Allyourbase
Allison Kapitein
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2010
- Posts
- 1,283
I'm not a Stephen King aficionado, but I read all kinds of stuff, and when I heard he wrote a writer's guide, I decided to check it out. It's mostly a memoir, but there's some solid writing advice in there too. So I thought to share some things that were striking to me here, and see what you guys have to say.
Of course he says the things everyone says: read a lot, write a lot - which... I don't, unless you count the fact that I work with text for a living, then I do. Don't go for passives. Avoid clichés. Show, don't tell. Make dialogue sound realistic. And so on. But here's something else:
He's not a fan of plotting. He argues a strong enough situation renders the whole question of plot moot. He likens writing to uncovering a fossil. He starts with situation, characters follow, and then he writes the story wherever this takes him. ("Why be such a control freak? Sooner or later every story comes out somewhere."
I happen to agree here, but lately I've wondered if the lack of plotting was the reason I have a hard time writing story series.
Ironically, he urges writers to be brief...
*glances at his novels the size of a fist* Apparently, when revising his pieces, he shortens them significantly. One of the things he has issues with... is using adverbs. Especially adverbs in dialogue attribution. And don't you try and cheat by "shooting the attribution verb full of steroids". He thinks it's silly, redundant (show, don't tell, right? and especially, don't show AND tell) and often cliché. He will usually edit them out - 'he said' and 'she said' are just fine.
I'm guilty of using adverbs and attribution verbs other than 'he said'. Too much, maybe, also.
So I'll ask you guys: what are your thoughts about this? Plotting? Adverbs? Attributions on steroids?
Of course he says the things everyone says: read a lot, write a lot - which... I don't, unless you count the fact that I work with text for a living, then I do. Don't go for passives. Avoid clichés. Show, don't tell. Make dialogue sound realistic. And so on. But here's something else:
He's not a fan of plotting. He argues a strong enough situation renders the whole question of plot moot. He likens writing to uncovering a fossil. He starts with situation, characters follow, and then he writes the story wherever this takes him. ("Why be such a control freak? Sooner or later every story comes out somewhere."
I happen to agree here, but lately I've wondered if the lack of plotting was the reason I have a hard time writing story series.
Ironically, he urges writers to be brief...

I'm guilty of using adverbs and attribution verbs other than 'he said'. Too much, maybe, also.
So I'll ask you guys: what are your thoughts about this? Plotting? Adverbs? Attributions on steroids?