here Comes the Sun by Nicole Dennis-Benn
  60. Yabo by Alexis De Veaux
  61. Fragments that Remain by Steven Corbin
  62. Vanishing Rooms by Melvin Dixon
  63. Blackbird by Larry Duplechan
  64. B-Boy Blues Series by James Earl Hardy
  65. The Gilda Stories by Jewelle Gomez

**I could not find links to buy both of these books, so if anyone is able to please add them to the post!

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A Somewhat Useful Masterpost for Writers

Websites for Critique:

  • Authonomy It’s been a while since I used this website in particular, but it’s useful for helpful critique and to get your original works out there. If your book get on the top five list at the end of the month Harper Collins will read it for possible publication.
  • Teen Ink
  • Figment
  • Fiction Press
  • ReviewFuse
  • and of course… Tumblr

Other Websites:

Characters

Characters (part 2)

Naming Characters

Medical/Crime/Legal

Other Helpful Stuff

Dress Up Games  I personally like to find games that I can make my OCs with.

Free Writing Software

  • Google Docs (automatically saves as you write. 100% recommend)
  • EverNote
  • OpenOffice (a free version of Microsoft Office)

Articles

Books:

Inspirational Quotes: x x 

And I couldn’t find the original post for these so (pictures under the cut)

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studysection
Hey guys! As a writer myself, it’s hard to have a lot of resources for writing in one place. That’s why I decided to create this masterpost, and maybe make more if I find future resources. I hope you like it, and expect to see more masterposts like this in the future!

Generators

Character

Names

Plot

Setting/World-Building

Prompts

Misc

Some Tips

Just a few I found from the writing tips tag!

Vocabulary

Some Advice

Playlists

Websites and Apps

For Writing

  • ZenPen: A minimalist writing website to keep you free of distractions and in the flow.
  • The Most Dangerous Writing App: A website where you have to keep typing or all of your writing will be lost. It helps you keep writing…kind of. You can choose between a time or word count limit!
  • Evernote: An online website where you can take notes and save the product to your laptop and/or smartphone!
  • Writer, the Internet Typewriter: It’s just you and your writing, and you can save your product on the website if you create an account.
  • Wordcounter: A website to help check your word and character count, and shows words you’re using frequently.
  • Monospace: An Android app for writing on the go when you feel the inspiration, but you don’t have your laptop on you!

For Productivity

  • Tide: An app that combines a pomodoro-esque timer with nature sounds and other noises! (Google Play / Apple Store)
  • ClearFocus: An Android app with a pomodoro-type time counter to let you concentrate easier and stay productive.
  • Forest: An app with a time counter to keep you focused and off your phone, and when you complete the time limit, a tree grows in your garden! (Google Play / Apple Store)
  • SelfControl: A Mac downloadable app that blocks you from distracting mail servers, websites, and other things!

Prompt Blogs

Writing Tips Blogs

Reblogging to save a writer

Hey fellow writers! Enjoy!

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2020 Manuscript Wishlist

Hi guys! Just incase you are unaware, I am a Literary Agent at Ladderbird, a full service boutique literary agency (https://www.ladderbird.com/).

I am currently accepting queries for completed and revised young adult manuscripts. I’m yearning for stories written by underrepresented writers with their #ownvoices. Please send them ALL!!!

I am looking for character driven stories that are well written. I love myself a complicated plot with scheming, cons, and playing the long game, but the characters must drive the story forward with their own wants and emotions.

The characters themselves can be as messy as Prince Zuko or as adorable as Adora! There should be some sort of internal conflict, some inner demons that they’re fighting. Give me angsty monster girls that dream of ruling the world or burning it down.

As for genre, I find a mixture of genres THRILLING. So something like historical crime I would LOVE. In fact, universe, PLEASE send me more historical fiction. I’d love to see some contemporary thrillers and crime – a sort of YA Gone Girl would be SO COOL.

I’m NOT looking for overused tropes or stereotypes (boring!). It’s a new year and new decade. New books are being published. Give me FRESH and FUN and NEVER SEEN BEFORE.

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bettsfic

things i’ve learned as a slush reader

in the past month, i’ve read over 200 submissions for the literary organizations i volunteer with, and i want to share some of the stuff i’ve learned about writing as a slush reader.

(a slush reader is someone who reads submissions, and either declines them or pushes them through for editors/judges to make a final decision on whether or not a story will be published.)

  • a rejection does not mean you are a bad writer or that you’ve written a bad story. it’s all chaos. there’s no rhyme or reason to any of it. i was chosen as a reader for these publications because my personal taste in literature jived with the editors. that’s all it comes down to – personal taste. if your taste doesn’t match the taste of the slush readers, you’re not going to get published. there is no way you can predict that, so all you can do is keep writing and keep submitting and hope your work aligns with someone who gets what you’re trying to do. that said, there are some across-the-board things that are worth noting:
  • your story should be doing some kind of Work. what is the intention of your piece? what are you trying to comment on, explore, or do? it doesn’t have to be concise or obvious or complex, it can be literally anything in any way, but if you’re writing something just for the sake of getting published, or to validate yourself, it’s going to be pretty obvious to readers. that is not to say that self-validating work is not valuable, or that a story cannot be both Doing Something and self-validating, but readers want to see that you have something to say, some work to do other than, “i want to be a good writer.” 
  • readers will probably have made their decision by page 4. probably sooner than that depending on the quality of the writing. that means you have (if you’ve written in 12pt serif font and double-spaced, and please dear god, do these things unless you’re intentionally playing with form) about a thousand words to engage a reader. if you’ve written a short story, personal essay, or novel excerpt (sorry, cannot speak for poetry), this means your core conflict needs to have been introduced by this point and headed in some kind of direction. to put it more clearly: i need to know what’s going on. elusiveness is not your friend. i want to know: 1) who is the main character, and 2) what do they want? if you do not have these things established by page 4, your work might still be an early draft.
  • caveat being, of course, if you’re writing experimentally, in which case i hope you’ve submitted to an experimental publication. but there’s a big difference in good experimental vs bad experimental writing, and that is:
  • write with intention. intention is the difference between dancing alone in your bedroom and becoming a ballerina. both forms of dance might be good, you might be an innately talented dancer alone in your bedroom, but choreographed dancing takes discipline and practice. when it comes to writing, every sentence needs to be chosen to determine if it works for the piece. this is unfortunately one of the hardest parts about writing.
  • take risks. my least favorite stories are the ones that make me think, this has been done before. having to read hundreds of stories means repetition – i see the same themes over and over (white man feeling conflicted about cheating on his wife), the same writing styles (purple prose run-on sentences), the same characters (middle-class english teachers). i want to read words i don’t expect about stories i’ve never thought of. i want to see confidence in creativity. i want to see writing that acknowledges convention and destroys it for something better. show me newness, ingenuity, artistic expression. show me the stuff you’re afraid to write for fear of ridicule – that’s the stuff that gets published.
  • THE WORLD WANTS TO HEAR FROM FANFIC WRITERS. when i volunteered with one publication, the application involved a list of the last 15 novels i’d read. and i thought, i don’t want this gig if i can’t be brutally honest, so you bet your ass i put fanfic on there. i was accepted within a day. when i’ve told my writing mentors that i write fanfic, their faces have all lit up in excitement and they have a ton of questions. i cannot tell you how many submissions i’ve read where the interactions between characters feel stilted and normative, and all i’m looking for is the kind of dynamic tension and chemistry that fanfic authors have mastered. so if you write fanfic and don’t think you’re good enough to write “literature” i’m here to tell you, you absolutely are. 

Some advice for our followers

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jenny slate / two, sleeping at last / an oresteia, euripidies (trans. anne carson) / the chaos of stars, kiersten white

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wordsnstuff

Resources For Writing Sketchy Topics

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ironpunks
sillyedboy‌:
wordsnstuff‌:

Medicine

Writing Specific Characters

Illegal Activity

Black Market Prices & Profits

Forensics

Come join the “I’m on a government watch list after researching for my RP character” club!
This is honestly the best thing ever, now the MI6 aren’t going to kick down my door
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