by Elizabeth Preston As readers, we root for a kiss to happen between the characters who we know are just meant to be together in a novel. When it finally happens, we inwardly cheer (okay, sometimes outwardly as well) and then move on. via Pucker Up: Writing a Kissing Scene — A Writer’s Path
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The Complications of World Building For an Author — A Writer’s Path
by Doug Lewars I enjoy writing in the Fantasy genre and World Building is a part of that. It may or may not be extensive. For example, you can simplify your life considerably if you use our existing world and just add a bit of magic here and there. J.K. Rowling uses that […] via The… Continue reading The Complications of World Building For an Author — A Writer’s Path
How Pitching a Novel is Like Being in the Secret Service — A Writer’s Path
by J.J. Hensley For seven years, I had the pleasure of being a Special Agent with the United States Secret Service. During that time, I conducted a variety of criminal investigations involving counterfeiting, check fraud, wire fraud, and even cell phone cloning. via How Pitching a Novel is Like Being in the Secret Service — A… Continue reading How Pitching a Novel is Like Being in the Secret Service — A Writer’s Path
The Puzzling Prologue Problem — A Writer’s Path
Go ahead, Google something along the lines of prologues in novels. I’ll wait. Done? If so, you’ll have found links like 7 Deadly Sins of Prologues, The Worst Ways to Begin Your Novel: Advice from Literary Agents, The Dreaded Prologue, Question: the oft-maligned prologue, and so on. Read these four pages. Did you see the following?… Continue reading The Puzzling Prologue Problem — A Writer’s Path
“If I was a painter … I don’t paint the chair, I would paint feelings about the chair.” — Art of Quotation
A record … is a statement, it’s its own statement, its own entity, rather than being about something else. If I was a painter … I don’t paint the chair, I would paint feelings about the chair. Bob Dylan, poet via “If I was a painter … I don’t paint the chair, I would paint feelings… Continue reading “If I was a painter … I don’t paint the chair, I would paint feelings about the chair.” — Art of Quotation
“The camera gave me an incredible freedom. It gave me the ability to parade through the world and look at people and things very, very closely.” — Art of Quotation
“The camera gave me an incredible freedom. It gave me the ability to parade through the world and look at people and things very, very closely.” Carrie Mae Weems, photographer via “The camera gave me an incredible freedom. It gave me the ability to parade through the world and look at people and things very, very… Continue reading “The camera gave me an incredible freedom. It gave me the ability to parade through the world and look at people and things very, very closely.” — Art of Quotation
“True happiness comes from… the zest of creating things new” — Art of Quotation
True happiness comes from the joy of deeds well done, the zest of creating things new. Antoine de Saint-Exupery, writer, French via “True happiness comes from… the zest of creating things new” — Art of Quotation
“Every creative act… involves a regression to a more primitive level, a new innocence of perception liberated from the cataract of accepted beliefs.” — Art of Quotation
Every creative act… involves a regression to a more primitive level, a new innocence of perception liberated from the cataract of accepted beliefs. Arthur Koestler, author, book quote from “The Sleepwalkers: A History of Man’s Changing Vision of the Universe“. via “Every creative act… involves a regression to a more primitive level, a new innocence of… Continue reading “Every creative act… involves a regression to a more primitive level, a new innocence of perception liberated from the cataract of accepted beliefs.” — Art of Quotation
”It is the ability to determine consciously what it is that interests him, and why, that differentiates the artist from the art student.” — Art of Quotation
”It is the ability to determine consciously what it is that interests him, and why, that differentiates the artist from the art student.” John F. Carlson, painter, author via ”It is the ability to determine consciously what it is that interests him, and why, that differentiates the artist from the art student.” — Art of Quotation
“Art is risk made visible” — Art of Quotation
“Art is risk made visible” Arno Rafael Minkkinen, Photographer Image: Saunderstown, Rhode Island, 1974 He works alone, his images are all unmanipulated, made with one exposure, with no retouching. ‘I do not use an assistant to look through the camera; otherwise she or he also becomes the photographer. Instead, I have nine seconds to get […]… Continue reading “Art is risk made visible” — Art of Quotation