Saturday 14 June 2014

Dwight V. Swain and Me

You will be familiar with my ongoing fascination with the wisdom of writing gurus who want to help you write better. First it was Blake Snyder, then John Yorke then I listened to the words of Michael Moorcock and Lester Dent. My latest find is Dwight V. Swain. I like his gnarly voice on the podcast I listened to. Gnarly has a different meaning in American I'm aware because one of the reviews for my stories said it was 'gnarly'. I think that was good. Yep, I've checked - it is good, and doesn't mean covered in knobs (well it does sometimes.

So, I am reading Dwight V. Swain at the moment. There are some very useful blogs about his technique. Check out Phillip McColllum's blog entry on Scene and Sequel  but also Katie Ganshert's post on "Motivation-Reaction Units".

I love a bit of jargon.

So I went over The Beast of Whitby and tried to get my Motivation/Reaction Unit in place and arrange them in Scenes and Sequels.

The benefit of this for me was that Blake Snyder and John Yorke and also Christopher Vogler (to a lesser extent) gave an overarching story structure. Yorke makes the point that Acts and Scenes are fractal - so that they should mirror the overall story arc.  Swain tells you exactly how to do that.

So, you have (Inciting incident) -> reaction -> dilemma -> decision -> goal -> conflict -> disaster.

And you repeat it. So each scene has that form, and each act has that form and the whole story is built from those bricks. This works well with John Yorke's idea of a five act structure being implicit in all stories.

I don't buy that every story is the Hero's Journey however, though I like Joseph Campbell a lot. There are lots of archetypal experiences that light us up - Leaving Home, Finding a Mate, Facing Death, Being Predated, Finding our Place in the Tribe's Pecking Order, Raising Young.

I don't know why I've given them all capital letters...

Peace dudes - be gnarly!

TW.

The Beast of Whitby



I wrote a new story! But I also repackaged The Exorcist and The Golem. I've taken the individual stories off the market because they weren't selling much. That's despite me thinking they're not bad stories - I really like the characters Adam Meyrink and Midnight Blue.

My alter ego (a lady) did this with some of her racy stories and repackaged them with a new title and a new cover. She took the old ones off the market as it wouldn't do to disappoint people who thought they were buying new raciness and had already got the previous titles. This worked pretty well. Not stellarly, but well.

Anyway here's the contents of The Beast Of Whitby: 3 Stories of the Supernatural

The Beast of Whitby
"Adam Meyrink, intellectual by nature, loner by inclination and  supernatural problem solver to earn a living, takes a missing person job from a grieving girlfriend. He finds the missing man alive and well in Whitby, Yorkshire, but the ex boyfriend doesn't want to rekindle his old love. It turns out he has made new friends and developed other interests of the black magic kind. Job done, Adam is about to leave town but the man's occultist friends want to make trouble for him.  He knows he should walk away, but Adam's not the kind of man who can bend his principles and he never turns his back on trouble. "

The Exorcist
 Dr John Eliot inherits a clock and disturbing things start to happen in his house. His daughter sleeps alone upstairs and something wants to get her. Dr Eliot thought there was a rational explanation for everything, but when his family is at threatened, he knows he has to go beyond science to protect them. In his desperation he turns to Adam Meyrink

The Golem
Now in Prague, pursuing is mysterious research, English occultist, Adam Meyrink wants to make psychic contact with long dead Dr John Dee and Edward Kelley.  Going about his business, he upsets the wrong people and they draw him into their plots and unleash a monstrous creature of clay whose only mission is to kill him. 

Thursday 5 June 2014

Lester Dent and Me


So this one was in response to people saying my previous ghost stories weren't scary enough. By that some of them clearly meant weren't horrible enough in a gory sense. I thought I'd write one that was, but of course you can be the judge of whether I succeeded. I was aware that this is a Monster in The House story, using Blake Snyder's genre typing. The main rule is "don't get eaten" which has an ironical meaning in this story. If you are familiar with Snyder's ideas, this genre is typified by someone being in a place they can't get out of due to physical or other impediments and a monster has been created by their "sin". They have to face their sin to resolve the issue.

I also wanted to try out Lester Dent's method for writing short stories. This is based on four parts each 1500 words each. I went over this word count in the rewrite by about a third, but I thought that was forgivable. +Karen Woodward  discusses this very usefully on her blog.  Dent was writing pulp action fiction so his is all about murders and fist fights. Clearly that wasn't going to work in a horror story where you don't want the monster to appear until much later, if at all - creating the atmosphere by hints rather than revelations. (Do revelations ever create atmosphere?). I also wanted to avoid laying too much pipe as Blake Snyder says - I didn't want much exposition at all. When I'd finished I found that I needed a little bit more.

I was also aware of +Michael Moorcock 's advice about dropping little bits of mystery in - even if you're not actually going to explain them at the end, though I think it all becomes clear. 

So, I did all that to the plan and I finished a story that I was 50% satisfied with. I wondered whether that was because it just wasn't tense enough to anyone, or it wasn't tense enough to me because unlike when I pantsed stories before, the story itself was a surprise to me and therefore tantalising or scary to me, I knew the bones of this one and so maybe it was too clinical?

I don't know. I'll wait for the reviews. My kids liked it anyway, but maybe they just wanted to sweeten me up so I gave them money?

Tony


Sunday 1 June 2014

Scrivener Update Windows Error

Tried to update Scrivener but I got an error message:

"Installation and runtime mismatch"


Said that where I had installed Scrivener and where it was running from were different so it couldn't update. But of course it was making a mistake. Hoping this link will fix it.