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- May 23, 2023
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Yep. 'Miss Vickie'. Over 31k reads and still growing daily.So many lit pages....All in one story?
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Yep. 'Miss Vickie'. Over 31k reads and still growing daily.So many lit pages....All in one story?
I have a story here that is 81 pages, and 8 more that are over 20 pages.So many lit pages....All in one story?
There are many long stories here on Lit. The longest single submission I've seen was 80 Lit pages, around 300k words, and and anecdotally there's a long serial story pushing a million words...So many lit pages....All in one story?
Others have said something similar, but:
You've written a conversation. It has powerful emotions, believable dialogue, it reveals character and sets up the next chapter. You think it's crafted better than any conversation you've ever written.
Be willing to cut it out because it doesn't fit the actual story you wrote. Don't cling to something that you wrote if it doesn't help the reader's experience.
--Annie
Yes! This! Kind of what I was talking about. When to cut, when to elaborate. Ok this is a different type of example of that, but yes.On that topic, you will get a ton of writing advice based on "rules".
What Annie is referring to is covered under "Kill your darlings."
The key to any of the "rules" is understanding the INTENT of the rule, not the letter of it.
We don't kill our darlings just because. We cull it because it doesn't fit the story.
Another one you will hear a million times is "Show don't tell".
Great rule. Don't say, "Jack was mad."
Say,
Jack slammed the phone into its cradle, and walked across the room before punching the wall.
"That backstabbing motherfucker," he said before punching the wall again.
One tells, the other shows.
But the thing is, showing takes significantly more words. Sometimes that "showing" distracts from the story, slows your pace down and doesn't help the reader experience. You have to decide which makes more sense for your story at that moment.
There are many long stories here on Lit. The longest single submission I've seen was 80 Lit pages, around 300k words, and and anecdotally there's a long serial story pushing a million words...
My current record is 27 pages (albeit split into six parts).So many lit pages....All in one story?
Oops. 'Miss Vickie' 9 Lit pages, 'The Evolution of Jennifer' is 11 Lit pages.Yep. 'Miss Vickie'. Over 31k reads and still growing daily.
Fucking shit, I was not ready for that while casually browsing on a lazy Saturday.I recognized that truth. Empathy without self regard can be dangerous. It can become, “It’s my fault he hits me.” It can become, “I’m not worthy of their love.”
You will not regret reading her Fall and Rise story. Or anything else of hers.I will definitely find some time to read your story.
With any genre story, hit the tropes, and hit them hard. Fans of the genre will eat them up and ask for more.Write an Incest story. Make it the most cliché thing you can imagine, but give it a title that draws in the readers.
I would like to use this thread to collect wisdom for aspiring writers, welcoming them to our illustrious world.
My How To for new others just posted (How To Be an Author on Literotica), so I'll start self-servingly with that. It was an attempt to gather much of the collected wisdom I have seen offered here.
But I've also had multiple conversations here with new-ish authors over the last few weeks.
I'm hardly a seasoned veteran, closing in on my 9month anniversary of my first story, 7 months on AH. Many of you have far more experience than I do,
What advice would you give people just starting out? And be nice, starting out is scary enough as is.
Do us all a favor:
- “Hot” is not the only adjective in the world.
- Women do not ejaculate.
- Young boys do not have 10-inch penises.
- Semen is not molten hot.
- "Fuck me! Fuck me! Fuck me!" does not add anything to a story.
Section 11 makes everything that follows less relevant, but I’ll tackle Section 9 anyway.
Negative energy is still energy, and it can be harnessed just as effectively as positive energy. Writing only fantasies that make you feel good is for children. Always put the story first, and if it leads you into darker or less comfortable territory, don’t flinch. Hedonism is for the soft and the half-baked.
Trust your gut: if something feels wrong, it probably is. Don’t hesitate to stop and try a different angle, even if it means scrapping entire sections.
What if I *want* to be the soft and half baked? What if my fantasy world is a place to escape from the darkness of my daily world? Do we all have to read and love dystopias to avoid being children, or can grown adults still enjoy pure wish fulfillment?Hedonism is for the soft and the half-baked.