30 exercises to help you outline the setting for your novel |
How do I sign up? Just start writing. There is no pre-registration and no deadline for new starters. When your first exercises comes in, I'll start tracking your progress in the forum body. Do I need to be a member of World Weavers ? No. If you do want to join, send me an email. Do I need a certain level of W.com membership? So long as you are a W.com member of any level and can create items, you can participate. Unfortunately we cannot accept participants who are not members of the site. But I only have a free membership and limited portfolio space. You don't need to post items on WDC to participate. You can paste your text into the survey instead. But I want to keep my notes private. Your survey responses come to me as the owner of the survey. I only scan them to check the exercise has been completed. If you really don't want to share your notes, create a private item and submit a link to the item instead. I won't be able to open the item, but I will be able to check whether you have edited it. Can I just use one forum post and update it to submit all my exercises? Exercises shouldn't be posted in the forum. You need to submit them via WW Workshop - Exercise Submission to make sure I don't miss your updates. But if you're looking for feedback from other participants on something, you can post in the forum as well. Can I work on a world I already created? Yes! You can use ideas and notes which already exist for a setting you have already prepared, to explore it and develop it further in a structured way. How is this even going to work? What if I'm only working on a city scale? What if I'm not writing fantasy? Don’t let the word ‘world’ mislead you. Your ‘world’ can be as small as a high school, as large as an empire, a single religious sect living within a larger whole, or a rebel colony of sentient reptiles on a star ship. These exercises are designed to lead you through the layers of a culture as much as the physical make-up of your 'world'. In order for a place to exist, someone has to build it and use it. The workshop is intended to help you understand the implications of those truths. If you're working with a contemporary setting, I still recommend giving the exercises a try. Often stories in those settings lack enough detail to bring in readers unfamiliar with a particular city or culture compared to fantasy and historical stories. |