theticklishpear:

Tomorrow is the anniversary of a decision I made to help writers think differently about what they’re writing, to give them one more perspective in a vast sea of other advice- and perspective-givers, but you’ve shown that it wasn’t a waste of time. You’ve stuck with me, and let me share with you what I know; you’ve let me encourage you, and you’ve let me in on a very special part of yourself: your stories and your dreams. Thank you! To celebrate the milestone, here’s your annual round up of what we’ve accomplished this year.

Two-Year Blogaversary masterpost
Three-Year Blogaversary masterpost

We added post series on Creature Companions, Dialogue, Relationships, Space Building, and we’ve picked up the Magic Building series again to talk about practitioner tropes. Night of Asking and the Night of Musing events continued strong, and you all indulged me with the Title Stories meme. The gmail for one-on-one consultations still doles out advice to those in need of longer conversations; the NaNo Chatzy room returned; and you tolerated my 4th State of the Blog(ger) Address. Take a look down this year’s memory lane:

Process:

Craft:

National Novel Planning Month:

National Novel Writing Month:

Grammar & Publishing:

Topical Discussions:

Book Recommendations:

Encouragement:

theticklishpear:

Tomorrow is the anniversary of a decision I made to help writers think differently about what they’re writing, to give them one more perspective in a vast sea of other advice- and perspective-givers, but you’ve shown that it wasn’t a waste of time. You’ve stuck with me, and let me share with you what I know; you’ve let me encourage you, and you’ve let me in on a very special part of yourself: your stories and your dreams. Thank you! To celebrate the milestone, here’s your annual round up of what we’ve accomplished this year.

Two-Year Blogaversary masterpost
Three-Year Blogaversary masterpost

We added post series on Creature Companions, Dialogue, Relationships, Space Building, and we’ve picked up the Magic Building series again to talk about practitioner tropes. Night of Asking and the Night of Musing events continued strong, and you all indulged me with the Title Stories meme. The gmail for one-on-one consultations still doles out advice to those in need of longer conversations; the NaNo Chatzy room returned; and you tolerated my 4th State of the Blog(ger) Address. Take a look down this year’s memory lane:

Process:

Craft:

National Novel Planning Month:

National Novel Writing Month:

Grammar & Publishing:

Topical Discussions:

Book Recommendations:

Encouragement:

Awesome Sites and Links for Writers

ghostflowerdreams:

Just about every writer out there has several go-to websites that they use when it comes to their writing. Be it for creativity, writer’s block, to put you in the mood or general writing help. These are mine and I listed them in hopes that you’ll find something that you’ll like or find something useful. I’ve also included some websites that sounded interesting, but I haven’t tried out yet.

Spelling & Grammar

  • Grammar Girl – Grammar Girl’s famous Quick and Dirty Tips (delivered via blog or podcast) will help you keep your creative writing error free.
  • The Owl – is Purdue University’s Online Writing Lab (OWL) it’s a great resource for grammar guides, style tips and other information that can help with your writing, especially academics.
  • Tip of My Tongue — have you ever had trouble of thinking of a specific word that you can’t remember what it is? Well, this site will help you narrow down your thoughts and find that word you’ve been looking for. It can be extremely frustrating when you have to stop writing because you get a stuck on a word, so this should help cut that down. 
  • Free Rice – is a great way to test your vocabulary knowledge. What’s even better about this site is that with every correct answer, they donate 10 grains of rice to the United Nations World Food Program. So, please disable your adblock since they use the ads on the site to generate the money to buy the rice.
  • HyperGrammar – the University of Ottawa offers up a one-stop guide for proper spelling, structure, and punctuation on this site.
  • AutoCrit – the AutoCrit Editing Wizard can check writing for grammar errors, clichés and other no-no’s. It also provides a number of other writing resources as well.
  • Writer’s Digest – learn how to improve your writing, find an agent, and even get published with the help of the varied blogs on this site.
  • Syntaxis – it allows you to test your knowledge of grammar with a ten-question quiz. The questions change every time you take the quiz so users are sure to be challenged each time around. It definitely helps writers know if there’s something that they need to brush up on.
  • Word Frequency Counter – this counter allows you to count the frequency usage of each word in your text.
  • EditMinion – is a free robotic copy editor that helps you to refine your writing by finding common mistakes.
  • Proofreading for Common Errors – this is a simple tutorial on proofreading your writing by Indiana University.
  • BBC – has a section for helping you with your skills, especially in writing, from grammar to spelling, to reading, to listening and to speaking.

Tools

  • Copyscape – is a free service that you can use to learn if anyone has plagiarized your work. It’s pretty useful for those that want to check for fanfiction plagiarism.
  • Plagium – is another a copy detection system, that provides a very similar service to Copyscape and uses Yahoo! rather than Google to perform its searches. Just keep in mind that searches for simple text up to 25,000 characters remains free of charge, but any larger requires credits to be purchase.
  • Write or Die – is an application for Windows, Mac and Linux which aims to eliminate writer’s block by providing consequences for procrastination.
  • Written? Kitten! – is just like Write or Die, but it’s a kinder version. They use positive reinforcement, so every time you reach a goal they reward you with an adorable picture of a kitten.
  • Fast Fingers – offers you an easy way to improve your typing skills. It’s puts you through a quick typing game that tests your typing speed and improves it at the same time. It’s also a great way for writers to warm up.

Information & Data

  • RefDesk – it has an enormous collection of reference materials, searchable databases and other great resources that can’t be found anywhere else. It’s great to use when you need to find something and check your facts.
  • Bib Me – it makes it easy to create citations, build bibliographies and acknowledge other people’s work. This is definitely something that academics will love. It’s basically a bibliography generator that automatically fills in a works cited page in MLA, APA, Chicago or Turbian formats.
  • Internet Public Library – this online library is full of resources that are free for anyone to use, from newspaper and magazine articles to special collections.
  • The Library of Congress – if you’re looking for primary documents and information, the Library of Congress is a great place to start. It has millions of items in its archives, many of which are accessible right from the website.
  • Social Security Administration: Popular Baby Names – is the most accurate list of popular names from 1879 to the present. If your character is from America and you need a name for them, this gives you a accurate list of names, just pick the state or decade that your character is from.
  • WebMD – is a handy medical database loaded with information. It’s not a substitute for a doctor, but can give you a lot of good information on diseases, symptoms, treatments, etc.
  • MedlinePlus – is the National Institutes of Health’s Web site that contains information about diseases, conditions, and wellness issues in language you can understand. It also offers reliable, up-to-date health information, anytime, anywhere, for free. 

    You can use the site to learn about the latest treatments, look up information on a drug or supplement, find out the meanings of words, or view medical videos or illustrations. You can also get links to the latest medical research on your topic or find out about clinical trials on a disease or condition.

  • Mayo Clinic – 

    is a nonprofit medical practice and medical research group.

  • World Health Organization (WHO) – is a specialized agency of the United Nations that is concerned with international public health.

    Its current priorities include communicable diseases, in particular HIV/AIDS, Ebola, malaria and tuberculosis; the mitigation of the effects of non-communicable diseases; sexual and reproductive health, development, and ageing; nutrition, food security and healthy eating; occupational health; substance abuse; and driving the development of reporting, publications, and networking.

  • Google Scholar – is an online, freely accessible search engine that lets users look for both physical and digital copies of articles. It searches a wide variety of sources, including academic publishers, universities, and preprint depositories and so on. While Google Scholar does search for print and online scholarly information, it is important to understand that the resource is not a database.
  • The Old Farmer’s Almanac – this classic almanac offers yearly information on astronomical events, weather conditions and forecasts, recipes, and gardening tips.
  • State Health Facts – Kaiser Family Foundation provides this database, full of health facts on a state-by-state basis that address everything from medicare to women’s health.
  • U.S. Census Bureau – you can learn more about the trends and demographics of America with information drawn from the Census Bureau’s online site.
  • Wikipedia – this shouldn’t be used as your sole source, but it can be a great way to get basic information and find out where to look for additional references.
  • Finding Data on the Internet – a great website that list links that can tell you where you can find the inflation rate, crime statistics, and other data.

Word References

  • RhymeZone – whether you’re writing poetry, songs, or something else entirely, you can get help rhyming words with this site.
  • Acronym Finder – with more than 565,000 human-edited entries, Acronym Finder is the world’s largest and most comprehensive dictionary of acronyms, abbreviations, and initials.
  • Symbols.com – is a unique online encyclopedia that contains everything about symbols, signs, flags and glyphs arranged by categories such as culture, country, religion, and more. 
  • OneLook Reverse Dictionary – is a dictionary that lets you describe a concept and get back a list of words and phrases related to that concept. Your description can be a few words, a sentence, a question, or even just a single word. 
  • The Alternative Dictionaries – is a site that you can look up slang words in all types of languages, including Egyptian Arabic, Cherokee, Cantonese, Norwegian and many, many others.
  • Online Etymology Dictionary – it gives you the history and derivation of any word. Etymologies are not definitions; they’re explanations of what our words meant and how they sounded 600 or 2,000 years ago.
  • MediLexicon – is a comprehensive dictionary of medical, pharmaceutical, biomedical, and health care abbreviations and acronyms.
  • Merriam Webster Online – the online version of the classic dictionary also provides a thesaurus and a medical dictionary.
  • Multilingual Dictionary – it translate whatever you need from 30 different languages with this easy-to-use site.

Writing Software

  • Open Office – why pay for Microsoft products when you can create free documents with Open Office? This open source software provides similar tools to the Microsoft Office Suite, including spreadsheets, a word processor, the ability to create multimedia presentations, and more.
  • LibreOffice – is a free and open source office suite. It was forked from OpenOffice.org in 2010, which was an open-sourced version of the earlier StarOffice. The LibreOffice suite comprises programs to do word processing, spreadsheets, slideshows, diagrams and drawings, maintain databases, and compose math formula.
  • Scrivener – is not a free program, but it’s certainly a very popular one. It’s great for organizing research, planning drafts, and writing novels, articles, short stories, and even screenplays.
  • OmmWriter – is for Mac OS X, a free simple text processor that gives you a distraction free environment. So you can focus only on your writing without being tempted or distracted by other programs on your computer. They are currently working on a Windows version of their software as well, so keep an eye out for that if you’re interested.
  • FocusWriter – is another free distraction-free writing application that keeps your writing space simple and clean without sacrificing functionality. It includes a daily goal tracker—work count and time spent writing—spell checking, real-time feedback on variables like word and page count, and tabbed document browsing. The great thing about this is that it’s available for Windows, Mac and Linux.
  • Q10 – is a free portable distraction-free writing tool for Windows. The interface includes nothing but a tiny bar at the bottom that displays the character, word, and page count—you can toggle the bar off for a totally distraction free workspace. 
  • Evernote – is a free app for your smartphone and computer that stores everything you could possibly imagine losing track of, like a boarding pass, receipt, article you want to read, to do list, or even a simple typed note. The app works brilliantly, keeping everything in sync between your computer, smartphone, or tablet. It’s definitely a useful app for writers when you have ideas on the go.
  • Storybook – this open source software can make it easier to manage your plotlines, characters, data, and other critical information while penning a novel.
  • ScriptBuddy – is a full-fledged screenplay software program. It handles the proper screenplay format automatically, so you can concentrate on your story. It is easy to use and the basic version is free.
  • TheSage – is a free application, which is a comprehensive English dictionary and thesaurus that provides a number of useful and in some cases unusual search tools.
  • Sigil – is ideal for e-book authors because it’s a free EPUB editor with a stack of essential features.
  • YWriter5 – is a free word processor and is designed for Windows XP, Vista and beyond. It’s a small but very comprehensive tool which helps you to plan your novel. It breaks your novel into chapters and scenes, helping you keep track of your work while leaving your mind free to create. You can set up deadlines, for instance, and the program’s Work Schedule report will let you know how much you’ll have to do, each day, to finish on time. You can even enter your characters, locations and items and freely organize them into scenes. This definitely sounds like it’ll be useful for NaNoWriMo writers.
  • Kingsoft Office (WPS Office) – is an office suite for Microsoft Windows, Linux, iOS and Android OS. The basic version is free to use, but a fully featured professional-grade version is also available. This software allows users to view, create and share office documents that are fully compatible with dozens of document formats, including Microsoft PowerPoint, Word and Excel. In other words, the format is similar to a Microsoft Word document (.DOC or .DOCX file) and supports formatted text, images, and advanced page formatting. Kingsoft Writer documents can be converted to Microsoft Word *.doc files in the software.

Creativity, Fun & Miscellaneous

  • National Novel Writing Month – is one of the most well-known writing challenges in the writing community, National Novel Writing Month pushes you to write 50,000 words in 30 days (for the whole month of November).
  • WritingFix – a fun site that creates writing prompts on the spot. The site currently has several options—prompts for right-brained people, for left-brained people, for kids—and is working to add prompts on classic literature, music and more.
  • Creative Writing Prompts – the site is exactly what it says. They have 100+ and more, of prompts that you can choose from.
  • My Fonts – is the world’s largest collection of fonts. You can even upload an image containing a font that you like, and this tells you what it is.
  • Story Starters – this website offers over one trillion randomly generated story starters for creative writers.
  • The Gutenberg Project – this site is perfect for those who like to read and/or have an ereader. There’s over 33,000 ebooks you can download for free. 
  • The Imagination Prompt Generator – click through the prompts to generate different ideas in response to questions like “Is there a God?” and “If your tears could speak to you, what would they say?”
  • The Phrase Finder – this handy site helps you hunt down famous phrases, along with their origins. It also offers a phrase thesaurus that can help you create headlines, lyrics, and much more.
  • Storybird – this site allows you to write a picture book. They provided the gorgeous artwork and you create the story for it, or just read the stories that others have created.
  • Language Is a Virus – the automatic prompt generator on this site can provide writers with an endless number of creative writing prompts. Other resources include writing exercises and information on dozens of different authors.

Background Noise/Music

  • SimplyNoise – a free white noise sounds that you can use to drown out everything around you and help you focus on your writing.
  • Rainy Mood – from the same founders of Simply Noise, this website offers the pleasant sound of rain and thunderstorms. There’s a slide volume control, which you can increase the intensity of the noise (gentle shower to heavy storm), thunder mode (often, few, rare), oscillation button, and a sleep timer. 
  • Coffitivity – a site that provides three background noises: Morning Murmur (a gentle hum), Lunchtime Lounge (bustling chatter), and University Undertones (campus cafe). A pause button is provided whenever you need a bladder break, and a sliding volume control to give you the freedom to find the perfect level for your needs and moods. It’s also available as an android app, iOS app, and for Mac desktop.
  • Rainy Cafe – it provides background chatter in coffee shops (similar to Coffitivity) AND the sound of rain (similar to Simply Rain). There’s also individual volume and on/off control for each sound category.
  • MyNoise: Online Fire Noise Generator – If you love the sound of fire crackling in a fireplace, this is the site for you.
  • 8tracks – is an internet radio website and everyone can listen for free, well it use to be completely free. Unlike other music oriented social network such as Pandora or Spotify, 8tracks doesn’t have commercial interruption (that’s if you get 8tracks Plus). Users create free accounts and can either browse the site and listen to other user-created mixes for as long as they like, and/or they can create their own mixes. It’s a perfect place to listen to other writer’s playlist, share yours or find music for specific characters or moods. Note: Joining is still free, however you’re now limited to 1 hour of free listening for each week (or more depending on how much people like your mixes). If you want unlimited access it’s $30 per year or $5.00 a month.

  • Playmoss with 8tracks no longer having free unlimited listening and no commercial interruptions many people looked for an alternative and Playmoss is what 8tracks use to be. It has all the same basic features that 8tracks has, only with extra goodies like unlimited skips, able to see the entire tracklist before playing, start at any point in the playlist, see how many playlists contain a certain song and even collaborate playlists with other people.

Make Reader’s Care

the-writers-society:

Having your readers care about the characters and plot is ideal, but it’s not always easy. Here are some tips to help you get your readers to care:

Plots that go nowhere.

Plots that go nowhere or characters that inspire no interest are death to your stories. If nothing interesting happens in a novel, readers are likely to put it down. If characters don’t engage the readers—their minds or emotions or curiosity—you get the same result—readers tossing aside the book without reading to the end.

So the task for writers is to engage the reader and to do so as soon as possible.

The days when a book could go 50 to 75 or more pages before the story got going are well behind us. Yes, some stories and some genres allow for a more leisurely opening. But unless you’re paying them to read or they’re reading a slow-moving novel as an exercise, today’s readers simply aren’t going to give you 50 pages to entice them. They have too many other uses of their time and if you can’t catch their attention in the early pages, they’re going to be gone. And they’re going to carry their impression of your poor writing skills with them, to be brought out any time they see your name on a book jacket.

You typically only get one chance to ensnare readers and once you fail to do that, it’s likely you won’t get another chance. Not with the same story.

My advice for you today is simple—make readers care. And do it early in the story. And then do it often throughout the story.

And while you’re at it, use different techniques and characters to ensure that readers have something interesting to read as they follow your characters chapter by chapter to the story’s conclusion.

In every story, in every scene, for every event—make readers care.

You never want a reader saying, “So what? What’s the purpose of this scene [or event]?”

Even when readers don’t understand the purpose of every bit of action or every line of dialogue, you still want them paying attention and interested. You want them involved. And they become involved when the plot and characters are involving.

You want readers engaged, caring about what happens to your characters or what happens next. You want readers sitting up and paying attention, eager to not miss one word or one little event.

Write so that readers pay attention. Make them care about what’s happening and what might happen. Make them anticipate and fear the possibilities that you’ve tantalizingly woven into your text.

Opening Pages

In your early pages, unless you’re writing a series, everything is new to the reader. You’ve got dozens of ways to interest readers who come to your novel wanting to be enticed into your fictional world. You can—

introduce an unforgettable character

establish an intriguing world

paint an irresistible tone or mood

dump readers into compelling action

Readers are predisposed to want to enjoy your novel: they’ve been intrigued by the cover or a blurb or the description of a friend; they know the genre and have expectations that your novel will conform to the genre specifics that they so love; they read the first couple of pages and got hooked; or maybe they’ve read another of your books. Whatever the reason, most readers want to love your story, want to get lost in your imaginary world with your imaginary characters and their oh-so-real dramas.

It doesn’t take much to entice the reader in the early pages. But it does take something.

Make the reader care about a character or about the story world right away. And then look for ways to continue making him care throughout the story.

First Third of the Book

Once a reader is hooked by the story’s beginning—truly hooked—you could go a little while on the interest you stirred in the early pages. But at some point you have to give the reader something new to think about.

The story’s original hook is not enough to see a reader through 400 pages of plot.

Once you’re beyond the introduction of plot, character, and setting, you’ve got to keep the reader’s interest. Writers typically do this with the introduction of new characters, challenges for the main characters, and action or events that shake up both characters and readers.

At this point in a piece of long fiction, you can send characters, plot, and readers off in a new direction, exploding the readers’ expectations and reminding readers that this is a new story and it won’t be going exactly where they expect it to go, no matter how much it fits genre conventions.

While you can’t always switch up your story as you approach the end—you’ve got to follow through with plot lines and character personalities that you’ve established throughout the novel—you can do a bit of shaking up in the first third of the story. A predictable story doesn’t engage the reader the same way an unfamiliar story does. A predictable story can be read with one eye while the other is engaged in different pursuits. A fresh story, one the reader can’t predict, keeps the reader’s focus. And his interest. And that’s what you want to draw from the reader—his unwavering attention and interest.

Use the first third of your story to—

  • introduce characters and their goals and motivations—this includes the antagonist and her goals and motivations
  • set up hurdles and challenges for the main characters
  • reveal some of the main characters’ strengths and weaknesses
  • write action events that move the story forward
  • deepen the quirks of your fictional world
  • make characters and readers feel a variety of emotions
  • show what’s at stake
  • give characters reasons to risk no matter what’s at stake
  • introduce a mystery or a dilemma that can’t be resolved in a single scene
  • induce reader anticipation

Make sure all scenes have a purpose. Actually, give scenes multiple purposes. Use layering to add different elements to a scene so it accomplishes several functions. All scenes should advance plot, reveal character, establish or change tone or mood, or raise the conflict level. If a scene achieves several of these purposes at the same time, you’ve written a strong scene. A cohesive scene.

Scenes with interrelated elements pull a story’s threads tight, making that story harder to unravel. Look for ways to purposely combine a scene’s elements so that the scene serves multiple needs.

Middle of the Book

Because so much happens in the middle chapters—and because so many of the events and dialogue include explanations and back story and perhaps flashbacks—the middle of a novel can get bogged down, trapping not only characters in scenes or settings for pages when they should be in and out in moments, but trapping and frustrating readers as well.

Don’t think that the middle chapters of a novel are restricted for established characters and their problems; you can always introduce new characters or reveal unknown traits of existing characters in the middle chapters, especially the early middle chapters.

You can add or take away characters midbook—and both are wonderful options as methods for shaking up your characters. And when characters are unsettled, you know you’ve got your readers unsettled. And when you’ve got their emotions involved, you know readers care.

For middle chapters, think change. Don’t allow the status quo to go undisturbed for long. You can get into a rhythm with your writing that makes every scene the same length, that gives every sentence the same structure or pattern. But sameness lulls—bores—the reader.

Break up patterns and rhythms.

Give readers a variety of scene and chapter lengths. Make sure different characters open or close chapters. Change the setting. Kill off a character. Reveal a secret. Change something. Change several somethings.

Introduce the unusual to recapture the reader’s attention. Make it imperative that readers pay attention.

Speed or slow the pace. Break something. Add in a betrayal.

Block the protagonist’s progress; frustrate the antagonist so he tries even harder to ruin the protagonist. Have friends of both protagonist and antagonist desert them. Embarrass characters so they must go to great lengths to save face.

Raise the stakes so that only a few characters can stay the course.

Use the middle chapters to—

  • reveal the true inner character of your main characters
  • take characters to and then beyond the point of no return
  • uncover elements of the fictional world/setting that help characters or hurt them
  • build the plot so events are timely and inevitable and causally related
  • show characters as vulnerable
  • stir anticipation for the climax and showdown

 The events and feel of the beginning of the middle will be different from the end of the middle—the closer a story gets to the climax, the faster it should move. Fast is a relative term, of course, and some stories won’t rush toward the end the way others will, but all stories should induce in the reader a sense of movement, of heading some place where something explosive will happen where events will come to a head and answers will be made known.

If readers don’t have a sense that something is going to happen, that the main character’s world isn’t at risk of unraveling, then you haven’t giving them much reason to stay with your story.

Entice them with the promise of something climactic, with the possibility of doom and a slight possibility of resounding success. But make the outcome uncertain; you do want the ending to seem inevitable once it arrives, but you don’t want it predictable. Include reasons in your middle chapters for why it’s unlikely the protagonist will succeed—his friends have deserted him; he fears his own strength but knows well his weaknesses; he’s never won against this particular opponent; what he’s trying to achieve has never been accomplished.

Those Final Chapters

Once you’ve got the reader anticipating the ending, you’ve got to deliver what you promised. And more.

The chapters that lead directly to the climax should be relentless. They should move forward, all the separate elements and pieces coming together in logical sequences that fit everything that has come before and that satisfy the reader.

The pace should definitely start to move. If the pace of your story doesn’t increase somewhere around the two-thirds mark, go back and rework your scenes from that point forward.

Increase the anticipation level in the reader. Make him wonder how you’re going to resolve the story’s major and minor problems. Move characters into place so they’re ready to play their parts.

In the final chapters, you’ve got to deliver the payoff. And it has to fit everything you’ve included up to that point. For the end chapters—

  • build to the climax
  • actually write and include a climactic scene
  • make the protagonist the one responsible for her story’s ending—this is not the time to introduce new characters or to have a secondary character save the day
  • make sure the climax takes place on stage—no summaries for the climax
  • resolve major issues—tie up loose ends
  • include a resolution—show or tell what happens to the protagonist after the final showdown with the antagonist (or with his problem)
  • show what it cost the protagonist to follow through with her convictions
  • stop the story without dragging the resolution on for pages

Some of these suggestions will obviously fit in at more than one section of a novel. The point is, you want readers engaged. And you have to consciously give them engaging material at every stage of a story. You can lose readers at any stage, but if you’re aware of that, aware of the need to entice them all the way through the novel, it’s likely that you’ll include story elements that hold their attention.

If you make readers care about your main characters and their problems, if you make every scene relevant, every bit of dialogue purposeful, then it’s more likely the readers will follow you to the final page. And if you satisfy the reader who’s gone through the entire adventure with you and your characters with an ending that pulls together every story thread you introduced, then you’ve probably earned yourself a reader for your next book.

Give readers a reason to care. Don’t give them any reason to ask so what concerning a story event or section of dialogue or character decision. Give characters stories that challenge them and that hold the interest of the reader.

Make your stories exciting for those who live through them as well as those who read the adventures you create.

Write stories that capture and hold your readers.

I hope this helped! If you have any questions, feel free to drop by my ask box!!!

Words to replace said, except this actually helps

muchymozzarella:

queenixx:

nichelle-my-belle:

imagines–assemble:

msocasey:

I got pretty fed up with looking for words to replace said because they weren’t sorted in a way I could easily use/find them for the right time. So I did some myself.

IN RESPONSE TO
Acknowledged
Answered
Protested

INPUT/JOIN CONVERSATION/ASK
Added
Implored
Inquired
Insisted
Proposed
Queried
Questioned
Recommended
Testified

GUILTY/RELUCTANCE/SORRY
Admitted
Apologized
Conceded
Confessed
Professed

FOR SOMEONE ELSE
Advised
Criticized
Suggested

JUST CHECKING
Affirmed
Agreed
Alleged
Confirmed

LOUD
Announced
Chanted
Crowed

LEWD/CUTE/SECRET SPY FEEL
Appealed
Disclosed
Moaned

ANGRY FUCK OFF MATE WANNA FIGHT
Argued
Barked
Challenged
Cursed
Fumed
Growled
Hissed
Roared
Swore

SMARTASS
Articulated
Asserted
Assured
Avowed
Claimed
Commanded
Cross-examined
Demanded
Digressed
Directed
Foretold
Instructed
Interrupted
Predicted
Proclaimed
Quoted
Theorized

ASSHOLE
Bellowed
Boasted
Bragged

NERVOUS TRAINWRECK
Babbled
Bawled
Mumbled
Sputtered
Stammered
Stuttered

SUAVE MOTHERFUCKER
Bargained
Divulged
Disclosed
Exhorted

FIRST OFF
Began

LASTLY
Concluded
Concurred

WEAK PUSY
Begged
Blurted
Complained
Cried
Faltered
Fretted

HAPPY/LOL
Cajoled
Exclaimed
Gushed
Jested
Joked
Laughed

WEIRDLY HAPPY/EXCITED
Extolled
Jabbered
Raved

BRUH, CHILL
Cautioned
Warned

ACTUALLY, YOU’RE WRONG
Chided
Contended
Corrected
Countered
Debated
Elaborated
Objected
Ranted
Retorted

CHILL SAVAGE
Commented
Continued
Observed
Surmised

LISTEN BUDDY
Enunciated
Explained
Elaborated
Hinted
Implied
Lectured
Reiterated
Recited
Reminded
Stressed

BRUH I NEED U AND U NEED ME
Confided
Offered
Urged

FINE
Consented
Decided

TOO EMO FULL OF EMOTIONS
Croaked
Lamented
Pledged
Sobbed
Sympathized
Wailed
Whimpered

JUST SAYING
Declared
Decreed
Mentioned
Noted
Pointed out
Postulated
Speculated
Stated
Told
Vouched

WASN’T ME
Denied
Lied

EVIL SMARTASS
Dictated
Equivocated
Ordered
Reprimanded
Threatened

BORED
Droned
Sighed

SHHHH IT’S QUIET TIME
Echoed
Mumbled
Murmured
Muttered
Uttered
Whispered

DRAMA QUEEN
Exaggerated
Panted
Pleaded
Prayed
Preached

OH SHIT
Gasped
Marveled
Screamed
Screeched
Shouted
Shrieked
Yelped
Yelled

ANNOYED
Grumbled
Grunted
Jeered
Quipped
Scolded
Snapped
Snarled
Sneered

ANNOYING
Nagged

I DON’T REALLY CARE BUT WHATEVER
Guessed
Ventured

I’M DRUNK OR JUST BEING WEIRDLY EXPRESSIVE FOR A POINT/SARCASM
Hooted
Howled
Yowled

I WONDER
Pondered
Voiced
Wondered

OH, YEAH, WHOOPS
Recalled
Recited
Remembered

SURPRISE BITCH
Revealed

IT SEEMS FAKE BUT OKAY/HA ACTUALLY FUNNY BUT I DON’T WANT TO LAUGH OUT LOUD
Scoffed
Snickered
Snorted

BITCHY
Tattled
Taunted
Teased

reblog to save a writer 

excellent resource

please dont use said for everything

But also please don’t avoid said

mystictrashheap:

mystictrashheap:

mystictrashheap:

mystictrashheap:

A small list of random ass sites I’ve found useful when writing:

  • Fragrantica: perfume enthusiast site that has a long list of scents. v helpful when you’re writing your guilty pleasure abo fics
  • Just One Cookbook: recipe site that centers on Japanese cuisine. Lots of different recipes to browse, plenty of inspiration so you’re not just “ramen and sushi” 
  • This comparing heights page: gives you a visual on height differences between characters
  • A page on the colors of bruises+healing stages: well just that. there you go. describe your bruises properly
  • McCormick Science Institute: yes this is a real thing. the site shows off research on spices and gives the history on them. be historically accurate or just indulge in mindless fascination. boost your restaurant au with it
  • A Glossary of Astronomy Terms: to pepper in that sweet terminology for your astrophysics major college au needs

Adding to this since I’m working on a shifter au one-shot:

More:

  • Cocktail Flow: a site with a variety of cocktails that’s pretty easy to navigate and offers photos of the drinks. You can sort by themes, strengths, type and base. My only real annoyance with this site is that the drinks are sometimes sorted into ~masculine~ and ~feminine~ but ehhhh. It’s great otherwise.
  • Tie-A-Tie: a site centered around ties, obviously. I stumbled upon it while researching tie fabrics but there’s a lot more to look at. It offers insight into dress code for events, tells you how to tie your ties, and has a section on the often forgotten about tie accessories

Even more:

So, hi! I really like your blog and i have a question: do you know some apps or “programs” (idk) for writers?

lets-get-fictional:

Hey, nonny! I’m glad you like the blog, and thanks for your question ❤ 

Here’s a huge list of some writing programs I found: 


FREE

-designed to keep you focused and distraction-free

-writing and editing software to keep you focused

-free alternative to Microsoft Office

-formatting and publishing software

-mind-mapping and organizing program

-idea organization

-pin pages to reference later

-reminds you to write daily and tracks your writing

-transcribes audio quickly and conveniently

-a white noise player to help you focus

-minimalist writing software so you don’t get distracted

-a crowdsourced thesaurus

-writing software with a built-in thesaurus

-finds the cliches in your writing

-an extremely simple interface to help you focus when writing

-if you stop writing for more than about three seconds, it deletes everything you’ve written


PAID

-sends you a prompt every day to get you writing

-reviews and evaluates your writing for grammar and other mistakes

-a simple writing program that allows you to set goals for yourself

-a writing interface that encourages you to write 750 words (about three pages) every day, and allows you to analyse your writing. my personal favourite. 

-an interface where you can only see the last letter you wrote, to help cure writer’s block


I hope that helped you out! (Side note: most of the paid programs have free trials.) If you have another question, feel free to ask us! 

-Mod Gen


If you need advice on general writing or fanfiction, you should maybe ask us!

earthrune:

mammoth-rising:

blue-author:

whathasbeenlost:

HEY WRITERS OF ALL KINDS AND AGES AND MAYBE EVEN DNDERS OR TABLETOP GAMERS ARE YOU READY FOR SOMETHING SUPER RAD? I HOPE SO ‘CAUSE 

RANDOM

MAP

GENERATOR

WITH

EDITING FEATURES AVAILABLE

IT DOESN’T REALLY DO LAND MASSES OR ANYTHING BUT IT SURE AS HELL WILL MAP THAT CITY/VILLAGE/SHIP/DUNGEON/WHATEVER THAT YOU’VE BEEN MEANING TO MAP OUT FOR YOU

SO FUCKING GO WILD

Holy moly, this changes everything.

Might be handy for making lair layouts? *3*

oh wow, this is really fun to play with!

Ambient sounds for writers

queerenbian:

icanneverbesatisfied:

queerenbian:

guysimbeingfollowed:

1000storyideas:

Find the right place to write your novel… 

Nature

Arctic ocean

Blizzard in village

Blizzard in pine forest

Blizzard from cave

Blizzard in road

Beach

Cave

Ocean storm

Ocean rocks with rain

River campfire

Forest in the morning

Forest at night

Forest creek

Rainforest creek

Rain on roof window

Rain on tarp tent

Rain on metal roof

Rain on window

Rain on pool

Rain on car at night

Seaside storm

Swamp at night

Sandstorm

Thunderstorm

Underwater

Wasteland

Winter creek

Winter wind

Winter wind in forest

Howling wind

Places

Barn with rain

Coffee shop

Restaurant with costumers

Restaurant with few costumers

Factory

Highway

Garden

Garden with pond and waterfall

Fireplace in log living room

Office 

Call center

Street market

Study room from victorian house with rain

Trailer with rain

Tent with rain

Jacuzzi with rain

Temple

Temple in afternoon

Server room

Fishing dock

Windmill

War

Fictional places

Chloe’s room (Life is Strange)

Blackwell dorm (Life is Strange)

Two Whales Diner (Life is Strange)

Star Wars apartment (Star Wars)

Star Wars penthouse (Star Wars)

Tatooine (Star Wars)

Coruscant with rain (Star Wars)

Yoda’s hut with rain ( Star Wars)

Luke’s home (Star Wars)

Death Star hangar (Star wars)

Blade Runner city (Blade Runner)

Askaban prison (Harry Potter)

Hogwarts library with rain (Harry Potter)

Ravenclaw tower (Harry Potter)

Hufflepuff common room (Harry Potter)

Slytherin common room (Harry Potter)

Gryffindor common room (Harry Potter)

Hagrid’s hut (Harry Potter)

Hobbit-hole house (The Hobbit)

Diamond City (Fallout 4)

Cloud City beach (Bioshock)

Founding Fathers Garden (Bioshock)

Things

Dishwasher

Washing machine

Fireplace

Transportation

Boat engine room

Cruising boat

Train ride

Train ride in the rain

Train station

Plane trip

Private jet cabin

Airplane cabin

Airport lobby

First class jet

Sailboat

Submarine

Historical

Fireplace in medieval tavern

Medieval town

Medieval docks

Medieval city

Pirate ship in tropical port

Ship on rough sea

Ship cabin

Ship sleeping quarter

Titanic first class dining room

Old west saloon

Sci-fi

Spaceship bedroom

Space station

Cyberpunk tearoom

Cyberpunk street with rain

Futuristic server room

Futuristic apartment with typing

Futuristic rooftop garden 

Steampunk balcony rain

Post-apocalyptic

Harbor with rain

City with rain

City ruins turned swamp

Rusty sewers

Train station

Lighthouse

Horror

Haunted mansion

Haunted road to tavern

Halloween

Stormy night

Asylum

Creepy forest

Cornfield

World

New York

Paris

Paris bistro

Tokyo street

Chinese hotel lobby

Asian street at nightfall

Asian night market

Cantonese restaurant

Coffee shop in Japan

Coffee shop in Paris

Coffee shop in Korea

British library

Trips, rides and walkings

Trondheim – Bodø

Amsterdam – Brussels

Glasgow – Edinburgh

Oxford – Marylebone

Seoul – Busan

Gangneung – Yeongju

Hiroshima

Tokyo metro

Osaka – Kyoto

Osaka – Kobe

London

São Paulo

Seoul

Tokyo

Bangkok

Ho Chi Minh (Saigon)

Alps

New York

Hong Kong

Taipei

Beautiful

@icanneverbesatisfied @maybe-mikala I HAVE FOUND THE ULTIMATE RESOURCE

I LOVE YOU FOR THIS

HONESTLY I CAN DIE HAPPY NOW