Action/Adventure: May 08, 2013 Issue [#5661] |
Action/Adventure
This week: It's an Adventure, so Move It! Edited by: Kate - Writing & Reading More Newsletters By This Editor
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
Each day is a blank page, an adventure to be written,
action and re-action ~ be pro-active
Welcome to the WDC Action & Adventure Newsletter where we explore adventures both mundane and spectacular, and act to make them real for our characters, ourselves, and our readers |
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Greetings,
One can say that life itself is an adventure, as we daily encounter (fellow writers, we don't merely pass by, we notice) something to solve, surmount, answer, question - you get the point And we can write of such adventure, real or invented, in a number of genres. Adventure stories and poems can be romantic, historical, science fiction, fantasy, mystery....
Action, by definition, is movement. Action and Adventure stories and poems therefore are intense, forceful and maybe violent. The action keeps your reader involved, on edge, and needing (not just wanting) to keep reading
Repeat = Action is movement. We don't want to see it interrupted by reflection, internal thought. We want to see the characters react to the situation, their environment.
For example, we wouldn't want to read that, "Jack ran quickly across the parking lot, thinking that a sniper could be in one of the cars." Instead, how about, "Jack darted across the parking lot, gun raised to pan the tangle of cars, each a potential sniper's shield."
Not perfect, but you see that I traded adverbs and adjectives for descriptive words to make it more vivid, more active, less introspective. When we keep up the pace with shorter, cleaner, sentences and paragraphs; temper the picturesque descriptions, the action stands on its own. Your hero (or villain) would not be contemplating the myriad stars lighting his way beneath a cerulean sky as he/she plots the next move. He or she would be engaging in the next move.
Movement. An Action and Adventure moves the characters from one place to another. The story moves from one locale to another; from a jungle with insurgents chasing potential hostages to a city with fearless, motivated villains chasing your hero. Clean, crisp transitions from one scene or sequence to another. This maintains momentum and keeps the story or plot on track. We don't see the hero or heroine sleeping and dreaming, or having a nice relaxing dinner, or in the washroom (unless perhaps he/she busts through the door after a villain).
Dialogue that's on point and moves the plot along. This means few, if any, extraneous dialogue tags. Stick with "he said," or "she replied," ejecting the spent shell casings. - Then move, once again. Dialogue can also thus introduce a shift in point of view.
Backstory Cut. In an Action & Adventure story or epic poem, readers don't want to spend a chapter on the hero's childhood fear of spiders. Dialogue, or disgust expressed with a shudder upon finding one in a weapons cache akin to his mother's utensil drawer gives the reader the picture and forwards the plot (weapons cache - utensil drawer - both have knives).
Minimize pathos; be realistic. For example, when in hand-to-hand combat, your hero can trade a comment or two with the villain, perhaps recall a past battle or maybe a time they were on the same side, in a few words. But your hero would not engage in such a discourse if the battle were being waged by trading fire a block away, or across a field.
Know your facts. Readers of Action & Adventure do. Embelish with realistic possibilities.
If you like to write adventure stories or veres, you already do this - read and watch Action & Adventure books and films. The challenging movement, action, plot advancement, to the satisfying resolution is what keeps you reading, and writing it!
Keep it Active!
Write On!
Kate
Kate - Writing & Reading
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Check out these adventures ~ engage the action ~ engage as well the writers with your thoughts, perchance a review
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Thank you for sharing this exploration with me, now go out and observe with your senses that which you encounter, engage the adventure with action
Write On
Kate
Kate - Writing & Reading |
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