My Commander Shepard
Wow! Nobuyuki, did you just used your tactics what I think you did? đđ Good work on this one @ichigo-daifuku đđ.
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Though âwriting skillâ is often used to refer to all aspects of story crafting, it can be divided into âstorytelling conceptsâ and the âactual writingâ. Addressed in the previous post: Writing vs Storytelling Skills (link embedded), now Iâm here to tell you how to work on that specific storytelling skill.
1. Read a variety of books. Various authors, various genres, the more you expand your examples the better. Variation of reading means youâll be exposed to more ideas, more ways of thought, more storytelling patterns, more everything that you can critique and help make decisions on how your own stories will unfold. Even take up books you may not like. Give them a chance, and if you still donât like them then at least be able to explain why.
2. Learn genre expectations (and that tropes arenât bad). Genres exist to classify stories into familiar concepts. Sometimes, novice writers try to throw out genre ideas because theyâre all âclicheâ or they want âsomething differentâ, yet they fail to grasp why those patterns exist in the first place. Familiar storytelling concepts (tropes) can be cliches, yes, but more often they fulfill one or more of these requirements:
A way to fast-track info to the reader without having to explain every ounce of meaning (Color-coded symbolism, character archetypes, etc.)
To create a familiar base, allowing for further growth of the concept with less time than it would have taken to set up something new.Â
Promises to fulfill a certain type of story (You canât say you want to write a romance, but with no romance)
Those things only become cliche when executed poorly or if they cause predictability when the story is trying to rely on unpredictability. A story full of tropes is not automatically a bad story. Writing in a way that subverts expectations well requires having a strong understanding of the genre youâre trying to twist. A genre is a promise of a specific type of narrativeâ you canât just throw it out the window and expect readers to be satisfied. Itâs fine to write cross-genre or mess with tropes, but be wary of it coming from a place of âitâs all the same so Iâm going to do it completely different!â.
By learning genre expectations, you can gain that knowledge that lets you subvert better, or the knowledge to play into it better. You can figure out where the true heart of the stories are and why readers care. You can figure out how to write in a genre that works with your personal goals and desires for the story.Â
3. Learn best practices for different storytelling mediums. âI saw this awesome scene on TV and I want to write it in my story, so I imagined how itâs going to play out and itâll be perfect!â No, it wonât, because what works in visual media isnât the same for books and what works in your head isnât a clear idea of how it would work on paper. (link embedded)
TV, and other forms of visual media, are presented very differently than the written word. They can rely on music, camera angles, subtle background eventsâ and endless list of things that writing cannot replicate and isnât made to. Becoming a better storyteller means learning the strengths and weaknesses of different media so you can tailor stories to best fit how theyâll be told. The imagination is similar to visual media, but better and worse. Better, because you can learn over time how to tailor your imagination for the written word. Worse, because it can create unrealistic expectations and is harder to look past.
Itâs natural to want to mimic what you see in other forms of storytelling, but one of the most important things a writer can learn is to get over the fact that they canât translate ideas in every situation. Itâs fine to be inspired by other forms of storytelling and what your imagination creates, but donât become a slave to the unrealistic expectations. Learn to work with the paper, not against it.
4. Stress test plot ideas to catch issues before they become a problem. While this isnât going to always work and there will still be times that you have to adjust in the middle of things, stress testing your ideas can help teach you where you keep going wrong so you can work on fixing it. There are two main things to keep in mind when doing this:
The plot structure (link embedded): Overarching plot concepts should fit into a specific structure. The structure can have small variations, but there should be an average line of best fit that naturally overlays against the story. The higher your skill, the more you can mess with the lines and have it not blow up in your face.
Plot is essentially cause-and-effect (link embedded): The events of a plot should be a relatively smooth slide from start to finish. Not âsmoothâ as in âno conflict or tensionâ, âsmoothâ as in âlogically glides from one point to anotherâ. Make sure you can connect the dots.
If you catch and fix enough of your own mistakes then you can start teaching yourself not to make them.Â
5. Critique the storytelling of others. What did you like? What didnât you like? What choices did the writer make and what were the consequences of those choices? Iâm going to repeat that last one again because itâs one of the most important things a writer can learn: Every story is made from a set of choices and those choices have consequences. Not all bad, not all good; itâs a neutral term that just refers to outcomes. One of the biggest separators of storytelling skill is how well a writer can work with the natural consequences of their choices.Â
When you critique others, you look at those consequences and weigh them against what you consider to be a âgood storyâ. While a writer can only critique at a close level to their skill, the more they critique, the higher skill climbs, and the better they get. To become a better storyteller, you should get used to tearing otherâs, and your own, work apart. It can help to keep a journal or some kind of record of critiques, since writing thoughts down helps bridge the gap between the mindâs assumptions and reality (just like the bridge between an imagined scene and actually writing it down).
6. Brush up on literary concepts. Theyâre not just for English class! While some are more technical in nature, there are plenty of storytelling-inclined literary techniques that gaining a better understanding of can improve your own work. Also, literary concepts are just tropes that happen to apply to âwork of literary meritâ. Theyâre not fancy or pretentious to includeâ just study and practice them well so they work with your story rather than against it. (Study tropes too!)
All that said, thereâs no such thing as a âperfect storytellerâ. Brushing up on storytelling skills isnât about being perfect, itâs about getting better relative to where you were before (and potentially helping close the gap between writing and storytelling skills).Â
Keep writing, keep practicingâ keep storytelling.
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Establish boundaries beforehand and know that you are your own person.
So what? If my actions inconvenience people, then as long as I did not hurt anyone (perhaps their ego but its their problem) its alright.
From Taiko by Eiji Yoshikawa
This part occured after Nobunaga's death. Hideyoshi and Shibata Katsuie (Nobu's senior retainer and an NPC in SLBP) had a fallout and after many schemes and faction disputes later, they fought in the Battle of Shizugatake in which Katsuie lost. When I read this part, I was awed.
As a player of both IkeSen and slbp, I have seen the loyalty and brotherly love of ikesen!Hide (the "mother hen"of Azuchi lol) and the clever mischief of SLBP!Hide, but this book opened my eyes to this cunning man whose mind is as dangerous as he is kind (and loyal) to his allies. He had no qualms using "borrowed knife" tactics against his enemies: a proof of how scary he is, if his mind is used as a weapon. So unless you are Ieyasu, you'll never see him coming....
I know he is depicted as a clever man in history (...like he coaxes the bird to sing proverb...) but this novel goes beyond my expectations. Not that I dislike him (In fact I respect this man for beating odds to unify Japan), but one can just imagine how the wars shape good men to do what we consider "evil" or "underhanded" means to achieve peace.
You knowâŠif I didnât know better Lady Yoshihime can be the worst evil LOVE RIVAL for Lord Kojuroâs affection until you knew the truth behind that woman.
I REFUSE to be apologetic for my autistic child. Iâm not sorry sheâs sensitive, Iâm not sorry she has meltdowns, Iâm not sorry she doesnât like to interact with others, Iâm not sorry đ€·đ»ââïž Iâm not gonna waste another minute explaining to someone âsorry sheâs autisticâ, because Iâm just not sorry anymore tbh
Hiding information from your readers on purpose will help you create tension in your novel. I know this doesnât work for every novel, but if youâre writing something with elements of suspense and mystery, hiding details and revealing them later will improve your story. This also helps add dimensions to your characters and explore their motivations on a deeper level.
Here are a few things to hide about your characters to create tension:
Whether or not your protagonist is lying
Even good characters lie, especially if they feel like it will protect other people in the long run. There are ways to hint that your character is hiding the truth without actually revealing what the truth is. If your protagonist gets nervous or changes the subject when theyâre asked about a specific detail, this will help show your readers that something isnât quite right. If your characterâs deception is hidden and then revealed at the right time, youâll be able to add exciting tension and shock value to your story.
Who the real villain is
Some of the best tension is created when weâre uncertain about who the real villain is. In mystery/crime novels, for example, thereâs often evidence that points to one person who ends up not really being the one we need to worry about. If you hide this information from your readers, you keep them guessing throughout the course of your novel and this will aid in creating suspense.
The truth about their past
When you hide your characterâs past from your readers, you have the ability to use it as an explanation for something important later on. For example, if you character has these mysterious powers they canât explain, you can use their parents and back story in order to reveal later on why itâs happening. Revealing past details slowly over the course of your novel helps build the mystery.
What their secondary goals are
Sometimes characters will have goals no one else knows about but them OR they will have a false goal that their using to cover up their real goal. For example, a character might say theyâre rescuing another character because they want to help, but it really might be all about finding some hidden treasure along the way. There are many reasons why a character might want to hide their goals. Explore character motivations on a deeper level and youâll be able to realistically include this type of deception in your story.
-Kris NoelÂ
GOOD LORD !!đšđšđš!!
someone has waited their entire career to use this headline