How to Write for Fun
By TG Wolff @tg_wolff
Everyone has a different reason for writing, but one thing
should be universal: writing is fun. For many, the mandatory writing on
uninteresting subjects forced on us from elementary school on up has left a
bitter taste in the preverbal writing mouth. It’s akin to my distaste of plaid
after twelve years of Catholic school even though I haven’t worn a schoolgirl’s
skirt for thirty years. But fear not, you can overcome the rigid constraints of
noun-verb-noun and intro paragraph-body-summary paragraph. It may be hard to
overcome the Pavlovian habits, but it won’t be painful.
So, here’s the secret of how to write for fun…write like
nobody’s going to read it.
Counterintuitive, right? Well, I’m sure you’ve heard these
other popular sayings…
Dance like no one is watching, sing like no one is
listening, work like you don’t need the money, love like you’ve never been hurt.
Writing, like any another other form of art, is personal.
Which means how you do it is completely unique to you. When you feel like you
have to follow certain rules, or if you
worry about how nameless, faceless readers will react, you stifle the very
part of you need for good writing. Ergo, put aside all the rules and write like
nobody’s going to read it.
If it’s a funny scene, make yourself laugh. If you don’t,
nobody else will.
If it’s a sad scene, make yourself cry. If you don’t, nobody
else will.
If it’s a thrilling scene, make your adrenaline pump. If you
don’t, everyone else will be bored.
If it’s a sexy scene, make yourself…well, you get the
picture.
True story, in one of my books, the soon-to-be ex-wife of my
main character dies and he has to go back to arrange the funeral. He comes back
from the funeral determined to walk away from a budding romance. My editor told
me I had to write the funeral scene, without it, the hero’s actions weren’t
believable. It took me three days to figure out how to frame the funeral of a
failed love affair, but I did. When I wrote it, I cried so hard, I gave myself
a headache that lasted for three hours! The husband laughed with me, not at me
(that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.)
I started writing to entertain myself. I was doing a lot of
driving for my day job and found the radio just didn’t hold my attention. I
began playing with characters in my head, which evolved into storylines. I
wrote them down when I could, often in 20-30 minute spurts. Much of writing is
in the figuring out of what is to be said. Some people “figure” in front of a
keyboard. For me, it happens everywhere else. Walking the dog. Swimming.
Chilling on the back porch. Driving across the Midwest.
Writing is my reward at the end of a long day and where I go to play when life
is heavy.
I had over ten manuscripts completed before a friend dared
me to see if I could get published. In my opinion, one of the reasons my story
connect with people is they were written to entertain me, and by doing that,
they entertain others. Here’s an example from my newest release, WIDOW’S RUN.
The chapter is title Wanted: Sophisticated Slut, Must Have Three-Inch Heels.
The stiletto heels of my knee-high boots clicked as I
stepped onto small islands of concrete adrift in a sea of rubble. The city long
ago forgot this patch of nowhere existed, leaving it to reclamation by feral
beasts of all species. My target was the squat building wearing a mish-mash of
sixties, nineties, and Y2K renovations. Looked like everybody ran out of money
before the job was done. Still, the building stood when others had fallen,
surviving the urban apocalypse like a cockroach without the good sense to die.
Around the joint, an ad-hoc parking lot took over the space demoed buildings
left behind. Crushed glass sprinkled across the parking lot like sugar on a
donut, glistening under the happy-ass afternoon sun. The Hideaway.
Yeah, it was hidden…like a zit on the tip of a nose.
It was fun to put myself in
the role of an ex-CIA agent going into a seedy bar to do a little side job I
got blackmailed into. How would I walk? What would I be walking on? What would
the place feel like? How would it smell? I pulled on my attitude and let my
fingers fly.
There is a lot of advice out
there for writers and so I’ll add mine. Start by figuring out what type of
writer you are. If you like to go to the grocery store and winging it, you’re a
pantser—some who writes by the seat of their pants. You’ll likely find your fun
in the spontaneity of creation. Tell that critical angel on our shoulder to
come back during editing and set the words free. There’s nothing that can’t be
fixed in editing and you just may be amazed at where you end up.
If you meticulously plan out
meals, organize your list, and then ruthlessly consult it at the story, you’re
a plotter. You’ll likely find your fun in the development of order. Whether you
outline, storyboard, or make notes, creating the tool will give you a sense of
completion and satisfaction. Then sit down, with a smile on your face, connect
the dots and color in the scene. There’s nothing that can’t be fixed in editing
and you just may be amazed at where you end up. (I feel like I just read that
somewhere.)
Here are a few things you
may be asking yourself and my answers.
Q: What if I write for fun
and the first draft sucks?
A: The first draft will
suck; that’s what first drafts do. That doesn’t mean the story sucks, it means
you’re ready for editing. Expect several rounds of edits for content and for
copy. With each round, the story will get tighter and better.
Q: What if I write for fun
and nobody else likes it?
A: What will actually happen
is there will be a small number of people who thinks it’s horrible and a small
number of people who think it’s perfect. The truth is somewhere in between.
Readers have a broad taste spectrum. You won’t please everyone. Trying will
drive you crazy and ruin your self-esteem. Know what you want your story to be,
then challenge the haters to explain what didn’t work for them and critically evaluate
to determine 1) if it is valid and 2) if it needs to be fixed. Challenge the
lovers to make it better by asking open ended questions like
·
Did the story make you (laugh,
cry, angry, etc” if yes, where)
·
Were you bored anywhere? If yes,
where
·
Were you confused at any point? If
yes, about what?
Q: What if I write for fun
and I can’t get an agent or publisher?
A: You’ll be in good
company, but you’ll be richer for having enjoyed creating the story. There are
two times in life you can do whatever you want: when you have nothing and when
you have everything. You have nothing to lose…enjoy it.
Q: I have a story that is
really important to me and I want to tell it well, should I write it for fun?
A: Yes, but not first.
Writing is art, but it’s also a skill. Your third story will be twice as good
as your first for the experience of editing and feedback. Your sixth story will
be twice as good as your third as you hone your style and process. You don’t
expect to paint like Leonardo when you’ve never picked up a brush, have the
same expectation with writing. Write. Enjoy. Learn. Grow. Repeat.
Writing Prompt: You are four
years old and just came home after the best weekend ever with your
grandparents, describe it to your parents.
About the Author
TG Wolff writes thrillers and mysteries that
play within the gray area between good and bad, right and wrong. Cause and
effect drive the stories, drawing from 20+ years’ experience in Civil
Engineering, where “cause” is more often a symptom of a bigger, more challenging
problem. Diverse characters mirror the complexities of real life and real
people, balanced with a healthy dose of entertainment. TG Wolff holds a
Master’s Degree in Civil Engineering and is a member of Mystery Writers of
America and Sisters in Crime.
★ WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS: ★
Website → www.tgwolff.com
Twitter → @tg_wolff
Facebook → www.Facebook.com/tina.wolff.125
About the Book:
Title: WIDOW’S RUN
Author: TG Wolff
Publisher: Down & Out Books
Pages: 236
Genre: Mystery/Thriller
Author: TG Wolff
Publisher: Down & Out Books
Pages: 236
Genre: Mystery/Thriller
BOOK BLURB:
One night in Rome. One car. One dead scientist. Italian police
investigate, but in the end, all they have are kind words for the new widow.
Months later, a video emerges challenging the facts. Had he stepped into
traffic, or was he pushed? The widow returns to the police, where there are
more kind words but no answers. Exit the widow.
Enter Diamond. One name for a
woman with one purpose. Resurrecting her CIA cover, she follows the shaky video
down the rabbit hole. Her widow’s run unearths a plethora of suspects: the small-time crook, the mule-loving
rancher, the lady in waiting, the Russian bookseller, the soon-to-be priest.
Following the stink greed leaves in its wake reveals big lies and ugly truths.
Murder is filthy business. Good thing Diamond likes playing dirty.
"TG
Wolff's novel is for crime-fiction fans who like it action-packed and
hard-edged. Written with feisty panache, it introduces Diamond, one of the most
aggressive, ill-tempered, and wholly irresistible heroines to ever swagger
across the page." --David Housewright, Edgar Award-winning author
of Dead Man's Mistress
No comments:
Post a Comment