Hey all,
It's been a while since I've last posted, and it's given me a lot of time to work on my writing. I want to make sure people don't "jump the gun" on each other anymore, or judge the book by it's rather short introduction. Just a few things, and maybe we can come to a general consensus about these thoughts together:
1. Just because an introduction is short, doesn't mean it's bad. To a certain extent, I soemtimes prefer to write shorter intros. That being said, you should at least have three sentences. Anything around there or less would most likely need work. Also, if the writer is making all of his chapters small, that's still no reason to judge. I know James Patterson wrote a series called Maximum Ride, where the longest chapter was 3 pages. However, it was a very long book (And the series is still going-the last book's coming out soon) and each chapter was very detailed and well written. The moral here is that quantity isn't a bad thing to have, but sometimes quality can take its place.
2. Dialogue-the never ending debate (As to sound dramatic about it). There is a point where if someone is only putting dialogue and not even tags, then they may want to revise their story. However, I've seen that dialogue isn't a demon or whatever we call it. Some people prefer (Like me) to write with a lot of description. Everyone has their own style of writing, and trying to adapt others to our way is wrong. We'd be taking away what makes them their own writer, and making them our writer. I don't like it, and I feel bad about it. Moral: Dialogue can just be someone's writing style, and isn't necesarily a bad thing. But fitting in a little something to describe a scene here or there wouldn't be too bad.
3. The biggy: Age. I know there have been numerous descrepencies along this line (Too young to be judged, using it as an excuse, etc), but I think it comes down to this: if you wanted only praises and positive feedback, either state that at the beginning of the story or only show it to your friends and family. I don't want to sound mean, but I think it's better for us to be honest and give advice-that doesn't mean going crazy on people, but maybe offering helpful hints here and there. Moral: Specify if you don't want advice and just want positive stuff or whatever, otherwise if you think you have some tips to offer feel free to share them.
That's my 2 cents, anyways. Post comments about what I have here and what you'd add or argue with.
Thanks guys,
Sparta
It's been a while since I've last posted, and it's given me a lot of time to work on my writing. I want to make sure people don't "jump the gun" on each other anymore, or judge the book by it's rather short introduction. Just a few things, and maybe we can come to a general consensus about these thoughts together:
1. Just because an introduction is short, doesn't mean it's bad. To a certain extent, I soemtimes prefer to write shorter intros. That being said, you should at least have three sentences. Anything around there or less would most likely need work. Also, if the writer is making all of his chapters small, that's still no reason to judge. I know James Patterson wrote a series called Maximum Ride, where the longest chapter was 3 pages. However, it was a very long book (And the series is still going-the last book's coming out soon) and each chapter was very detailed and well written. The moral here is that quantity isn't a bad thing to have, but sometimes quality can take its place.
2. Dialogue-the never ending debate (As to sound dramatic about it). There is a point where if someone is only putting dialogue and not even tags, then they may want to revise their story. However, I've seen that dialogue isn't a demon or whatever we call it. Some people prefer (Like me) to write with a lot of description. Everyone has their own style of writing, and trying to adapt others to our way is wrong. We'd be taking away what makes them their own writer, and making them our writer. I don't like it, and I feel bad about it. Moral: Dialogue can just be someone's writing style, and isn't necesarily a bad thing. But fitting in a little something to describe a scene here or there wouldn't be too bad.
3. The biggy: Age. I know there have been numerous descrepencies along this line (Too young to be judged, using it as an excuse, etc), but I think it comes down to this: if you wanted only praises and positive feedback, either state that at the beginning of the story or only show it to your friends and family. I don't want to sound mean, but I think it's better for us to be honest and give advice-that doesn't mean going crazy on people, but maybe offering helpful hints here and there. Moral: Specify if you don't want advice and just want positive stuff or whatever, otherwise if you think you have some tips to offer feel free to share them.
That's my 2 cents, anyways. Post comments about what I have here and what you'd add or argue with.
Thanks guys,
Sparta