Free e-book: Mugging the Muse: Writing Fiction for Love AND Money

May 4th, 2010

I stumbled across this e-book by Holly Lisle, available free at her website! I’m reading through it with great interest, and it looks like a lot of good, practical information on how to write your novel.

While having high hopes can keep you going, having high expectations can paralyze you. After all, if you demand of yourself that you write the Great American Novel your first time out, every time you try to type a word on the page, your mental editor is going to say “No Great American Novel ever included that word.” And you’ll never get beyond the first thirty pages.

Mugging the Muse: Writing Fiction for Love AND Money, © Holly Lisle

Download MtM:WFfLaM from her website, in PDF or ZIP format: http://hollylisle.com/fm/

Next version preview & status: Goals and Graphs

May 3rd, 2010

I’m working hard on the goals and graphs portion of Storyblue that’s coming in the next update. This is looking awesome, folks. The current design lets you easily add either daily/weekly word goals, or total-words-in-time-period goals.

So for instance, if your goal is to write 2000 words a day, you can set that up as  a daily word goal. Storyblue keeps track of your daily output, and graphs your daily progress against your goal, so you can see where you fell short. You can look at graphs for the last week, last month, last year, or all time, and see how you’ve done.

The other type of goal is for something like NaNoWriMo, where you know how many words you need in a set time period. Just type in your goal (e.g. 50,000 words) and your target date (Nov. 30), and Storyblue will calculate how many you need per day, and let you know if you’re on track for success.

These changes should be in the next release, sometime in the next two weeks.

I’ll post some screenshots soon!

Let me know what you think, and if you have any ideas for this feature that would help you out.

Limited time offer: Storyblue only $27.99!

April 27th, 2010

Whoa! We’re now offering Storyblue for $27.99 for a limited time (like, it goes back up sometime next month, so buy soon!).

Why? We’re working on cool stuff that’s coming soon, like Goals and Charts, but we don’t want the lack of them to hold you up from buying. If you buy now, you get free updates to all 1.x versions, and if we go to 2.0 within a year, you get that version free too :). Because we like you.

Buy Storyblue for $27.99 today! Regular price is 39.99, so you’re saving a whopping 30% off the normal price. Yikes.

Storyblue updated to v1.0.2!

April 27th, 2010

Yep, another release. This one’s also minor; we changed some styling of the writing interface, to look more writerly (we think), fixed a bug with the Recent Projects window from last time, and some other minor things.

You can download/update your copy from here!

Next update will be bigger: Goals and charts! These will be awesome, and awesomely motivating.

Lester Dent’s Master Plot Formula

April 27th, 2010

Every so often I sit up, look around my office, and wish that there was a formula for success in whatever I’m doing (building software, investing, mini-golf…). A formula that never fails, in fact, that when followed makes it impossible to fail.

Luckily, Lester Dent (“…one of the grandest purveyors of ripping, tearing, he-man action-fiction who’s loomed over the magazine horizon in many a long year…” — his editor) created such a formula for 6000 word pulp stories (like Lester’s Doc Savage). I’ll let you know when I find one for the stock market.

Here’s how to write the first 1500 words:-

FIRST 1500 WORDS

1–First line, or as near thereto as possible, introduce the hero and swat him with a fistful of trouble. Hint at a mystery, a menace or a problem to be solved–something the hero has to cope with.

2–The hero pitches in to cope with his fistful of trouble. (He tries to fathom the mystery, defeat the menace, or solve the problem.)

3–Introduce ALL the other characters as soon as possible. Bring them on in action.

4–Hero’s endeavors land him in an actual physical conflict near the end of the first 1500 words.

5–Near the end of first 1500 words, there is a complete surprise twist in the plot development.

SO FAR: Does it have SUSPENSE?
Is there a MENACE to the hero?
Does everything happen logically?

Read the whole thing here:
http://www.multiverse.org/fora/showthread.php?t=2510

On Thud and Blunder

April 22nd, 2010

Poul Anderson wrote this a long time ago, addressing the ridiculous lack of basic research (indeed, of common sense) in some heroic fantasy.

I’m not convinced of the “enthrall” quality of a story wherein the sensibly clad barbarian hero shoulders his 5-lbs-light axe and alternates trotting, walking, cantering and galloping a cavalcade of geldings to the coast, where he sits calmly in Honolulu harbor for 6 months waiting for a fair wind to swoosh him across the Pacific, eventually lands miles (and weeks) from his destination, and swiftly dies of illness before entering battle.

I do respect and whole-heartedly agree with the principle of not simply making dumb stuff up. Give us at least a nod at research/realism, even if it’s a quick nod, given while galloping by on your stallion, swinging your 50-lb broad-sword around your head single-handedly.

Read it here: http://www.sfwa.org/2005/01/on-thud-and-blunder/

Moved to WordPress

April 21st, 2010

Just a note to say we moved the Storyblue blog to WordPress, and it’s now at http://storyblue.com/blog (you’re there right now), because that really just makes more sense. :)

Feel free to comment on anything!

Your Novel is Awash with Shallow Characters and Vague Scenes (but that’s okay)

April 21st, 2010

Or, How to plan your novel.

Some writers exist, perhaps, who can hold all elements of character and plot in their heads, cross-checking mentally while they write 85,000 words of scintillating prose. These writers are not my intended audience.
My intended audience is those of us who have a hard time retaining a thought without writing it down, who can’t remember where we put our spectacles ten minutes ago, much less that awesome plot twist that smote us yesterday while we were -procrastinating- gardening or something.
Yeah, I didn’t think it was just me.

What to do? How to deepen your characters, make each scene meaningful, and more

Characters tend to come to me as an image, or a scenario, or half of a jacket blurb: An unformed idea, in other words, not a fully developed character.

“Crooked Will Scarvando is an amnesiac immortal who forgets everything every thirty years on June 18th.”

Read the rest of this entry »

Storyblue v1.01 Screenshot

April 20th, 2010

Storyblue v1.01 screenshot

Storyblue v1.011

April 20th, 2010

We’ve fixed a few launch glitches and rolled out a shiny new version, with a spiffy toolbar and updated color scheme (more light grey! Less… dark grey).

If you’ve installed Storyblue already, it should prompt you to update automatically (be sure to save first). If you have any trouble with that, you can install the new version from our website.

Thanks!