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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/8012-Rivalries-and-Envies.html
Drama: December 07, 2016 Issue [#8012]

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Drama


 This week: Rivalries and Envies
  Edited by: Aennaytte: Free & Wild in GoT
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

Hello dramatic writers and readers, I am Aennaytte: Free & Wild in GoT , your guest editor for this issue.


Word from our sponsor



Letter from the editor

Rivalries and Envies


The holidays bring out the worst in us.


What better source of drama than the holidays?


It's the most wonderful time of the year ... or is it?

Keeping up with the Jones's is hardest around the holidays. It begins with the battle for the most epic lighting display in front of the house and it keeps going from there. Who got the biggest new car or truck. Who travels to the most exotic location for the holidays?

Whether neighbor, co-worker, or relative - people are going to have to deal with someone (or many people) who will seem to have everything and then some. And definitely the most shiny version of everything and then some. It's the time for rivalries and envies. As a writer, you can use the bragging you see and the envy you witness as a source for your dramatic writing.

A few years ago, a video circulated on the internet of a teenager who burst out into a crying fit when the iPhone she received for Christmas had the wrong color. This was a prime example of greed and being spoiled to a point where getting what she asked for was still corrupted by a minor detail. As embarrassing as this episode was for the girl in retrospect, she gave a great example to us writers as to how petty we can make our characters when it comes to present giving and present receiving.

We even have an example from fiction: Dudley Dursley of Harry Potter is upset when he only counts 32 presents for his birthday.

If you're going to write any type of drama involving gift giving and receiving, be sure to have at least one character be completely oblivious and greedy. It really gets the reader's blood boiling and it's a great way to show a character's personality without having to tell about it.


Editor's Picks

STATIC
Death at Rosewood Mansion  (13+)
Excerpt from a gossip column about the death of a famous director....
#1136918 by iKïyå§ama-House Targaryen

 
STATIC
The Greedy Man  (E)
A poem about greed and its price.
#2074398 by Fhionnuisce

 
STATIC
A Customer's Perspective  (E)
...after an ordeal with the Service Department at the local Honda dealership.
#1343101 by Maria Mize

 Greed  (18+)
The reading of a will
#654321 by John Nation

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This item number is not valid.
#1041713 by Not Available.

 
STATIC
A Trip to Love  (18+)
Will Kelly and Sarah ever work it out?
#2072848 by Bikerider

 
STATIC
Floods and Flurries  (13+)
A discovery of bones prompts his love to tell her secret.
#1965865 by K Renée (on the road)

 
STATIC
The Christmas Carol Ballet  (E)
"The Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens has been a holiday staple. Now, dance to it!
#2102975 by Jay O'Toole

 Obsession  (13+)
Never underestimate the little guy...or his rival. An original myth.
#1124344 by Tehuti, Lord Of The Eight

 
STATIC
Friendship Lost  (E)
a poem about a friendship that didn't last.
#1959737 by Isola Bertolucci

 
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Word from Writing.Com

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Ask & Answer

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