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WATTPAD WORKSHOP SERIES: WEEK 16!

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TAKE IT TO A NEW LEVEL: FIXES FOR YOUR FICTION

Welcome to the Wattpad Workshop Series!

 Start anytime.

These are free workshops for Wattpad writers who want to be inspired and challenged. You’ll come away with new ideas, new techniques and, most importantly, you’ll generate lots of new writing. The workshops run every Monday on the Wattpad Blog.

To join in: read the post and get writing – post your writing on the Weekly Workshop Series Discussion Thread!

The workshops are run by Alice Kuipers, bestselling author of Life on the Refrigerator Door, The Worst Thing She Ever Did and 40 Things I Want To Tell You. Visit her at www.alicekuipers.com:

Week 16 (Missed the earlier writer’s workshop? Join in with this week, then go back to check out Week 1, Week 2, Week 3, Week 4, Week 5, Week 6, Week 7, Week 8, Week 9, Week 10, Week 11, Week 12, Week 13, Week 14 and Week 15!)

Beginnings, middles, endings. We’ve all heard writers, readers and editors talk about these, but mostly in the context of the whole book. This first week of FIXES FOR YOUR FICTION we’re going to be looking at how EACH scene in your novel or story needs to have a beginning, middle and ending.

Here’s how a scene should look:

BEGIN with action. Ask: what does the main character want?

ACCELERATE by introducing conflict. Ask: what is stopping the main character?

SUSTAIN as plot points and important information for the rest of the novel are included. Ask: What is this scene trying to achieve?

LEVEL OFF as the character achieves or does not achieve their goal.

END with the question that makes the reader move to the next scene.

If you’re reading through your novel or story and finding that you have a beautifully written scene full of lovely language and gorgeous moments, a scene you remember painstakingly writing, you have to ask yourself:

WHAT IS THIS SCENE ABOUT?

If you don’t have an answer: bad news. You have to be brave and CUT.

This first fix for your fiction applies not only on the scenic level.

Ask yourself:

WHAT IS THIS CHAPTER ABOUT?

And above all:

WHAT IS MY STORY ABOUT?

Keep asking yourself. If you don’t think you have solid answers, you need to dig deep to find them. Believe me, once you know what your book is about, your narrative arc will come alive. You’ll be able to cut extraneous material – scene by scene, chapter by chapter – and take your work to a new level.

This week’s writing prompt:

Although this cycle of workshops is about editing, the writing prompts will be about generating new work. This week, I want you to write a POSTCARD story – a complete story of up to 500 words, with a beginning, middle and end – using the word GHOST to inspire you.

Post your writing here at the Weekly Workshop Series Discussion Thread! I’ll read and give feedback as often as I can.

Commit to your writing by joining in this and the following workshop:

Oct 15th-Nov 12th: Kickstart Your Writing - Trying New Things To Fuel Your Writing


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