Skip to main content

Sincere Writing is Original; A Story Ending Precise but Concise

Logo of the Insecure Writer's Support Group with a lighthouse in the background.


 It's the first Wednesday of the month and so it’s time for another Insecure Writer’s Support Group (IWSG) post! In an IWSG post, we writers bring our writing challenges and problems out into the open to share with each other and try to offer solutions. This month we have the question of the month here at the Fantastic Site and I have a few details about my story in progress (SIP) which will be included in my upcoming book of short fiction. 

Question of the Month

The question for August 3 is: When you set out to write a story, do you try to be more original or do you try to give readers what they want? My answer to that, is that when I write a story, I don't so much try to be more original as I try to write sincerely. That means when I write I often develop the story from an idea that I had jottted down in my journal way before hand as it came to me. To me it appears to be an original idea because if it didn't I wouldn't have bothered jotting it down (at least not for fiction). But when I do develop the idea into a story I try not to think about how original it's supposed to be. I just try to let my characters perform their own actions based on their surrounding environments and the events of the story that pertain to the idea that started it.

Also, I try to write the story as sincerely as possible, not as in making a "portrait of the artist", or in this case the author, but as in releasing my own emotions and experiences into it. These emotions and experiences are often dispersed throughout my story’s several characters. If you write sincerely your experiences will show up in your story to some degree. Nobody has the exact same life experience as someone else. So, if you write in this way, the story can only be original. It will be new and original to readers and so in that way you'll be giving readers what they want in which most readers want new experiences and the unexpected in stories.  

WIP: Writing in Progress

I've been continuing to work on a story for my book of short fiction in progress, "Bad Apps". I had been stalled on it because I was having a hard time coming up with an ending that was satisfying to the story yet without being too explanatory in the resolution to the conflict. More specifically, I did not want to bore the audience with methodical details. The ending had even come out kind of campy and comical which I didn't want. But I've finally come up with a way to show the resolution through suggestive yet concrete action. This is characteristic of most short stories, more is said with concrete details but with less words and so with suggestion. So, that story will come to a completion soon, I'll go on to the next ones and hopefully be able to release the book by next month sometime.  For more updates, keep checking back here or on my Facebook page. For even more details on my book’s progress, subscribe to my author’s newsletter—it’s free!


How much sincerity do you put into your stories in order to make them original? Or do you go by formulae and market trends to please your audience? 

Today’s IWSG is brought to you by these super co-hosts:  Tara Tyler, Lisa Buie Collard, Loni Townsend, and Lee Lowery! IWSG was founded by awesome author Alex Cavanaugh, writer of the Cassa Series of novels! 

Until next time . . .


Comments

  1. We are different which makes what we create original because it's our take on it.
    Glad you figured out a less campy ending.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, I am too. Now I just have to write it into the story!

      Delete
  2. As Alex says, we're all different. We sees things differently and that makes our writing different. Good luck on your WIP. Looking forward to hearing more about it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, I'll be talking about it more here in the weeks to come. I give even more details about it in my free newsletter (the sign-up box is in the right hand column or the dropdown menu of the blog).

      Delete
  3. I'd never really framed originality as sincerity before. It's a good way to look at it. I don't consider my stuff original just because there's hundreds of element-based magic systems (like Avatar the last Airbender), so it's hard for me to say "yeah, I've got an original concept". But true, no one quite has my voice, thoughts, and twisted ideas, so there is some level of originality to it. Though the word "sincerity" lends an air of seriousness, and I have to say, I suck at being serious.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've never necessarily equated sincerity with seriousness although it does overlap with it in many situations. That's true, we do draw from other works when we make our own, often unconsciously, because we're influenced by them. Originality does come in various degrees. You have a good point.

      Delete
  4. Original? Maybe true to what's in my heart as it unfolds into a living, breathing creature I can set free to the world, yes!

    ♥.•*¨Elizabeth Mueller¨*•.♥

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Book-To-Movie: Stephen King’s 'The Raft'

Credit: Pixabay.com It's the third Saturday of the month and so that means it's time for another Book-To-Movie ! In a Book-To-Movie we review a book and its movie adaptation. One of the reasons I as a horror fan don’t read a lot of Stephen King’s work is because most of it consists of novels that go more than 400 pages. I have a short attention span when it comes to reading, ironically since I consider myself an avid reader, and so I normally won’t read a work that is much more than the equivalent to a 350-page mass market paperback. The other reason why I don’t read a lot of King’s work is that, as literary scholars will tell you, a lot of his writing is poor. However, he does have some good writing in his works, especially his earlier stuff, including his short horror tales. So if I read anything by Stephen King it’s usually his short stories or novellas. One of his collections I’ve read is Skeleton Crew which includes some of his good, or at least

Book-To-Movie: ‘The Hound of the Baskervilles’

Credit: Wikimedia Commons I apologise for posting outside our regular post-day which is late Saturday night/early Sunday morning. However, I got behind on several things last week and so had to postpone the post to today.  I’ve been a reader of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes books ever since I was 11. What I’ve always liked so much about the series is that, like a good horror story, the stories often take place in dark settings and involve bizarre cases. Conan Doyle’s novel, “The Hound of the Baskervilles”, definitely contains these elements. It’s a detective story that crosses over into the gothic horror genre. Several movie adaptations of the novel have been made that go as far back as a 1915 German silent film. In 1959 Hammer Studios released a version starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. As much as I’m a fan of the Hammer horror films, I have not seen that one yet. The only one that I’ve seen so far is the 1939 adaptation starring that other big name in classic Bri

Book-To-Movie: Guest Blogger Alex Cavanaugh Reviews 'Relic'

Credit: Tor Books The fourth weekend of the month, when we normally have our Book-To-Movie review has passed us again. However, the review is still on! This month I have a guest blogger for our Book-To-Movie review. The two of us agreed to trade our book-to-movie reviews and present them to you today, this last Monday of the month. In a Book-To-Movie, we review a work of prose fiction and its movie adaptation.  And my guest blogger and reviewer is Alex Cavanaugh. Alex is the author of the Cassa series  of novels and founder of the Insecure Writers' Support Group ! Here at the Fantastic Site, he’s reviewing a best-selling novel of detective horror, "Relic", and its movie adaptation. In turn, at his site, I have the pleasure of reviewing "The Black Phone" short story by Joe Hill and its movie adaptation. So, after you're finished reading Alex’s awesome review, please leave a comment for him in the box below and then head on over to his website to check out my