Cagivagurl
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2019
- Posts
- 1,344
Ah, the road to literary greatness is littered with roadblocks.As a writer, each of us hits a stumbling block sooner or later. Are you great at writing the beginning of a story, and struggle with it after that? Or the opposite: great at writing an ending, now how do you get it set up for that?
My greatest challenge is keeping the story moving. I tend to get way in to excruciatingly minute detail. Like I don't even understand the concept of brevity. I've got a quote on my desk by Mark Twain: "A story is typically best told in as few words as possible."
I've had to cut bits that I really liked how I wrote them, but they had to go because they were stalling the story. I fight this battle constantly in my writing.
My only solution has been my own ruthless editing. If it isn't serving the story, out it goes. I save those passages, because they might be useful for something else.
Anybody else? Character names, describing outdoor settings (or indoor settings)?
Sometimes my biggest impediment is time. Not to write, but the gaps between when I do... Maintaining the consistency of character... On occasion, it could be weeks between getting back to a story. Keeping the characters voice strong and in character can be difficult...
There's also another problem for me.
The passionate fervour of the opening... The words flowing easily and smoothly. Then as the story sinks into the more mundane, that desire to press the keys subsides, and it becomes a little tedious... More work than love...
It is still a joy though, untangling the words, and sentences, trying to tell the story in your head. Translating thought to story...
I'm slower these days, because I am aware of the craft, searching to get better, improve, grow and actually convey the story.
Cagivagurl