• Café Life is the Colony's main hangout, watering hole and meeting point.

    This is a place where you'll meet and make writing friends, and indulge in stratospherically-elevated wit or barometrically low humour.

    Some Colonists pop in religiously every day before or after work. Others we see here less regularly, but all are equally welcome. Two important grounds rules…

    • Don't give offence
    • Don't take offence

    We now allow political discussion, but strongly suggest it takes place in the Steam Room, which is a private sub-forum within Café Life. It’s only accessible to Full Members.

    You can dismiss this notice by clicking the "x" box

What are your rules of writing?

Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
Status
Not open for further replies.

LJ Beck

Full Member
Blogger
Joined
Aug 20, 2022
Location
New Zealand
LitBits
50
A friend read to me a particular writer's 4 rules of writing. They didn't really fit for either of us, so we made our own rules. What are yours?

Here's Hemingway's Rules :
And Gaiman's : Neil Gaiman's 8 Rules of Writing

I came up with these for me:
1) Never be boring. If I'm bored writing it, don't.
2) Never be lazy, if it needs fixing, fix it.
3) Never shy away from being bold.
4) Be honest.
 
  • Let your characters wear your heart on the page, but let them change it into their heart first.
  • This is your characters' story, not yours, so don't interrupt.
  • Show it to the world. If you don't, you won't hear if they hate it but neither will you hear if they love it.
  • Keep trying. It only takes one person to say yes.
  • Nothing is too silly if you tell it well.
 
A friend read to me a particular writer's 4 rules of writing. They didn't really fit for either of us, so we made our own rules. What are yours?

Here's Hemingway's Rules :
And Gaiman's : Neil Gaiman's 8 Rules of Writing

I came up with these for me:
1) Never be boring. If I'm bored writing it, don't.
2) Never be lazy, if it needs fixing, fix it.
3) Never shy away from being bold.
4) Be honest.

Ha. I do the [square bracket] thing often: for the right word as Neil Gaiman said, for continuity questions I need to go back and check up later (but right now, keep moving forward, for layers I want to add e.g. [describe clothes] [describe food] [add smell and taste] [describe room] . . .
 
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
Rules, I dont need no stinking Rules. More like Guidelines. Kurt Vonnegut's are what I aspire to. My biggest failure is inevitably no. 8. Working on it.

1. Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted.
2. Give the reader at least one character he or she can root for.
3. Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water.
4. Every sentence must do one of two things— reveal character or advance the action.
5. Start as close to the end as possible.
6. Be a sadist. No matter how sweet and innocent your leading characters, make awful things happen to them, in order that the reader may see what they are made of.
7. Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia.
8. Give your readers as much information as possible as soon as possible, to heck with suspense. Readers should have such complete understanding of what is going on, where and why, that they could finish the story themselves, should cockroaches eat the last few pages.


 
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Further Articles from the Author Platform

Latest Articles By Litopians

  • The Shadow Durian
    As a lifelong foreigner, I’ve learnt that being open to new things smooths the path considerably. ...
  • Goodbye Eeyore, Hello Tigger
    Granny was churchy. She grew up in an era that saw living by the Bible as an important British chara ...
  • 21st Century Song of Summer
         It’s sobering to think that while summer is celebrated in some parts of the world with mus ...
  • Falcon Theory
    “So,” said Goethe to his friend Johann Peter Eckermann, “let us call it a Novelle, for what i ...
  • The Joy of Lit Mags
    While my first novel is tentatively making its way towards agents who already have too much to read, ...
  • Advertising and Social Media
    There has been much discussion in writing circles about how much a writer has to self-promote these ...
  • Future Abstract: Fights at Night
    SATIRE ALERT: The following abstract is entirely fictional and does not represent actual events or s ...
Back
Top