Category Archives: creativity

Going No Posts for a While

A change is as good as a holiday and I really need to recharge my batteries!

I’m flying off to Melbourne on Sunday and won’t be back until after World Con. While I’m down there I’m going cold turkey on the Internet, no Twitter, no Facebook, and no Blogging (have scheduled posts for the Mad Genius Club because the others can answer) but there will be no posts here.

When I do get back I promise lots of interesting insights. Over on the ROR blog I’ve done a post about what will be happening while I’m in Melbourne.

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Filed under creativity, The Writing Fraternity

Weird and Fascinating things …

Okay, I should be preparing for my panels at World SF Con, but I am writing a blog post about Weird and Fascinating things.

I came across this – a Dutch photographer who finds glitches in computer games and turns them into art – in the sense that when you stop and look at them they are fascinating and they seem to say something about the human condition. His name is Robert Overweg.

Here is one of his photos from Grand Theft Auto, where he found a way to slide under the world and look up at it.

Here is an article on him and some of his work. There is a dreamlike quaility to his work. Since I find the world a fascinating place anyway, I love this kind of thing, a segue into surrealism!

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Filed under creativity, Fun Stuff, The World in all its Absurdity

Ramble on Writing

I just went to see the Inception movie.  The premise is that someone can enter your dreams and they can construct dreams which feel so real, you don’t know you’re dreaming. In the movie they use this to steal information or plant ideas.

Listening to them talk about this kind of dreaming made me realise that writers do this all the time. In fact, we’d do it all day long, every day if the rest of the world would let us. For us the dream (our stories) is more real than reality. Otherwise why would keep coming back to write?

I saw this article which said that gamers, if they play games directly before going to bed, they can control their dreams to a certain extent.

Well, isn’t that what writers are doing all the time? When we are ‘in the zone’ we are lucid dreaming. The only thing that holds us back is the speed we can type at.

Inception was good. I liked the layers of the story and some of the visuals were breathtaking. I liked the main character’s motivation and it was a change for a movie to have a happy ending. Or was it?

Did you sit through all the credits like I did to find out if the top stopped spinning?

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Filed under creativity, Fun Stuff, Genre, Movies & TV Shows, Writing craft

Anyone interested in writing for computer games?

Over at the ROR blog the Sunday Writing Craft post is a Beginner’s Guide to Writing for Games. It’s a two-parter with the second half being posted on Tuesday.

And this scary little girl is one of the ‘little sisters’ from Bioshock 2. The design of the game is very retro 1930s. I love the look of this period,  everything from Art Nouveau to Art Deco.

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Filed under creativity, Writing craft, Writing for computer games

Mentoring Retreat in the Tropics

Good friend of mine, Sandy Curtis, is running a writing retreat at Kellys Beach Resort. So if you live up that way, near  the coast in central Queensland and you’d like to spend 3 days at a lovely resort with a published mentor going through your book, short story or play …

Writers retreat to the beach!

Three storytellers will each offer their unique insights into writing at a mentoring retreat at Kelly’s Beach Resort, Bargara on the coast near Bundaberg, in Queensland.
The Bundaberg based professionals will mentor emerging novelists, short story crafters and playwrights over three days from 15-17 October 2010.

Mentoring the Muse is proposed as an intensive retreat-style development program similar to iniatives like the Varuna Manuscript Development Awards in NSW or the QWC/Hachette Australia Manuscript Development Program. These have been highly successful at supporting writers to improve their work to publishable standard, resulting in numerous publishing contracts for participants.

There is nothing like getting away from family and work and concentrating on your writing in a beautiful environment with other writers, while being mentored by someone who ‘gets’ your writing!

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Filed under Australian Writers, creativity, Mentoring, Nourish the Writer, Publishing Industry, The Writing Fraternity, Writing craft

Telling Lies to reveal an Inner Truth

That’s what fiction writers do. They tell lies (stories) to give the reader an insight into the human condition.

Because, let’s face it, if you are anything like me your days are filled with endless running on the spot, just to keep from going backwards.

You run to get the kids to school, part time jobs and uni. You run to get the house work done (shopping, cooking, washing). You run to get to work with everything ready so you don’t let yourself or anyone else down. And you run to make the time to do the extra things that make life worth living. (For me it is writing and story related).

With all that running it’s easy to overlook the profound in the everyday. (We all need a bit of  time to sit back and watch the waves).

Writers who told lies to reveal inner truths:

Charles Dickens ‘Oliver Twist – recurrent theme of social reform and good versus evil.

Mary Shelley, ‘Frankenstien’ – What is human?

Jane Austen ‘Pride and Prejudice’ – The title gives this one away.

George Orwell ‘1984’ – The danger of a totalitarian state.

William Golding ‘Lord of the Flies’ – Golding claims the book was written to trace the problems of society back to the sinful nature of man.

Ray Bradbury ‘Farenheit 451’ – The repression of the questioning mind by the destruction of books (access to knowledge).

Ursula K Le Guin ‘Left Hand of Darkness’ – Explores the themes of gender, politcis and religion.

If you are a modern writer who wants to explore an inner truth this could be confronting for your readers. You have to overcome their unconscious prejudices before you can win them over to identify with your protagonist. Once they identify with a character they can feel empathy. And empathy is what leads to insight.

This is why the genres Fantasy and SF are so powerful. By removing nouns loaded with associations, the writer can introduce characters that the reader responds to and explore themes without risk if distancing the reader.

If you are writing a contemporary novel you have to do lots of research to get your facts right. If you get something wrong someone will know and it will throw them out of the book. Once you break the suspension of disbelief you lose your reader. But, even with all that research, you won’t be able to find the perfect set-up to put your character in so you can challenge the protagonist and explore your underlying theme because you are limited to the world as we know it.

An invented world gives the writer the freedom to create settings and events specifically to test their characters and explore their themes. This is why fantasy and science fiction are such powerful genres. (With invented worlds you still do lots of research so that the worlds are consistent and believable).

In 2004, Le Guin gave a talk at the Children’s Literature Breakfast, where she described what she sees as the function fantasy serves in contemporary society.

“Fantasy is a literature particularly useful for embodying and examining the real difference between good and evil. In an America where our reality may seem degraded to posturing patriotism and self-righteous brutality, imaginative literature continues to question what heroism is, to examine the roots of power, and to offer moral alternatives. Imagination is the instrument of ethics. There are many metaphors beside battle, many choices besides war, and most ways of doing good do not, in fact, involve killing anybody. Fantasy is good at thinking about those other ways.”

So there you have it, writers tell lies to reveal inner truths. What books have made you stop and think?

Lots of analysis of books and their themes here.

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Filed under creativity, Nourish the Writer, The World in all its Absurdity, The Writing Fraternity

Doing the Happy Dance!

You know how writers labour away for years in back rooms writing books, throwing their whole heart into these series, never knowing if anyone will read their stories?

Well,  every once in while the fates of publishing smile on the struggling author  and  these series do sell. This is one of those days. So I’m definitely Doing the Happy Dance!

Solaris have bought my First T’En trilogy.

Book one:
This series follows the fate of a tribe of  mystics, the T’Enatuath. Vastly outnumbered by people without magical abilities, the mystics are persecuted because ordinary people fear their gifts.

This persecution culminates in a bloody pogrom sanctioned by the King who lays siege to the Celestial City, last bastion of the T’Enatuath.

A fantasy-family saga, the characters are linked by blood, love and vows as they struggle with misplaced loyalties, over-riding ambition and hidden secrets which could destroy them. Some make desperate alliances only to suffer betrayal from those they trust, and some discover great personal strength in times of adversity.

You know how to fall in love with your characters?  I fell in love with these people.  I’m over the moon now that the trilogy has sold!

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Filed under creativity, Fantasy books, Nourish the Writer, Publishing Industry, Story Arc

Being Human

When my husband said you must watch this show, it’s about a werewolf, a ghost and a vampire in a share house in Bristol trying to pass for human, I thought I have to see this.

This is the only show I actually watch on TV. (I really must get the series on DVD).

I thoroughly enjoyed the first season. And I’m finding the second season raises some lovely moral abiguities and puts the characters through the mill. Just the sort of quandries I like.

I love it that their ambition is to be ordinary!

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Filed under Characterisation, creativity, Dark Urban Fantasy, Genre, Movies & TV Shows

Are all dedicated readers aspiring writers?

I love reading.

But I can just remember a time when I couldn’t read. I was two and my mother had a picture in the bathroom. It contained a children’s nursery rhyme about cleaning up the bathroom. And after the bath, she’d point to it and read it and say, now you can’t leave the bathroom before you clean it up. So we’d put the toys away and hang up the bathmat.

I hated that picture because it had power over me and no matter how hard I tried I couldn’t see where the power came from.

I started school at four and I don’t remember learning to read.  It was the time of Dick and Dora and their dog Spot. (See Spot run. See Dick run. See Dora run. Riveting stuff). I remember being pages ahead of  the class because listening to them read was painful. When it came to my turn I had no idea where they were and the teacher thought I couldn’t read.

So reading is like breathing to me. I can’t help it. Conversely coming up with stories is also like breathing. There have always been stories in my head. I’d pester my poor grandfather for stories. And wonder why he couldn’t come up with dozens of them. His stories tended to be practical snippets like. You grab a snake behind the head real quick, and crack him like a whip to break his back. Grandfather was from the bush.

When I had my secondhand bookshop I’d read a book before lunch, a book after lunch and a book after dinner. (This was in the days when books were 60,000 words). Soon I’d read every book that interested me in my shop. I’d prowl the shelves searching for anything that piqued my interest. When ever someone bought in books to sell I’d put aside any that I found interesting and devour them.

But before long there were days when I could not find anything to read. Or I would start books and get annoyed with them. So I just had to write to feed my reading habit. That’s how I started writing.

Are all dedicated readers aspiring writers? Over at the ROR blog the Sunday Writing Craft post is a Checklist for Aspiring Writers.

I suppose it is different now that we can buy the DVD of our choice, surf the net and play computer games.  But sometimes, only a book will do. What do you do when you can’t find a book to read?

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Filed under creativity, Fantasy books, Fun Stuff, Nourish the Writer, The World in all its Absurdity, The Writing Fraternity, Writing craft

I have my ‘grump’ on …

For no reason that I can see, I just feel grumpy.

I feel like here should be a big sign over me that says, ‘Warning Irrationally Grumpy Woman’.

There’s no reason for this. I had a lovely weekend. My husband and I went to IKEA to look for a unit to put the new TV on. We’d never been there before. As we drove under the building and saw the miles of parking that went on and on, we both burst out laughing.  I guess you had to be there.

We nearly got lost walking around. I felt like we should both be wearing proximity beepers so we could track each other down. There were young families, middle aged couples and even teenagers who had been dragged along by their parents. The place seemed to cater to every demographic.

Then, just to be sure we’d savoured the whole IKEA experience, we stopped in their coffee shop and my husband had Swedish Meatballs (which seemed just like Australian meatballs to me) and I had pasta.

As we sat there eating the glass wall beside us looked out over the escalator which just keep pouring people from the entrance, up to the first floor showroom like the shop was an insatiable animal devouring customers. And don’t get me started on the huge stock room out the back, where you select your flat-pack furniture.  The shelves went up three storeys high. I could stage a post apocalypse story there. (Even when writers don’t appear to be working, they are working).

On the whole, it was a very interesting experience, made all the more fun because we went there together and we could catch eachother’s eye and share a secret smile.

So I shouldn’t be grumpy. I really shouldn’t.

By the way, we bought our new TV unit. My husband spent a couple of hours putting it together and he only had one screw left over. I’m sure they do that just to mess with your mind.

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Filed under creativity, The World in all its Absurdity