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Printed from https://writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/11654
Short Stories: November 09, 2022 Issue [#11654]




 This week: Character Inspiration
  Edited by: Leger~ Author IconMail Icon
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  Open in new Window.

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

The purpose of this newsletter is to help the Writing.com short story author hone their craft and improve their skills. Along with that I would like to inform, advocate, and create new, fresh ideas for the short story author. Write to me if you have an idea you would like presented.

This week's Short Story Editor
Leger~ Author Icon



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Letter from the editor

Character Inspiration


There's been some brilliant characters in novels I read, and some awesome ones in movies. While a person can't hijack an entire character for your story, you can look at what you loved about that character and add those attributes to your character.

It is hard in a short story, to give a huge amount of background to your character without using a lot of word count and if you're in a contest, there's generally a limit. So distill down what qualities you love and plump up your character. While some of you are pounding through NaNoWriMo, remember you can edit after you win and add some special characteristics. Editing doesn't always mean removing words, it can mean adding or clarifying what you wrote.

Also, every character doesn't have to be brilliant. The shopkeeper that moves through the scene should be bland and keep the focus on your main characters. Grandma can hand out sweets to the children but doesn't have to pull a gun on your protagonist. The same with the scene, it can be ordinary and let the spotlight shine on the characters.

So, in summary, let other characters inspire you, don't copy them. And as always, Write On!


This month's question: Do you add attributes to your characters in edit? Send in your answer below! *Down* Editors love feedback!


Editor's Picks


 
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CROSSWORD
A Thanksgiving Crossword Open in new Window. (E)
A crossword about Thanksgiving.
#2283949 by StephBee Author IconMail Icon

Give this holiday crossword a try!

A Samhain Visit From Mahmo Open in new Window. (E)
Irish Soul Cake has special powers
#2284596 by Bikerider Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: I followed the ancient Irish Soul Cake recipe exactly. I blended the flour, cinnamon, sugar and lemon zest while the yeast, sugar, and milk creamed into a frothy cloud. I’d never met my grandmother, but I found her recipe years after her death. I’d forgotten it, but for the past week an inner voice compelled me to make the cake for All Hallows Eve.

 
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STATIC
The Case of the Man in the Mummy's Case Open in new Window. (ASR)
How could a man be dead only a week after being buried for a thousand years?
#2234519 by Seuzz Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: "I love it when I am right!"

I looked up in time to catch the hurled newspaper full in the face. "Especially," Moon grinned at me, "when it means everyone else is wrong!"

My companion had the high forehead of a genius, and the narrow face of a criminal; when he grinned, malice invariably lit up his eyes. Children instinctively recoiled from him, and even brave men were known to cross the street when they saw Moon striding down the sidewalk at them on a winter's evening.


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This item number is not valid.
#2255729 by Not Available.

Excerpt: She wasn’t the most beautiful dog, but it turned out that she was the smartest dog, by far.

 The Goat Open in new Window. (18+)
A decision to pick up a souvenir leads to a trip back in time.
#2120802 by Aiva Raine Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: I longed for home. What I wouldn't give to go back. To be back in my own time, my own place. Three days. I had been here for only three days, but they felt like a century.

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#2283785 by Not Available.

Excerpt: I wore morning like a black armband. 4 a.m. Dad was in the kitchen making coffee on the wood stove. I sat on the step stool beside flesh-devouring heat. Filmy frost on the pane above a dull white sink screened a dark day. A blue pair of leather gloves lay in my lap. The dirty boots he gave me pinched my toes.

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#2284255 by Not Available.

Excerpt: We all know gays love nothing more than houses and Halloween, so when Dr. Christopher Malik saw the Dormus Veritatis shaded by the hills of Redwater County, he’d called his real estate agent and snatched it up. He didn’t even ask Brandon; didn’t need to. He’d already pictured his husband’s stereotypical but natural gay-gasp, and six weeks later, the couple, their nephew, and their dog moved in. With only a couple of weeks before Halloween, they started decorating as they’d unpacked.

 
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Wiggin's Haunted Mansion Open in new Window. (E)
Jennifer, baited into getting the Wiggin's account, sees the mansion's famous ghost.
#2114150 by Jeannie Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: Jennifer couldn’t believe what happened as she walked out of the conference room. How could I be so gullible? Feeling a headache coming on, she poured two ibuprofen tablets into her hand, popped them into her mouth, and gulped down a glass of water. She slumped down in her office chair and stared out the window.

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The Thing from Space (weird tales #8) Open in new Window. (13+)
Something unearthly finds a good home on Earth. Flash fiction.
#2226984 by Kotaro Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: Saki was dreaming. A sound like breathing, yet deep and slow beyond anything within experience, disturbed his slumber.

He rose. Stumbling to the window, he pushed aside the curtain. Rain, splattering the window, obscured his view. Saki strained his eyes to find the source of the sound. Dread filled his heart as it grew in volume. He backed away as the throbbing rattled the window. The walls quaked and shuddered.


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FORUM
Chapter One  Open in new Window. (18+)
Write the first chapter of a book, inspired by the prompt.
#2251577 by Cubby Author IconMail Icon

Excerpt: There are no set rules on how many words are allowed in your chapter. If your first chapter is interesting and keeps the reader reading, word count won't be an issue. A wordy chapter that doesn't go anywhere, might need trimming. You won't be judged on word count but how you make your words count! Short or long, your first chapter is important. Set the tone, introduce your protagonist, set the scene, create a sense of what your main character is up against (conflict, obstacles, challenges.)



 
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Ask & Answer


This month's question: Do you add attributes to your characters in edit? Send in your answer below! *Down* Editors love feedback!

Last month's "Short Stories Newsletter (October 12, 2022)Open in new Window. question: How would you describe a favorite scary scene?


s Author Icon: My favourite scary scenes are hard to put into a simple paragraph. The writing is tight and involves all 5 senses. It has been built through the course of the book, not just plonked down out of nowhere. There is a protagonist I care about and I don't want to see bad things happen to them, but know they have to. The source of the horror makes sense in the context of the story and is not there for the sake of being there. There is a lot that goes into a scary scene.

In films, there is all of the above, plus a look, a visualisation, that suits the horror. Having said that, so few horror films succeed beyond the gross-out, the jump-scare or the copying of what has come before that I don't rate many (especially modern) horror films highly at all.

brom21 Author Icon: Horor is not my genre but I am sure I could cook up something eerie. But I do shy away from gore and pieces that are too dark. I do love the mystery and mounting suspense that comes with moderate horror. In light of that, I am looking forward to horror/suspense without over the top, gore and darkness. Thanks for the NL!

TheCaptain Author Icon: for me, true horror is in the suspense, the unseen and the unknown.
What's that noise? Is it something being blown over in the garden? Is someone trying to break in? Do I go and check it out? Should I grab my hockey stick just in case I need to hit something?

elephantsealer Author Icon: She curled within her blanket, her heart pounding hard against her breast. It was not just a noise she heard that woke her up. It was the voice of Jimmy, my Jimmy who passed away months ago. Don't do this to me, jimmy, I whispered; you promised before you collapsed and lost conciousness, an arrow in your heart. She felt the beginnings of cold sweat as it drenched her face and trickled down her neck, down to her back. The bones in her face tingled hard, pressed against her throat. Stop it now, Jimmy; stop it this instant...

In the coldness of the morning hour, she was tangled tightly in her blanket, her face ashen, her eyes unseeing, her mouth agape, her tongue hung loosely...

Amarantine Author Icon: Whenever the impossible becomes possible.

Happy to write Author Icon: Stay away ,horror and stuff is not my thing really life has been horrific enough at times.

s Author Icon: There are so many! But the things they have in common are a sense of dread through word choice and sentence structure, a character we (the reader) feel something for and care about.

I think my all-time favourite is not from a short story, but from the novel Pet Sematary. The first time Louis is led over the brambles by Jud, past the cemetary to the one beyond, carrying the dead cat, Church. The description of the plants as bones, the cries of the loons and all of Louis' physical responses is so well done.

In a short story, maybe 'Gig Marks' by Ed Ferrara when the dead kid appears in the car.

Thanks to everyone for your responses, it's much appreciated!

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