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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1311011-Porthole/day/1-17-2021
Rated: 13+ · Book · Personal · #1311011
A terminal for all blogs coming in or going out. A view into my life.
Started July 1st 2019 for contests, etc. as other blogs are filling up and have other purposes.

Ferry boat between Solvorn and Ornes across the Lustrafjord i Sogn og Fjordane.




I'm starting a new blog because
BOOK
L'aura del Campo  (13+)
Online journal capturing the moment and the memory of moments. A meadow meditation.
#982524 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
had over 1,200 entries and that was getting close to full. I don't want to trim it by deletion. I did that once, much to my dismay. Will be used more for poetry.

BOOK
Hoarfrosts from Hell  (GC)
Anything I'm not happy about or that I don't want in my main blog!
#997339 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
is still hidden from the public and will remain so. It's more personal and full of angst. Was used for 30DBC for May 2020 and now used for Blogville.

BOOK
Enga mellom fjella  (13+)
Enga mellom fjella: where from across the meadow, poems sing from mountains and molehills.
#1317094 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
was full... until the number of entries was increased. A mixed blog, mostly stories.

I'll be linking to
BOOK
On The Write Path  (13+)
ON THE WRITE PATH: travel journal for Around-the-World in 2015, 16, 18.
#2032403 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
as I need to post there about my travels.

 
BOOK
O Pinions!  (XGC)
May my opinions gather wind under their wings and fly, perchance to soar.
#1501776 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
is for my opinions. *Laugh*

BOOK
Nurture your Nature  (13+)
Look around. Let Nature nurture your Soul. I record images I sense and share them here.
#1439094 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
was set up for nature observations and musings.

 
BOOK
Watt's Gnus  (18+)
On topics and today's gnus. Definitely opinionated. Set to 18+ for a reason.
#1439092 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
come out of a need to share interesting stuff I come across. When I was young I did a small newsletter named as such. (or was it column in the newsletter? Been 30 years... I think.)

 
FOLDER
Flash Fiction  (GC)
Short 300 word, more or less, "stories" .
#2190336 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
is where I put my flash fictions. Maybe someday I'll figure it out and have enough good ones to publish. Ratings vary and some are hidden from view.

I've started an appendix (I no longer have one personally) to keep track of my Space Cadet journals for Space Blog. It's a work constantly under construction. Mind the mess.
STATIC
Space Cadet - the never ending journal  (18+)
Journeys of an Alien Space crew.
#2226611 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani


I needed to start a folder for contests as there are so many deadlines and details to remember.
 
FOLDER
Conquest ... to keep track of contests  (18+)
A place to keep track of in progress works and up-coming deadlines as well as any awards.
#2233119 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
(also very messy!) *Shock2*

 
FORUM
Blogville   (XGC)
Where bloggers meet and greet to read and share. No required prompt. Alias: blogville.
#2253938 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
is for posting personal blog entries in hope that folks will comment and post their blog entries there as well. I will be commenting on all blog entries posted. It's my effort to rebuild a blogging community.

BOOK
Bibimbap 비빔밥   (13+)
Left-overs piled on hot rice and mixed.
#2296648 by Kåre Enga in Udon Thani
an E blog focusing on food and culture. Easily digestible for the Queasy and Questioning.

January 17, 2021 at 6:13pm
January 17, 2021 at 6:13pm
#1002307
Weekly goals January 18:

*Check* 1. write three poems or prose or short-stories. 3 poems, one flash fiction.
*Check* 2. submit at least one writing to a contest. 2 submitted (one monthly)
*XW* 3. old goal: design a trinket.
*Questiongr* 4. read. I've had a real problem focusing on reading. I read very little
*CheckG* 5. Go out every day. Because I really don't want to. Visited friends all 5 weekdays.

6... exceed one of the above or finally finish an old goal.

Aennaytte: Free & Wild in GoT wrote about writing a short story. I've written 100 flash fictions but can't quite grasp how to do it write. These are her suggestions my response:

Ten Small Steps

Write a short story in ten easy steps.

1. A short story is not a novel.

Like novel, a short story needs to tell a story that includes the basic and expected storytelling elements of inciting incident, rising action, climax, and falling action. Unlike a novel, a short story will skip fluffy parts of storytelling. The short story focuses on one event, one aspect/problem/relationship of the main character.

Flash really pares it down to one moment, imho.

2. Frontload the action.

Pull the reader right into the story by starting as close as possible to the end. There is no need to describe mundane before events that have only a small relationship to the plot at hand.

I liked how my new fav Thai series started out with the main character dropping dead. The bits and pieces of the back story are revealed later but would have weakened the presentation. It's a bromance with a ghost... so we start with a ghost!

3. Short stories go fast.

Now that you started close to the end, keep the pace at the high speed that readers expect during the parts of highest action and highest tension.

I might disagree a bit. Not all stories are filled with 'action' and the tension can be mental-emotional-spiritual.

4. Short story equals small cast of characters.

Developing characters takes time and words. A hard hitting short story needs about three of them. The main character, an antagonist, and a relationship character who can drive the protagonist's or antagonist's character arc.

Again... not convinced that two 'characters' are needed. In flash it can be Character versus Time, Humanity, Nature... But the cast is limited to say the least.

5. Make the reader root for one of the characters.

The obvious choice for the character to root for is the protagonist. The reader will root for a passionate character, or one who leaves his comfort zone.

That or root against them. Anger is a strong emotion.

6. Conflict.

In a short story, one point of conflict is enough. The conflict might be a decision that has to be made, a revelation, or a dilemma to figure out. It's important to keep the tension high around this point of conflict to keep the reader invested and engaged in the story.

Yep. Focus. Short poems present this challenge as well. Neither can afford any extraneous words.

7. Backstory?

Not really. There is not going to be enough space to have an elaborate backstory in a short story since every sentence counts. However, you, the writer, have to know your character so well that his backstory can be glimpsed through the way he talks, acts, and behaves under tension.

Write it then cut it and save as a separate story. If you have time. There's no reason why a great character can't have more than one story! Same with poetry.

8. The five senses.

Give the reader as much taste, smell, touch, sound as possible so that your reader experiences your world as if he were there.

Yes. We rely too much on descriptive sight. Fragrance evokes memories. Sounds can trigger traumas (at least for me). Long descriptions are problematic. One word may suffice for each sense. Adverbs need to be avoided unless hyperbole is the point. A hyperbolic character might work... but word count...

9. Dialogue brings your story to life.

Tight dialogue can be a real good help for building drama, but read it out loud so that it doesn't feel stilted or unrealistic. Keep speech tags to a minimum and use "said" for the majority if you need a speech tag. Dialogue is more powerful when it's part of an action. Have your characters experience something as they speak to each other.

Movement. Always read out loud.

The easiest step (not)
10. Edit.

Editing is where the real heavy lifting comes in. Kill your darlings comes to mind. This does not have to mean that you have to kill a character that you're attached to. Although that's what it can mean. Another type of darling can be a specific description of something, an action that doesn't drive the plot forward, or irrelevant backstory details. The truth is: every word you put into that first draft is one of your darlings. Some of them have to die. It's a sacrifice you have to be willing to make.

The only problem with a 24 hour contest is time. But once written it can be edited days or years later and nproved upon. The following 4 suggestions are important, imho.

*Bullet* Can one character do the work of two? Kill one.
*Bullet* Too much set up before a scene? Cut that out.
*Bullet* Repetitive words? Strike them.
*Bullet* Each sentence has to be meaningful to the story.

I would add that keeping a copy of the first draft and anything cut isn't a bad idea. Cut sentences and scenes might be useful later.













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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1311011-Porthole/day/1-17-2021