Image Credits:-
All images from Pixabay/Pexels unless otherwise stated. Somes images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos. Screenshots taken by me, Allison Symes. Book cover images from Chapeltown Books and Bridge House Publishing.
Hope you are all safe and well. UK currently experiencing Storm Eunice. Must admit I’m not impressed by her! Neither was the dog…
Facebook – General – and Chandler’s Ford Today/Authors Electric
Authors Electric
Busy night on the old blogging front as I have two separate posts to share. First up is my Authors Electric post for this month where I talk about Animals in Fiction. This is something I talked about for Chandler’s Ford Today a few weeks ago but the topic bears repeating. I share my love of animal characters and talk about what I do when I write from the viewpoint of an animal character. I’ve written from the viewpoint of a mother dragon after all! Hope you enjoy the post.
Chandler’s Ford Today
And now time for my Chandler’s Ford Today post. This week I’m looking at Frameworks in Fiction. I look at why frameworks matter, share a few of the different ones I use (and why I like to mix them up), and what can be used as a framework, even when at first glance the device in question doesn’t appear to be a framework at all! I also ask if frameworks can be too constricting. Hope you enjoy the post and find it useful.
Frameworks in Fiction
Lull between the storms in the UK right now. Take care, everyone, with Storm Eunice due tomorrow.
On a happier note, my Chandler’s Ford Today post this week will be about Frameworks in Fiction. I use a number of different ones for my flash tales and will be discussing these and why frameworks are so useful. Link up tomorrow. See above.
Don’t forget I send out an author newsletter on the first of each month with tips, news, prompts etc. If you’d like to sign up please head over to my landing page at https://allisonsymescollectedworks.com
Currently busy on story judging and editing as well as my own writing so am staying out of mischief well enough!
It was lovely catching up with everyone on the Association of Christian Writers Flash Fiction group on Zoom last night. We all ended up with a new story to work on thanks to a free writing exercise set by #AnnmarieMiles. I used a random name generator to come up with the name of a character to write about and there were excellent and different approaches taken. All good fun!
The wind is already getting stronger here in Hampshire – take care, everyone, over what promise to be a wild few days in the UK.
Now I don’t use the weather in fiction at all (too many cliches etc and It was a dark and stormy night has been done!). But you can use the elements to help set mood including landscape as well as weather. Think about the detail a reader needs to know. You won’t need to spell everything out. The joy of flash is so much is inferred and the reader fills in the gaps.
I’ve always loved doing that when reading longer works but for flash writing, it is crucial. I may need to know your character is on a moor. I don’t need to know how wet, boggy etc the moor is because I have my idea of what a moor is like and that will be what I visualise when I read the word “moor”. What is more important to know is the season. Is your character there in the summer or the winter? That will make a huge difference to the conditions they face.
So it is the question of the telling detail then – select what readers have to know, what they cannot guess at, and let your readers fill in the gaps. We will – and it saves so much on the old word count! Nor do you irritate readers telling them what they can work out for themselves.
Facebook – From Light to Dark and Back Again
Now earlier this week, I shared my YouTube story called At Number 64 – see below – and I mentioned I had submitted a linked story to this for Friday Flash Fiction. Well, I am glad to say my second story on the same theme is now up on FFF and I am glad to share it here. Hope you enjoy A Good Cause (and many thanks for the fab comments in on it so far).
In a month’s time I’ll be on my way to the Scottish Association of Writers’ Conference where I’ll be running a flash fiction workshop. Looking forward to that immensely. Never thought I’d be doing this kind of thing when I started out.
But I have a very soft spot for workshops anyway. You get to meet other writers. You get to learn something useful. And a good workshop should trigger ideas for you own stories too.
Best invention since sliced bread? The notebook and pen of course.
Still great for workshop/conference environments. And flash gives you potential for writing up your exercises from workshops etc into polished stories you can submit later. Every so often I will go back through my old notebooks and see if there is something I can polish up. Sometimes I will find something useful like that. Other times I’ll read something which will trigger other story ideas and that’s great too.
I was talking about giving readers the telling details they need to know to make sense of your story over on my Facebook author page just now and I referred to the elements. But you need to think about telling details for your characters too.
I’ve mentioned before I like to know the character’s major trait as all sorts of things can come from that which you can use to bring your character to life (e.g. the character is brave, they have a tendency to be reckless because of it and that’s where the story is – in what that recklessness leads to).
So work out what you need to know to make the character work for you. (If the character works for you, they’ll work for a reader). If a character is poor, do you need to know if they have become poor or have always been less well off? What is their attitude towards it? Can that attitude be where your story is – if your character is bitter, do they do something against anyone they hold to blame for their situation?
Ask yourself questions about what you need to know. I’ve found doing that sparks ideas and soon an outline for a possible story emerges. I like that – a lot!
Fairytales With Bite – Happily Ever After?
And they all lived happily ever after has to be one of the most famous endings to any story. Though it should be added the original versions of fairytales often did not have a happy ending or gruesome things occurred before the happy ever after bit.
I understand it being in the classic tales for children but it is not one I am comfortable with myself. I like most of my stories to have a positive, upbeat ending where you can see things would continue to be okay for my deserving characters long after the story has finished. But sometimes I write stories with poignant endings because that is appropriate for the characters I’ve come up with.
And that is what I am really after in the stories I read and write – appropriate endings for the characters.
One thing I do get from my love of fairytales is the wish for the villains to get their well deserved comeuppance. I’m actually more interested in seeing how that pans out rather than the happy bit (because with the comeuppance bit achieved, the rest will follow).
I also like to see happy ever afters “earned” by the characters concerned – it seems more realistic to me the characters (a) deserve to get their happy ever after ending and (b) contribute to achieving that significantly themselves.
So give some thought to how you want your stories to end. When it is a happy ending, have your characters be worthy of it. You want your readers cheering them on to the happy conclusion after all.
This World and Others – Living In Peace
Does your fictional world live in peace with other creations around it? Do the inhabitants of your created world get along with each other? How many species live in your world and is there any “history” between them? Do they live in peace now after centuries of not doing so? Is your world one of those where peace is a rarity or where war is unknown and disputes have to be resolved in other ways?
What would your fictional world make of our real one? Answering something like that can give you insight into how and why your people behave and act the way they do. Could they live in peace with us? What do they make of our warlike ways? Some would despise that (and possibly because we’re not warlike enough in their view). Some would hate it because they cannot understand violence. Some would love it, possibly seeing possibilities of exploiting that quality against us.
Living in peace takes effort. How much effort are your characters prepared to make? What is the incentive for them to be at peace especially if their culture is one of war?
Good story possibilities there I think especially since there is always someone who is prepared for various reasons to go against the status quo.
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsI use a variety of writing prompts to help me trigger story ideas. Do you have any favourites? I like the idea here of responding to a challenge set by someone else I suppose. It makes me think outside of my usual box. pic.twitter.com/Ba8Jt94dfx
— ACW (@ACW1971) February 16, 2022
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsI often use random generators (noun, adjectives, questions etc) as a way of triggering writing prompts. Pictures are also useful. I like landscapes where I can imagine who might live there. pic.twitter.com/I2pGbNmKQh
— ACW (@ACW1971) February 17, 2022
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsCompetitions with set themes to write to are giving you a prompt to respond to and I like those. I use spider diagrams to come up with differing ways I can take the theme and then go with the one that has the strongest impact on me. I figure it will do the same for a reader. pic.twitter.com/AvpkTaWLuI
— ACW (@ACW1971) February 18, 2022
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsAuthors Electric: Animals in Fiction by Allison Symes https://t.co/6dlw9fezSE I share my love of animal characters in this month's post and talk about writing from an animal point of view. I also invite you to share your favourite animal characters. Hope you enjoy! pic.twitter.com/wDHiWtjDlr
— Allison Symes (@AllisonSymes1) February 18, 2022
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsFrameworks in Fiction https://t.co/d2wPNLDxUs I look at why frameworks matter, share a few of the different ones I use (and why I like to mix them up), and what can be used as a framework, even when at first glance the device in question doesn’t appear to be a framework at all! pic.twitter.com/OSvfsSq8EI
— Allison Symes (@AllisonSymes1) February 18, 2022
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsA Good Cause, by Allison Symes – Friday Flash Fiction https://t.co/o9d5H7q4Cg I put on my YouTube channel earlier this week a story linked to this one. It was great fun to write them both. Hope you enjoy A Good Cause (and many thanks for the fab comments on it so far). pic.twitter.com/yp6WizzeDw
— Allison Symes (@AllisonSymes1) February 18, 2022