StillStunned
Scruffy word herder
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2023
- Posts
- 8,985
Can't fault that logic! In fact, I'd say that the more you ramble on at the beginning, the more obliged you are to ramble on through the rest.
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And that was the day his life changed forever." Essentially, he says, everything that goes before that line is unnecessary.
In fact, I believe the original script - and the novelisation - had a scene where he meets his friends and discusses seeing the space battle. Biggs is there, and mentions that he's off to join the Rebellion. But like you say, it's redundant because Luke's story begins with the droids.Perfect example: In Star Wars, we don't meet Luke Skywalker until the day he meets the droids.
There could have been a scene with him before that, interspersed between the space battle, a scene of him working on the moisture vaporators or something.
It would have established the character earlier in the film, but what would have been the point?
In fact, I believe the original script - and the novelisation - had a scene where he meets his friends and discusses seeing the space battle. Biggs is there, and mentions that he's off to join the Rebellion. But like you say, it's redundant because Luke's story begins with the droids.
I love this thread.When I was at uni in a previous millennium, a professor pointed out that Renaissance poets tended to describe people (mostly women) in one direction: from top to bottom. So hair, brow, eyebrows, eyes, nose, cheeks, lips, chin, neck... and the rest.
Up to a point. There should be a hook to get readers interested, then you can rambled on.So, conversely, the longer I ramble on at the beginning of the story, the stronger a license it gives me to ramble even more throughout the rest of it?…
Gosh, that’s so validating! Listen to this man, he clearly knows what’s up.
I feel like a little bit of exposition to start might be okay, if only to set the scene and get the ball rolling. I do agree that line iteming character traits and backgrounds to immediately lead into sex is not the way, though.I feel like it's a common practice in erotica to spend the first several paragraphs just supplying information about the characters -- like we need to know everything about their situation before they start having sex with each other. i.e. "My sister and I were never close, we grew up in a modest home in a small town and etc. etc..."
I usually skim right over these, if not back away from the story entirely. Facts and background information are well and good, but it's not a very compelling way to kick things off. Useful maybe to start the writing process that way to get that stuff down in your brain, but I'd say that can often be cut out entirely to let the reader figure it out, or perhaps filled in later once we have a reason to care about the characters and their situation.
That's fair. I'm not sure I'm on board with it as a general writing practice -- both as a writer and a reader -- but I can't really argue with giving the readers what they want.I feel like a little bit of exposition to start might be okay, if only to set the scene and get the ball rolling. I do agree that line iteming character traits and backgrounds to immediately lead into sex is not the way, though.
With how many stories follow that formula, however, I feel as if a sizeable amount of the readership here is looking for exactly that, because they're consuming it as they would visual pornography (see hot people/characters then watch them fuck, plot and setting are ancillary).
I feel like it's a common practice in erotica to spend the first several paragraphs just supplying information about the characters -- like we need to know everything about their situation before they start having sex with each other. i.e. "My sister and I were never close, we grew up in a modest home in a small town and etc. etc..."
I usually skim right over these, if not back away from the story entirely. Facts and background information are well and good, but it's not a very compelling way to kick things off. Useful maybe to start the writing process that way to get that stuff down in your brain, but I'd say that can often be cut out entirely to let the reader figure it out, or perhaps filled in later once we have a reason to care about the characters and their situation.
I read somewhere that as a writer you're telling your story on credit from the reader. They have no reason to keep going. They read because they want dialogue, interesting characters and plots. Any word that doesn't give them that has to be very carefully considered, because it diminishes your credit.I feel like a little bit of exposition to start might be okay, if only to set the scene and get the ball rolling. I do agree that line iteming character traits and backgrounds to immediately lead into sex is not the way, though.
With how many stories follow that formula, however, I feel as if a sizeable amount of the readership here is looking for exactly that, because they're consuming it as they would visual pornography (see hot people/characters then watch them fuck, plot and setting are ancillary).
Oh Lord, now we have erotic writing Economics.I read somewhere that as a writer you're telling your story on credit from the reader.
Unfortunately, Loving Wives trolls have already instituted a 0.5-1.0 star tariff on any story posted there.Oh Lord, now we have erotic writing Economics.
Supply-side deficits? Micro- and macroeconomics? Overdrafts? Premature withdrawals?
The possibilities make me shudder.
I do this for "just". So, so, so many unnecessary uses of just.When I finish my second draft, I always use the word search function and look for "Then", "Began", "Started" and other common words that are more often than not unnecessary.
I also search "Said", "The", "She" and "He" in order to find out if I have used them too repetitiously.
Yep, "just" was my first find and destroy word; "and then" is still my worst annoying tic as I write. I find you can get by with one or the other, but it's very rare that you need both.I do this for "just". So, so, so many unnecessary uses of just.
I think that's 90% of this site. At least I hope, together with that most of it is far from realistic. Incest, giant cocks and very uncomfortable NC...I believe that you can write things you haven't experienced personally, provided you do your research and keep it realistic.<...>
Though I agree, it should still be used in a measured way. The story can become cluttered and weird to read. Using it everywhere is certainly a step up from using it nowhere. Giving an emotional state is incredibly important.Late to the party, but my two cents, adjectives and adverbs.
She didn't just kiss him: she tenderly kissed him, or she sensually kissed him, or she lustily kissed him!
Adverbs should be used sparingly and judiciously, and preferably minimally.Though I agree, it should still be used in a measured way. The story can become cluttered and weird to read. Using it everywhere is certainly a step up from using it nowhere. Giving an emotional state is incredibly important.
You can also give this emotion afterwards though.
She kissed him. The tenderness surprised him.
That way you can reduce the -ly words, while still achieving your goal. It can also help with the pacing. You can use dots, comma's and longer/shorter sentences to hold the reader longer, or move them along some less important fluff
I've mentioned one or two million times how I like to use the sounds of words to enhance their meaning. In descriptive passages, this will put the reader in the mood you're trying to create. Even if the words themselves don't register with the reader, the impression of the sounds will.
I was recently rereading "The Eve of St. Agnes" by John Keats, and the opening stanza provides a wonderful example of this:
St. Agnes' Eve—Ah, bitter chill it was!
The owl, for all his feathers, was a-cold;
The hare limp'd trembling through the frozen grass,
And silent was the flock in woolly fold:
Numb were the Beadsman's fingers, while he told
His rosary, and while his frosted breath,
Like pious incense from a censer old,
Seem'd taking flight for heaven, without a death,
Past the sweet Virgin's picture, while his prayer he saith.
There are a lot of S sounds, to convey hissing, which you'd expect in a description of a frozen night. The stillness, the icy cold. Sibilants are good for these.
But also note how many F sounds there are: feathers, frozen, flock, fold, fingers, frosted, flight, even Virgin. This isn't just cold, it's someone trying to keep their teeth from chattering.
And there are very few words starting with dental Ds and Ts, and very few plosive Bs and Ps until the last line when they all come bursting out. Like the poet is struggling to speak through frozen lips and spits out the last few words almost in relief.
If you're trying to make your descriptive paragraphs more appealing to readers, I think this is a useful tactic. If the substance is dry, try using the form to make it memorable.
For all the caterwauling coming out of another thread about the lack of writing discussion, this was a really helpful approach to me. One I would not have considered on my own. Thank you.I've mentioned one or two million times how I like to use the sounds of words to enhance their meaning. In descriptive passages, this will put the reader in the mood you're trying to create. Even if the words themselves don't register with the reader, the impression of the sounds will.
I was recently rereading "The Eve of St. Agnes" by John Keats, and the opening stanza provides a wonderful example of this:
St. Agnes' Eve—Ah, bitter chill it was!
The owl, for all his feathers, was a-cold;
The hare limp'd trembling through the frozen grass,
And silent was the flock in woolly fold:
Numb were the Beadsman's fingers, while he told
His rosary, and while his frosted breath,
Like pious incense from a censer old,
Seem'd taking flight for heaven, without a death,
Past the sweet Virgin's picture, while his prayer he saith.
There are a lot of S sounds, to convey hissing, which you'd expect in a description of a frozen night. The stillness, the icy cold. Sibilants are good for these.
But also note how many F sounds there are: feathers, frozen, flock, fold, fingers, frosted, flight, even Virgin. This isn't just cold, it's someone trying to keep their teeth from chattering.
And there are very few words starting with dental Ds and Ts, and very few plosive Bs and Ps until the last line when they all come bursting out. Like the poet is struggling to speak through frozen lips and spits out the last few words almost in relief.
If you're trying to make your descriptive paragraphs more appealing to readers, I think this is a useful tactic. If the substance is dry, try using the form to make it memorable.
Definitely. But at least we can try to learn from him and from other great poets.It's hard to do it like Keats, because he was a genius with words,
Definitely. But at least we can try to learn from him and from other great poets.
I'd planned to add a line about how poetry is probably a better source than prose is for studying how sounds enhance meaning, but it seems to have been lost in the thought process.
This. The ancient Greeks talked about writing as wooing the Muses, and much like wooing women, there are plenty of fellas ready to tell you how you should do it. But your story isn't their story and it might not want the same things.They both do different things. The first one puts the reader inside the narrator's head, but it slows down the narrative. The second one is more superficial, but it doesn't interrupt the action. As a writer it's your job to decide which one you prefer, and to find out which one works best in the story. And that's a choice only you can make, because the rules are, after all, only guidelines.