Friday, January 26, 2018

Which creative writing hacks did you find the most useful as a newbie?

Use short paragraphs
Go through any popular Quora answer and notice the length of the paragraphs.
Short paragraphs make reading significantly easier because our brains prefer small chunks information compared to a long info-dump.
Make sure that a specific idea is developed in each paragraph. Although it can include several sentences, paragraphs with just one sentence, or even a single word work too.
Just like this one.
Eliminate unnecessary words
Words like verylittle, and most often serve little purpose in your sentences, save making them sound bland and lifeless.
An example:
If I keep adding one useless word after another, no doubt my sentences will appear longer, but most often, the meaning would be lost in all the fluff, and the readers would be rather bored.
In the words of Mark Twain, Substitute ‘damn’ every time you’re inclined to write ‘very’; your editor will delete it and the writing will be just as it should be.
Avoid repeating yourself
Here’s an example of a conversation between a man and a woman from one of my stories:
‘But Jay, don’t you see the whole point? I am a workaholic. I may not be with you even at the end of the day. My work keeps me so occupied.’
‘Then I will share your work. I will be with you in your office. I can stick around you for ages and never get bored, trust me.’
She made another attempt to discourage him. ‘Jay I am not a good person. I am insensitive, insecure, impatient, irritable, and a total workaholic. You deserve a much better girl than me. I am sure you will find someone someday.’
‘I know that I will find another girl easily. I will have her, but will she have me? No, because my heart belongs to you, Shayna. You may be mad, bad, selfish, but I will always love you’
This dialogue spans over 100 words, the gist of which could simply have been put as:
Her: I’m a workaholic.
Him: Doesn’t matter, I’ll still love you.
We do tend to move around in circles in real-life conversations, but when the word-limit to your short story is 3000 words, you don’t want to spend a precious 100 of them saying the same thing over and over again.
Edit ruthlessly
This is the most important point to be kept in mind.
If you didn’t shorten your first draft by over one-fifth of its length after ten re-reads, you didn’t do a very good job.
Choose simple words
Beautiful can convey pretty much the same meaning as prepossessing or pulchritudinous. Use more fancy words only if the meaning you want to convey is so specific that no other synonym would do.


Source: https://www.quora.com/profile/Anangsha-Alammyan/answers?__filter__&__nsrc__=2&__snid3__=1910077283
Writer: Anangsha Alammyan

What unique characteristic of “Jan Gan Man” made it India’s national anthem?

Jana Gana Mana is composed by one of the most celebrated poets of the world. Tagore was the first Asian to win the Nobel prize in any category.
Tagore is far less controversial and his poems are more acceptable than say those of Muhammad Iqbal [the Pakistani nationalist who once wrote “Sare Jahan se Acha”] or Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay [who wrote “Vande Mataram” as a part of the controversial novel “Anandmath”]. When the national leaders were selecting the anthem they wanted to generate less controversy as possible - at a time India was already filled with blood and violence.
The anthem is almost entirely nouns - different geographic features of India. These nouns exist in most Indian languages and thus makes it much easier to understand all across India. When it goes like: Panjab-Sindhu-Gujarat-Maratha Dravida - - it is not rocket science to understand what the poet talks about.
At a time when India was having a rift with dozens of languages, it made sense to have a poem that is more understood by most.
It doesn’t have the religious color of any type nor deifies the nation - this makes it more acceptable to India’s minorities.
It is simple, short and easy to recite. Compared to many other anthems - including those of the USA - you don’t need musical prowess to sing India’s anthem. There is no complex melody like Vande Mataram and no big band needed to march like Sare Jahan se Acha. A common man could easily sing the Jana Gana Mana due to its simplicity and thus it was also breaking class barriers.




Source:https://www.quora.com/notifications/collection?__filter__&__nsrc__=2&__sncid__=1065305874
Author:Balaji Viswanathan