captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: Keep it simple, fool
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/2015/01/keep-it-simple-fool.html
Wednesday, January 21, 2015. Keep it simple, fool. Today, I went looking for inspiration and found a couple of interesting writing essays from this article. One was Fairy Tale is Form, Form is Fairy Tale. By Kate Bernheimer, and the other was How to Write with Style. By Kurt Vonnegut. One of the common themes I got from both is, simply, simplicity. Fairy tales hold a key to the door fiercely locked between so-called realism and nonrealism, convention and experimentalism, psychology and abstraction. A...
pdjeliclark.wordpress.com
Published Works | Phenderson Djèlí Clark
https://pdjeliclark.wordpress.com/published-works
The Musings of a Disgruntled Haradrim . . . Skip to primary content. An annotated list of published works and where to find them, with a background story that helps me. How I manage to come up with the stories that actually get selected. Replicating that success is always the hard part. 8211; My first full length fantasy piece, picked up by a semi-pro market ezine, Heroic Fantasy Quarterly. And a hunt for a mystical spear. Earned some comparisons to the legendary Charles Saunders. The Nganga’s Nkisi.
captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: Beginnings: why should I keep reading?
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/2015/01/beginnings-why-should-i-keep-reading.html
Monday, January 26, 2015. Beginnings: why should I keep reading? I don't really like to use this space for critiquing work- it's more for learning from reading, but sometimes reading will teach you things to avoid, too. For example, I'm reading We Are Water. By Wally Lamb. I've read Lamb's books before and I fully expect the narrative to get more interesting, but for now, I'm not finding the book opening too captivating. With We Are Water. Posted by Mary Cool. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom).
captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: Dueling unreliable narrators: Gone Girl Part II
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/2015/03/dueling-unreliable-narrators-gone-girl.html
Monday, March 2, 2015. Dueling unreliable narrators: Gone Girl Part II. Amy Dunne, played by. Last week, I looked at the novel, Gone Girl. By Gillian Flynn, from the perspective of reading an unreliable narrator. I focused entirely on Nick Dunne though, and neglected the other main character, Amy Elliot Dunne, so I thought I owed her more page time. FYI: discussing any part of this book is in itself a *spoiler alert*. To recap: the structure of Gone Girl. 1 The brilliant device of the diary! Is enough to...
captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: About Me
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/p/about-captivated.html
My name is Mary Cool and I live and write in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, where I share an apartment with my husband (Mr. Cool), two cats (Wile E and Baby Gouda), and our two pet crayfish (Short Wave and Cray Cray). In addition to having a short story published at hogglepot.com. I've performed my work at the Kick Assonance. Literary series at Manhattan's KGB Bar. I also have a short story forthcoming at Storychord. In the meantime, you can find me here weekly, still trying to figure out this writing shtick.
captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: Dueling unreliable narrators: Gone Girl
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/2015/02/dueling-unreliable-narrators-gone-girl.html
Monday, February 23, 2015. Dueling unreliable narrators: Gone Girl. Well, I'm late to the party, but I finally read Gone Girl. Random House: New York, NY; 2012). By Gillian Flynn, which is a really interesting case of dueling unreliable narrators. (By the way, there's pretty much nothing you can say about this book that is not a spoiler alert. 1 He comes across as a pathetic puppy dog. Guilty puppy snipped from here. The "screen" his narration uses, if you will, is that he's basically a well-meaning, swe...
captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: Inciting incidents and the incidents that incite them
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/2015/03/inciting-incidents-and-incidents-that.html
Tuesday, March 10, 2015. Inciting incidents and the incidents that incite them. By Janet Burroway and Elizabeth Stuckey-French.). It can be surprisingly difficult to "plant" that initial seed, but it's so important to a lot of stories, because it is what will bloom into the larger meaning of the story (if you'll forgive the botanic metaphors). Anyway, I'm re-reading a YA novel that I fell in love with when I was a kid- My Name is Sus5an Smith. The 5 Is Silent. Armadillo snipped from here. Life on the page.
captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: Great expectations: happily or tragically ever after?
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/2014/12/great-expectations-happily-or.html
Monday, December 22, 2014. Great expectations: happily or tragically ever after? I'm currently reading the novel, An Untamed State. By Roxane Gay. Before this, I read an essay collection, Bad Feminist,. By the same author . In an essay entitled, "The Smooth Surfaces of Idyll," she talks about her interpretation of Untamed. Which came out the same year as the essay collection) as a kind of fairy tale:. P122 (Kindle edition). In: Roxane Gay. Bad Feminist. New York, NY: HarperCollins; 2014. Okay, this is so...
captivatedaudience.blogspot.com
Captivated Audience: The "springboard" flashback
http://captivatedaudience.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-springboard-flashback.html
Monday, May 19, 2014. For a long time, I've noticed that there's this very specific type of flashback that gets used in story structure a lot- for lack of a better term, I'll call it the "springboard" flashback, or the SBF. Plain ol' ordinary flashbacks are used pretty sparingly, and for good reason- they're boring. If we're aware that something happened in the past, it automatically has a kind of who cares? It's the novel, Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You. It's a real painting! I wanted to be in ...
wrightwrites.com
Wright Writes: August 2012
http://www.wrightwrites.com/2012_08_01_archive.html
The author of this blog is a terrible copy editor. Furthermore, he has no assistant, no lackey, no trained monkey, nor magic robot to help edit these blogs. They are written and posted with little or no review. Read at your own risk! Tuesday, August 21, 2012. A Small Fish in Small (But Crowded) Ponds. In my last blog post, I talked about how I don’t consider myself to be a real writer because I don’t make a living by writing creatively. In may spring of this year, I discovered Duotrope. That wasn’t...
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