Tumgik
furiouslywriting · 2 months
Text
Masterlist of prompts (31/1/22)
Tropes:
Chosen one
Chosen one 2
Mentor
Squad
Trope subversion
Trope subversion 2
Heroes and villains:
Villains
Heroes and villains
Hero and villains 2
Hero and villains 3
Fantasy:
Powers
Fantasy
Fantasy 2
Fantasy 3
Time travel:
Time travel
Last words:
Last words
Last words 2
Banter/humour:
Banter
Banter 2
Banter 3
I also have a writing prompt series of just one random one each time, but I haven't linked those as I think I'm up to about 30? But you can find those under #writingprompts
I'm also taking suggestions! But I'll only do ones I'm comfortable with 🙂
37 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 2 months
Text
Writing tips: power escalation
I love a good power escalation (also called a power crawl or creep). When someone starts off as a novice and by the end they are scary talented, whether in magic or combat. I live for it. But how do you write a good power escalation?
Firstly, let's look at an example so you can see what I mean. Katara from ATLA. Episode one we're introduced to the only waterbender in the tribe and she can't even maintain a bubble of water. Season 3. Oh boy. Katara is doing all kinds of crazy water bending, including blood bending; controlling people by the water in their blood. Katara went through a serious power escalation.
But here's the thing. Her power escalation had a defined roof, and walls. There were things we knew she could never do. She's a water bender. So she couldn't start controlling fire. But things like mist, snow and even blood (with the proper explanation- we know that waterbending is tied to the moon. She can only blood bend depending on the position of the moon which can increase power) are absolutely possible.
So, it's important to establish the limits of the power that you want your character to grow in. Characters that have no limits are often boring and hard to write for. Superman is a notorious example: there are only so many ways to get in trouble with kryptonite. (There are ways around this of course; Lois getting into trouble, or him losing his powers etc. But that's unrelated 🙂)
Define where your character is and where they need to be to achieve their goal. Maybe the villain is an expert in magic. Maybe the prophecy states the MC will be able to raise the dead. Define the highest rung on the ladder, so we can see just how low they are. And then make them climb.
Introduce a struggle. Power escalation can also introduce personal struggles. Katara herself nearly used her waterbending, when she'd become powerful, to take revenge for the death of her mother. Or maybe your OC becomes blocked because of emotional upheaval. A power crawl should have struggles and low notes just like any arc.
What's your favourite power escalation?
189 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 9 months
Text
Hey! I know I haven't done any new posts in a while! I feel like I've exhausted the well of creative advice. I've covered a lot! If there's anything you'd like to learn more about let me know
2 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 9 months
Text
Writing advice: naming places
Similarly to naming characters, we writers often have trouble naming places. Now there are name and place name generators that you can use but I find these unsatisfactory. So here are some ideas for naming places yourself!
Consider the language
If you have your own language, or conlang, for a species in you wip, consider the sounds of the language and the words you've made as you try to name places. For example, I had a city in a forest, so I fiddled around with the words for tree, city, forest etc. to name the place.
Also remember that if your language doesn't use particular sounds, then the place name shouldn't have those sounds! It seems obvious but it can be easy to forget.
Fiddle with/combine words
If your world contains elves, gremlins and unicorns, you might take letters from each, mush them together and form a name for your world! Consider also the themes for your story, like faith, redemption etc. Grab that 'f', the 'el', the 'de' and the 'n' and you've got 'Felden'.
The ol' keyboard smash
If all else fails a good ol' keyboard smash (preferably using the fingers, but in times of great stress the head may work). Get your random letters (lsvrlo) and fill in the blanks (Lasvarlon).
How do you name places in your world? Do any of these work for you?
59 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 11 months
Text
I love Disney's Robin Hood ❤️❤️ So underrated!
Writing tips: fairytale retellings
Know the difference between a retelling and inspired by
Make sure it's public domain
Only draw from the original (eg. if it has a Disney retelling do not draw from that. Disney is not public domain and you'll breach copyright)
You can sprinkle references or go fully into it
Retellings are more than just the events of the story. Look at the themes, the messages behind it
You can change setting, genders, genres! Anything you can think of
90 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 11 months
Text
Writing tips: fairytale retellings
Know the difference between a retelling and inspired by
Make sure it's public domain
Only draw from the original (eg. if it has a Disney retelling do not draw from that. Disney is not public domain and you'll breach copyright)
You can sprinkle references or go fully into it
Retellings are more than just the events of the story. Look at the themes, the messages behind it
You can change setting, genders, genres! Anything you can think of
90 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 11 months
Text
I killed off one of my favourite characters... And yes, I was looking forward to it 😂
Writers getting ready to kill off a character:
Tumblr media
721 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 11 months
Text
*evil laugh*
Tumblr media
107 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
Shipping characters like:
Tumblr media
10 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
Writing tips: formatting
One of the great things about indie publishing is that you can do things yourself. But please know that just because you can, doesn't mean you should! Things like editing and cover design MUST be done by professionals. But the cool thing is that formatting is fairly accessible to the average person, but you'll be swapping out spending money for spending time.
So here are some basic formatting tips:
Learn industry and genre standards
Every new paragraph except for the first in the chapter and scene must be indented
Use drop caps, lead in small caps or both for the first sentence of each chapter
Chapter should start at least a third of the way down the page. But usually about half
Page numbers typically go in the footer
In the header have your name on one page and your book title on the other (alternate the whole way through). These do not go in the front matter or on the first page of each chapter
Make sure your formatting is consistent the whole way through!
Front matter is everything before the first chapter, back matter is everything after the actual book (acknowledgments etc)
Justify text to both sides (so it's even). You can use hyphens to help with this
Check what the minimal requirements for margins are with your publisher (Ingram, kdp etc)
Use a normal, easy to read font. Times New Roman is the standard.
Use hyperlinks in your ebooks! Link directly to your other books, author socials and website. List them in your print copies
I'm using Atticus to format my debut and it's been fantastic so far.
182 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
Writing prompt #7
"There's only one thing I want from you," the vampire says, staring hungrily at the girl. She whimpers. He races forward and the girl shakes in terror. The vampire sits in the empty seat beside her and leans forward.
"What do I look like?"
36 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
Writing prompt #13
Character B: you'd make a great father
Character A: oh, yeah? Which part of this lifestyle screams parental figure? The murder or the assassinations?
Character B: YoU tOld Me YoU "TAKE CARE" oF pEoPLe!
If you write anything based on my prompts, don't be afraid to tag me, I would love to read it! Especially this one 😂
29 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
Writing prompt #20
"Did you see that, mum?" The old man asked.
"Yes, honey," the young woman said.
24 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
More hero and villain prompts 💪⚔️
'You defeated me but somehow you can't tie your shoelaces?!'
"is it really so bad that you love me, Hero?"
"I have to kill you. I don't have a choice."
"shhh, it's ok Hero. I'm sorry, but this is the end."
"why are you doing this?" "Do you really have to ask, Hero? I'm doing this for you! For us!"
The sound of a gun echos through the night, and Villain spins in place to find Hero dead on the ground. Hero's Sidekick stands over him, gun in his hand. "Am I the only one who was getting tired of all the speeches? I mean, wow! I'm sorry it took me so long to kill him."
"I'm sorry, my love," Love interest says, sliding a knife into Hero's side. "But I was Villain all along."
"You can't really think you're making things better!" Hero shouts. "Actually," Villain says, "I am."
27 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
Ideal reader profile and marketing
This is a wonderful concept to help you with the marketing of your books! I love it. But what am I talking about?
The ideal reader profile is what it sounds like. You create a profile of what the ideal reader of your book might be like. You see, a fantasy writers audience is very different to a crime authors.
So think about things like age range (are you writing children's, MG, YA, adult? What age within these group would your audience specifically be? Eg. Throne of glass series would be 14-18, whereas Percy Jackson might be 10-15).
Then, what genre do they read? I assume the one you're writing in! But think subgenres too. What genres don't they like? (If you're a romance author, your ideal reader probably doesn't like horror), so steer clear of posting about that!
What other books do they like? If you're writing a YA high fantasy with powers, then your reader probably likes Shadow and Bone, Red Queen etc.
Where do they hang out online? Younger readers (teen, YA) tend to be on Instagram more than Facebook (FB tends to have older, romance readers 🤷‍♀️).
So, once you've compiled everything you know about your ideal reader, you post/market specifically to then! If they're on insta, join insta! Reach out and connect with them about their favourite books. Make sure you target them.
And most importantly, don't worry about all those people who aren't in your target audience, because they don't want your book! You'd be wasting your time chasing them.
44 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Note
Congratulations on your book release! That's so exciting!!
How have you found the publishing process this second time around? Was it at all different from the first book?
Thank you!
It's definitely been easier! Mostly because I've done all the research already and I've gone through the process before. I have the same editor and cover designer as well (I'm writing in a series, so this made sense to me), so I didn't have to spend time looking for new ones!
Overall, I also just felt more confident in the story and my own writing. Not to say I'm not stressed! But I feel better about it all
11 notes · View notes
furiouslywriting · 1 year
Text
It's release day on my second book! I'm so excited for this book (the middle in a trilogy) to be out in the world!
If you have any writing or publishing questions, feel free to submit them to my question box or send me a dm
14 notes · View notes