I dreamt that we lived in the same dorm and one night you said you were too broke to get me a proper birthday gift so you handed me a platter and on it was written the word “GIFT” in ketchup o_o

punkgemini:

this sounds like something i would 100% do, your dream is 10/10 accurate!! i hope it was some good ketchup with seasoning and not too much sugar

I just re-read this and it’s one of the fucking funniest dreams I’ve ever had but when I was in it I totally took it seriously, like thank you, Nina, for this gift of ketchup 😀 

perringcentral:

p-assthroughfire:

On sudden plot twists.

I don’t think plot twists are in any way necessary for a good story but I enjoy some mind-boggling, shocking turn of events. When I start a story I don’t intentionally go for a plot twist but I love secrets and mysteries and as I shape them into a plot it’s easy to turn them into one except it usually doesn’t work the way it was intended?

I don’t know how to properly articulate this or why this is but my plot twists are usually not at the end or near the end of a story. I love to put the twists halfway or two-thirds of the way into the story because these twists turn things upside down, obviously, it challenges everything the characters thought was real or true and they have to change accordingly. And I love giving that time, to let these changes to breathe and have time to blossom into a new setting, a new context to what the characters do.

Take Leaper as an example. It’s about halfway into the story that it turns out that one of the characters has to die in order to fix what’s wrong. Either she dies, or everyone dies (including her). So, naturally, the right thing to do is for her to sacrifice herself. The rest of the story is spent with the characters trying to get over obstacles on their way to where and when this one character can finally sacrifice herself and save the world.

And I just wonder if that’s in any way useful or even the right thing to do cause… maybe the reader would wonder “oh there’s still fifteen chapters left, there’ll be another sudden discovery, another twist, they’ll figure something out so she doesn’t have to discover herself” and then it just doesn’t happen. Is that underwhelming or does it communicate that it was always supposed to happen this way? Is everything that happens after the twist, or most of it, just a glorified epilogue meant to “pad the runtime”?

In July 14th they figure out how to get out of the station like ten chapters before the end, but obviously Eve still has to go get the kidnapped kids so they can leave as well, then the rest of the story is just trying to outrun Zilda.

In Vale something very similar happens to what happened in Leaper. In In Static, well… In Static is a bit different cause technically it’s the same story twice and the big twist is actually disguised as a small twist and then the big twist is actually just an elaboration of the small twist which is at like two-fifths of the way into the story and is actually the big twist…

Anyway. I don’t mean that stories should end after the plot twist or cliffhangers are the only way to write a satisfying and shocking story, I just realised this about the way I write my plot twists and if it is in any way good for something or just bad pacing? 

I was looking at my outlining notes last night (i slept at 3am fight me) and I was actually a bit surprised to see that the plot twist doesn’t go in the middle (its a bit before the 3rd act, apparently.)

I think that the narrative reason for this is that it’s the final push to get your protag to where they should be (ie the resolution), because by this point they’d just undergone The Dark Night of The Soul (so they need something to get them to stop moping.)

Honestly now that I think about it in Happy Endings the plot twist comes in the middle. Of course there’s also another plot twist before the climax… You know? I’m noticing a pattern here. I think pacing naturally lends itself to two plot twists, one at the middle, which focuses on the inner conflict, and the other before the climax, which focuses on the outer conflict. (Now I think that you’d say that there isn’t always a second twist, but I’m defining twist here as ‘something that shows up that the reader doesn’t expect’ (no matter how unsurprising it is) because otherwise the audience would know how it ends.)

Am I onto something here or??

I guess you’re right in the second twist thing. I could find in all of my stories a second twist that is “something that shows up that the reader doesn’t expect”, but in my case they all seem like they weren’t consciously written. Maybe it’s my general instinct to feel how the pacing could be served by another “twist”.

Prepare for super cool illustration

image

In most cases this last twist is less of a shocking revelation and more like “new information that gives readers a clue about what direction the characters and the world would progress after the novel ends”.

I guess it depends on what you want to achieve with changing the stakes and the context. In Leaper, after the first plot twist if the reader thinks to themselves they could say “if nothing else changes about the situation, this is how the story will end”. And that’s what happens, that’s exactly how the story ends, actually. The character sacrifices themselves and the world is saved. However, in that story it’s kind of what I meant to say, that this was always how it was going to end, that’s the moral of the story.

In Vale it’s very similar because a sacrifice has to be made. The whole time after the first twist the characters keep going on about how they’ll figure out something and solve it so the sacrifice doesn’t have to happen. But in the end it does have to happen. So in a way that’s the twist? That they ultimately fail even though because the first revelation was made so early, you would assume the heroes do figure something out but then they don’t.

It’s weeeiiirrrd.

What is a red herring in writing?

a red herring is something the writer puts in the story to sort of distract from something more important or relevant. a very simple example to imagine this would be in crime shows where all evidence leads to a certain suspect being guilty but then someone else you wouldn’t have suspected turns out to be the murderer that certain clues pointed at but you were too distracted to notice. the clues pointing towards the first (innocent) person being guilty would be red herrings.

or like remember iron man 3 (spoiler alert idk if youve seen it x)) and how everyone thought that bearded guy was gonna be the villain but then he turns out to be a paid actor and a babbling fool, and the real villain is the dude from the beginning of the movie? also a red herring

i guess it can be anything done in any way that distracts the reader/audience from realising the truth at first.

peacefully:

vampireapologist:

vampireapologist:

idk i like picking taller ppl up to instill fear in their hearts

like i know the fireman carry is designed SPECIFICALLY for this but nothing make a 200+ pound 6 ft tall man question everything he thought he knew about the world like me saying “no seriously ill pick you up right now” and him laughing until he’s in the air. then it’s just fear and confusion.

YO KID my brother weights what u do and i can pick him up- don’t u joke i’m shorter than u and I’ll pick u up! 😀 Mwahahaha!

You’re on, my friend 😀

Hey i know I’ve probably asked you this a long long time ago but could you tell me what is nanowrimo cause I’ve been trying to read up on it and still don’t get it!!

NaNoWriMo is basically a month-long event (u can sign up for at nanowrimo.org) every November where writers all across the world pledge to write 50k words of something, novels, poems, anthology series, fanfiction, whatever. The official goal is 50k words as that’s what the on-site word-count is calibrated for but some people go for less some people go for more, it’s like, whatever.

There are some very loose guidelines that nobody really cares about, like some people (like me for the first couple of years) come up with new ideas every November, others might continue an ongoing project, others again are editing or whatever, the point is that by the end of November you have 50k words you didn’t have before November. That equals 1,667 words every day.

You can sign up to a region and see who’s from that region and participate in regional events (like my region is Hungary ofc and it’s actually a small but p active community, they constantly have write-ins and other events to support the writers of the region), but the NaNo social media (I only follow twitter) constantly has Q&A’s with writers who volunteer their help, word wars, word sprints, and other stuff to motivate participants. On the official site you get pep talks from published authors and other updates as the month progresses, like there’s always a 11k weekend around November 11th where I think everyone tries to write 11k in three days, but there’s also a double-up weekend where you’re supposed to double your daily average wordcount and stuff.

In the end you copy+paste your finished (or unfinished, it doesn’t have to end at 50k) product onto NaNoWriMo’s ~word confirmer (that’s not what it’s called) and if it is indeed 50k (it’s usually slightly off from let’s say Microsoft Word’s word counter but not radically) then it validates you as a winner. You can keep writing if you want, validation starts on November 20th I think and lasts until the very last second of November 30th.

And if you win then yay! You won! o/ It’s a common mantra of participants that if you hit 50k you’re more than allowed to feel like a winner but if you didn’t hit 50k you’re not allowed to feel like a loser.

A lot of people are against NaNo because apparently it glorifies quantity over quality but to that I say, if it’s not your kinda thing, don’t participate in it. I wrote my best stuff during NaNos. Sometimes that’s the only thing that will force me o put words down. Some people work great under a deadline even as imaginary as 30 days. The whole purpose of NaNo (to me) is to get you to plan, to think, to write, and even if you stop at a few thousand words, or a few hundred, at least you had the initiative to try.

I’ve had so many different experiences with NaNo. I’ve had tragic failures and unexpected triumphs, I’ve learned so much and talked to so many great people, it’s really a huge community of supportive dorks who just want to finish a novel. Every October I’m filled with an inexplicable buzz over preparations and expectations. There’s always the panic of being able to balance real life and writing but most people just say goodbye to their social lives for that month x) But some people can hit 50k within the first day and never sweat it, there’s a whole support group for overachievers alone (like me, yay!)

Sorry, this turned into a love letter to NaNoWriMo. I’ve bolded the tl;dr part 😀

There are two other events affiliated with NaNoWriMo called Camp NaNoWriMo during the months of April and July. The same rules apply mostly, except you can sign up to it at campnanowrimo.com, you can set the word count to any goal (above 1k? I think?) and it will calibrate your ideal daily word count based on that, plus you can have cabin mates? Which I think are supposed to work like regions except with people you can pick based on? I don’t know I’m a hermit writer, I just write alone 😀

reapermainbtw replied to your post : everyone is so in love with brigitte and im like…

Oh chill. I’m starting to hate these types of post. If you’re having an issue with this–don’t play Overwatch. I’m happy I finally get a female character representing where my family comes from (Sweden) that’s not a joke character like Torb.

i just said her character design/facial design is lazy which is objectively true, they could also add similar variety to the female cast of the game that they have with the rest it doesnt mean it has to be a joke. ofc ur free to be happy for a character from ur country but i can also wish for more variety in female characters. also yea lets not discuss or talk about what issues we have with something lets just straight up quit the entire game that sounds rational, right, so maybe also chill.