School is in Session

With Labor Day over and out, kids are back in school and I figure there’s no better time for me than the present to get my act together! Forget New Year’s resolutions—you don’t have to wait that long. We need to Write, Now! Here are my goals (perhaps “aspirations” is a better term) for the new school year, in no particular order:

  • Write EVERY [week] DAY
  • Schedule a time to work every day
  • Use my typewriter more often so am not distracted by the interwebs
  • Use my typewriter more often so I can’t go back and edit while writing
  • Read more books in the genre in which I am writing
  • Read at least on week nights so I can get through said books
  • Write, even if/though the first draft really is utter crap

I’ve been doing pretty well so far. (It’s been three whole days.) Today I typed 6 pages on my typewriter, which doesn’t seem like a lot, but it’s certainly more than I’ve been doing lately, and not being able to delete anything is going to be a good challenge.

On Tuesday I picked up a couple books from the library: The Encyclopedia of Medieval Times, Volumes I and II, and this gem: How Not to Write a Novel: 200 Classic Mistakes and How to Avoid Them–A Misstep-by-Misstep Guide

It’s bitingly sardonic, so if you don’t have a sense of humor, leave this one on the shelf. But if you do have a sense of humor, this is definitely one of the most entertaining books on the subject. Do note that there is a chapter on how NOT to write a sex scene, and there’s some colorful language. So if you are sensitive to that sort of thing, don’t say I didn’t warn you.

Bethany asked a question on an older post about what kind of technology I use to write, and mentioned Scrivener. You can read my response here, but I basically said I didn’t find Scrivener to be something I needed to purchase after the free trial. I use Evernote all the time because it syncs across my devices, but as I am trying to wean myself from being continually distracted by the internet, I’m going old school and unplugging more often. I’ve printed out worksheets, put them in a binder, and started to type on my typewriter, as mentioned above. It’s working pretty well for me. Better even than paper and pencil, because the text is legible, I write faster, and my hands are less likely to cramp up. Though I will go back to pen and paper when I do my edits. There’s nothing like a nasty red pen bleeding on a field of black and white.

Whether you are enrolled at school or not, what are your goals for the school year?

Brainstorming? Try Mind Mapping

Lately been getting ready for my son’s birthday party and chasing a toddler and puppy around the house. Needless to say, my days have been filled with bodily excretions I’m sure you don’t want me to describe here.

Next week, after Labor Day, we should be back on schedule for blogging here on Write Lara Write. And by “we,” I mean that I will be writing and I hope you will be reading.

Anyway, I wanted to share a really awesome new brainstorming tool called Exobrain. It’s BRAND NEW mind-mapping software. What’s mind mapping, you ask? Remember those webs you had to draw in seventh grade when brainstorming ideas for term papers? They look like this:

via ContentNotes

Well, now you can make a really ridiculously good-looking one even if you have the handwriting of a five-year old and the artistic ability of a naked mole rat.

It’s called Exobrain and it was introduced to be by a designer friend via Twitter. Actually, he tweeted about it to someone else, but it popped up on my feed, and, well, that’s the beauty of Twitter. (P.S. Writers need Twitter, in moderation. You can follow me @Larathelark or click the Twitter button on the top right side of this page to be taken to my profile.)

This is what Exobrain looks like when you go to Exobrain.co:

And here’s something you can make with it:

(image taken from video, below)

And here’s a video of how it works:

I’ve been using it today for some of my design work and am really enjoying it. I am excited to try it out for brainstorming new story ideas.

You DO need to log in and create an account, but you create an account simply so that you can access your mind maps (or “webs”) from anywhere in the world. There’s no need to back-up the information—Exobrain saves automatically. There are other mind mapping websites out there, but they can be a bit clunky with too many options and no real eye for design. This is a beautiful piece of software, and they are improving it everyday. There isn’t an availability to collaborate and share maps as of August 30, but they are working on that.

Once you create an account, you are given a default map. READ IT—it describes how the functions work. Then you can alter and add or delete as you please! You can save multiple maps, too.

Have fun with your brainstorming!

Pixar Story Rules

And also a bit of

The moving truck that has all of our personal belongings (i.e. all of my books) is still somewhere between here and the Ozarks. So while I intended to write this week’s Fiction Friday about writing scenes—a topic I definitely struggle with—that’s not going to happen until next week.

So, again, in lieu of a post, I’ll share with you a great site and resource for writers. This blog post is a compilation of tweets by Pixar story artist Emma Coats. She shares, in 140 characters or fewer, more than 20 story writing ideas and tools. Here’s one:

#11: Putting it on paper lets you start fixing it. If it stays in your head, a perfect idea, you’ll never share it with anyone.

Check it out, try some of the writing exercises. HOPEFULLY our moving truck will be here on Monday, so I can get you a legitimate blog post on setting.

Adieu for now!

LET THERE BE INTERNET

I’m back! We finally have internet in our new home, so I am ready to get back into the saddle of blogging. But right now it’s dinner time, so I’m going to have to post tomorrow or Friday.

What should we talk about next? Did you have a good time over at PaperWings while I was gone? I hope so.

Comment here with what you’d like more information about. I’ll do the legwork and give you what you need to know.

Want to know about characters? Dialogue? Setting? Mood? Theme? Something else? Let me know. I’d like this blog to be interactive, which means that everybody gets something out of it, but the more you put in, the more you get out.

And since I’m not actually giving you anything to work with today except for asking you a question, I’ll send you over to another writer’s blog. Here’s a post about Character Arcs on Screenwriter on Location that you might enjoy. Warning: Includes Star Wars.