Headed North

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Image Credits:-
All images from Pixabay/Pexels unless otherwise stated with many created in Book Brush. Book cover images from Chapeltown Books and Bridge House Publishing. Screenshots and Scottish photos taken by me, Allison Symes.
Hope you have had a good few days since the last post. Other half, Lady, and I are having a wonderful time in the far north of Scotland. Glorious weather. Equally glorious scenery. My writing desk this week looks across to a stunning view of a pine forest with a huge hill behind it. Seeing red deer and birds of prey around the cottage and there is a lonely cuckoo out there who could really do with shutting up but isn’t.

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Lovely day at Golspie today. Walked through the town along the coast path, into a magnificent bluebell wood, which came out by Dunrobin Castle, and then back along the coast path back to where we’d parked. Enjoyable walk and the castle does look a bit like something Disney came out with – check out those turrets!

Writing wise, am happily enjoying a fabulous view as I write my posts. Won’t be getting so much done this week but I am one of those writers who have to write something most days. Decided my postcard writing yesterday evening counted as some non-fiction flash!

Am enjoying the change of scenery immensely. It is glorious out there. I don’t have a bad outlook at home, to be fair, but there is little which could beat the scenery here.

Am looking forward to running an editing workshop on Zoom for an Association of Christian Writers group shortly after I get back home again. Will be running a longer two part course on editing for The Writers’ Summer School, Swanwick in August.

Don’t forget there is still time to enter The Bridport Prize competition for flash fiction and short stories. I’ve entered the flash fiction one again. Deadline is 31st May so still time to polish your stories and get submissions in.

Dunrobin Castle

Late post tonight. Had a fabulous day today. Went to the top end of Scotland today with a wonderful day spent at the glorious Dunnet beach. See the photo for Lady’s beach ready look. Have seen red deer opposite where I’m staying and plenty of birds of prey.

Don’t forget to add in non-fiction to your reading lists. Not only are there many fabulous books here, I’ve often found something in a non-fiction book then goes on to spark off an idea for a story. You read of an invention here, say, and then an idea occurs as to what could be invented in a similar or better line in your magical setting, for example, and would your characters welcome this development. What would the clashes be here? Not everyone welcomes “improvements” or sees them as such.

Writing Tip: Do you understand what drives your characters? I find knowing motivation is vital. I can see where my people are coming from. I can see from this what they would do and what they would not. The whole story for me hangs on this.

This is Lady's beach ready look

Am having a lovely time in the far north of Scotland. Lady is having a great time too – see the photo! Lots and lots of walkies going on for all three of us.

Aptly, I’ll be talking about Journeys for Chandler’s Ford Today on Friday. I look at how these “work” in fiction and non-fiction and talk about how every story is a journey in and of itself. Link up later this week.

Am hoping to use some of my holiday snaps to inspire story ideas. I do sometimes use landscapes to trigger story ideas. I work out who would live in these landscapes and from there deduce what crisis they might face. The landscape itself may also worsen the crisis faced.

Lady having a lovely time at LairgWhen this goes out, I shall be heading north on my holidays. Looking forward to a much needed break with hubby and Lady. Hoping the weather stays good (not that it worries us much. Being dog owners does get you used to being out and about in most weathers).

Appropriately I’ll be talking about Journeys for Chandler’s Ford Today next week. I’ll be looking at fictional journeys and the fact every story is its own complete journey. For one thing there has to be a starting point and an ending, same as any journey. More on that on Friday.

Don’t forget the May issue of Writers’ Narrative is now out. The theme is memoir and I often use some memoir techniques when it comes to creating characters. For example, I interview my characters to find out what their response would be to the questions I throw at them. This can be enlightening. Attitudes will emerge from what I think those responses would be and it shows me more of what that character is likely to do and say.

I also read memoir in the form of diaries and letters from various people and find these fascinating. Am currently re-reading the wonderful P.G. Wodehouse: A Life In Letters. Lovely book and many insights into his writing craft. Highly recommend.

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Am getting so much gorgeous Scottish fresh air I’m not doing so much reading as I thought I would. Head hits the pillow and away I go. But I am enjoying the reading I am doing and blessing the Kindle for saving on packing. Am getting in plenty of stories despite all that though as am listening to a lot of audio books as we tour the far north of Scotland. You can get a lot of listening done when on the A9!

Pleased to still get my flash fiction writing done on Sunday. Am hoping some of my holiday photos will inspire ideas for stories when I have time to go through them on my return home. Landscapes can inspire ideas for characters who live in them. Certainly when I outline a character first, I may well have images of my photos in my head if I want to “place” my character somewhere specific.

Also note to self: check out more flash fiction competitions when I get home and see if I can some stories submitted. Have sent something in for The Bridport Prize. Have something I want to work on when I get back which I hope to send into CafeLit. But it is time to go through the Writing Magazine competition guide again on my return as there are loads of flash competitions out there and I know some of them will take my fancy. If you don’t know about them, you can’t enter them.

I also like to try new competitions (having checked their background out first of course) as I find this stretches me and I end up writing stories I wouldn’t have otherwise written.

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Whenever I’m on holiday, I like to have a good nose at the visitor books. (Self catering is the option for us with a dog). I also do put comments in myself. But you get glimpses of where people enjoyed visiting while they were at the cottage or what have you before you went in and it can give you ideas of where you might like to explore whilst you’re away too.

Flash fiction is all about glimpses too. Due to its word count restriction, you can only give a glimpse of what a character is like as you unveil their stories. But glimpses can be powerful things. The challenge for the flash fiction writer is to give the right kind of glimpses so readers can form their own conclusions about the characters and how the story plays out.

Oh and I almost forgot it is Monday but it still time for a YouTube story. Hope you like my latest on here – Something Funny About Her Next Door. Hope you enjoy it.

 

Flash moments can happen in life. On my way up to Scotland, I met a couple with their lovely and distinctive looking dog twice at two different service stations a good one hundred miles plus apart. Lady was happy to meet them too.

Now we know coincidences like that happen in life. But, unfair though it may seem, they can’t happen in the stories we write. If there is a chance a character will meet another one again, there has to be something hinted early on that this is a possibility. You can’t just “throw it” at a reader. Readers have to accept this could happen because you have laid out the tracks to show it could happen.

424905627_10161880024617053_3122651101340406517_nWill enjoy writing my flash fiction stories this week while “on location” on holiday with my other half and Lady. Have laptop, will travel. There is WIFI at the other end!

I do sometimes use the random picture generators to trigger ideas for stories but have also used my own photos. I prefer to use landscapes when I do this. I can visualise them when I am trying to visualise a setting for a character.

Having a sense of place can be useful even if it doesn’t end up in the finished story. It just helps me to picture everything I need to be able to “see” and then I can write away. I will occasionally use some description from a photo when I need a reader to know something specific. So I am hoping I will take lots of lovely photos this week which I can use to inspire story ideas once I’m back home again.

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Goodreads Author Blog – Rooting for Characters

A successful work of fiction has me rooting for its characters throughout the book. I have got to care about what happens to them or be eager to see some deserving character get their long overdue comeuppance. Either works!

So to root for characters then I have to be able to get behind them and to understand at least something of what makes them tick. I don’t have to agree with all they do or say but I must be able to see why they are the way they are.

Be honest now. When someone asks you about your favourite books, you will recall the author (most of the time anyway), the title (most of the time), but,most importantly of it all, it will be the characters which linger longest in the mind. Just say Pride and Prejudice to me and I immediately think of Elizabeth Bennet. (Okay I may have certain images of a certain actor emerging from the lake thanks to a BBC adaptation but I know I’m not alone in that one!).

The best characters in any books are the ones we understand. Sometimes they’re the characters we would like to be. After all Sam Gamgee is honourable and brave and so, so loyal in The Lord of the Rings, all excellent qualities to aspire to, yes?

I honestly feel characters make or break a story.

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WRITERS NARRATIVE SUBSCRIBER LINK

AMAZON AUTHOR CENTRAL – ALLISON SYMES

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Holiday Writing and Quizzing Characters

Image Credits:-
All images from Pixabay/Pexels unless otherwise stated with many created in Book Brush. Book cover images from Chapeltown Books and Bridge House Publishing. Screenshots taken by me, Allison Symes. Hope you have had a good few days.
Am looking forward to a trip out with family to Windsor Castle later this week. I suspect there will opportunities for people watching. Whenever I go out anywhere, there usually is! Sometimes a snatch of dialogue will inspire a story. Sometimes a striking hat or other clothing item will make me think of a character of mine who might wear something similar and what situation they’re in. As ever, I just need something to get me started and getting out and about can help with that!

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Nice, cooler day today – Lady and I appreciated that.

Part 2 of my interview with YA fantasy author, Francesca Tyer, will be up on Chandler’s Ford Today later this week. Cracking interview. Link up on Friday. Be sure not to miss.

Now if you were temporarily allowed to bring one of your characters to life to ask them one question, who would you choose and what would you ask? Could be great material for a story or two here. Hmmm… something I too need to check out I think!

Am looking forward to the Association of Christian Writers’ Flash Fiction Group meeting next week. These are always great fun. I do set exercises here. I find writing exercises a great way to put into practise a tip or two you’ve picked up. The nice thing with writing exercises? There is sure to be at least one or two which really suit the way you write. Practising writing to them helps build up your writing skills so worth a go for that alone.

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Wasn’t sorry for the rain yesterday evening. Has cooled things down though the grass is still like straw over the Recreation Ground. Not that it stopped Lady having a good time with her Rhodesian Ridgeback bestie today.

Writing Tip: Quiz your characters. Find out what makes them tick. What wouldn’t they do in any circumstances? Your job here – put them in those circumstances and then see what they do. They will have to find a way of coping with it. Doesn’t necessarily have to be something “overly” dramatic.

For example, let’s say you have a character who doesn’t like the water. A friend is ill and someone is organising a charity swim to raise funds to help this friend. What would your character do? Sure, they could just donate but where’s the story in that?

What they would do so there is a story is learn to swim, take part in the event (though they probably wouldn’t do many lengths given the lack of experience here) but everyone is thrilled they’ve done this. That would make a nice human interest story. Your character has faced up to something they don’t like here. They are putting themselves out for someone else. It’s that which readers will like.

So think about something which would make your characters do something they wouldn’t ordinarily do. This can be taken in many directions. Have fun!

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I’m talking about Holiday Writing for Authors Electric this month. Do you do any and/or do you send your characters on holiday? Take your characters out of their normal environment and what could happen? I discuss this and more in this post. Hope you enjoy it.

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Bit of an odd day. Have gone from doing the ironing to painting a wood preservative on another fence panel. Oh the joys! So it is with great relief I am now back at the writing desk.

It was great to share Part 1 of the interview with Francesca Tyer on Chandler’s Ford Today yesterday. Am looking forward to sharing Part 2 on Friday.

Many thanks for the great comments coming in on Anniversary, my latest tale on Friday Flash Fiction. This one has a dark twist – if you missed it, check out the link. I very much appreciate the feedback on this great site and if you want to see what flash fiction can be, this is a very good place to start.

Screenshot 2023-06-16 at 18-35-04 Anniversary by Allison Symes

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Flash fiction collections are a great way to show off what flash can do and be. Mine have a wide range of characters and situations in them. Equally The Great War by Dawn Kentish Knox is a wonderful book (100 x 100 word stories) all based on World War One. So flash works well for characterisation and themes then. Then there are the flash-in-novella books too.

There is more flexibility in flash than at first might appear to be the case. It is the top word count only you have to watch for but there is much you can do within that

I regularly share tips on flash writing via my author newsletter. Next one is due out on 1st July. If you’d like to sign up, please head over to my landing page at https://allisonsymescollectedworks.com

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It’s Monday once more. It’s still hot (in my case not helped by having an afternoon in the kitchen batch cooking though it will pay off later in the week!). Time for a story then. Hope you enjoy my latest on YouTube – Editor Edited.

 

One of the joys of flash (and there are many) is that it is a great format for turning the tables. In my The Terrified Dragon I do exactly that. Firstly, the expectation normally is the dragon would be terrifying. Not in this story from Tripping the Flash Fantastic. Secondly, I then go on to show good reasons why it is terrified instead and have another character come to its aid. Great fun to write. Best kept as a very short story, anything else would be padding, and so flash is perfect for it.

Sometimes you just know when an idea comes to you that it works best in the shorter formats and with flash we have the ideal vehicle for the very short form. A single idea executed in the right amount of words works so well. Gauging whether an idea has “legs” for a longer format is not easy to get right. My gut instinct is to keep an idea tight – stick to the point of it and don’t elaborate further. Turning the table kind of stories tend to focus on one central action so this is why it works brilliantly when kept short.

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I’ve sometimes used proverbs as title ideas (and often they end up being the theme as well). One of these is A Stitch In Time from Tripping the Flash Fantastic. I used a humorous slant on this one.

The great thing with using proverbs for fiction is the proverbs have a timeless quality to them. People will always identify with the point they’re making and that is something invaluable to use for your stories. People will always get the point you’re showing in your tales as a result. So don’t throw out that book of proverbs – you can make good use of it here.

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Goodreads Author Blog – Book Fairs

Do you go to book fairs? I hope so. I’m taking part in one in my area in July and am looking forward to that. It gives local authors a chance to show what they do and these things are especially useful in areas which have a lost a lot of their bookshops. We had a fantastic local one but that had to close due to the owners’ retirement. Much missed.

All of us as readers appreciate the works of authors. We wouldn’t be on Goodreads otherwise but authors do appreciate support from readers. Going to book fairs is just another way of showing that support. So if you have such an event coming up near you, try and get along. You may well be surprised at the range of works your local authors produce. I know I’m impressed with what is available in my area.

Besides which, these events are fun!

Screenshot 2023-06-17 at 19-54-49 Book Fairs

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AMAZON AUTHOR CENTRAL – ALLISON SYMES

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