Help/tips for a first time writer? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Announcing our contest results! Tags of the week! April 8-14, 2019: Punctuation & Naming — RESULTSThe psychology of starting a piece of writingWhat are some online guides for starting writers?Should I write my story if I haven't established a plot?Are there good tips on being a better *creative* writer?What are the key skills for a new technical writer?First-time meeting with publisher & editors (What to expect)Looking for some tips on how to improve writingFirst-time author…can I publish in English in Mexico?Punctuation help needed — first-time novelistHow do I handle a backstory big enough to be a story of its own?How to handle a massive info dump post-ending?How do you deal with Chapter 2 when Chapter 1 is a volcano opening?Is telling one of three convergent plot-line before moving to the next an acceptable alternative to interleaving them?

Why use gamma over alpha radiation?

Strange behaviour of Check

I'm thinking of a number

What to do with post with dry rot?

How should I respond to a player wanting to catch a sword between their hands?

I'm having difficulty getting my players to do stuff in a sandbox campaign

Unable to start mainnet node docker container

Should you tell Jews they are breaking a commandment?

How to say that you spent the night with someone, you were only sleeping and nothing else?

What's the point in a preamp?

What items from the Roman-age tech-level could be used to deter all creatures from entering a small area?

Why is "Captain Marvel" translated as male in Portugal?

How do you clear the ApexPages.getMessages() collection in a test?

Fishing simulator

Choo-choo! Word trains

Need a suitable toxic chemical for a murder plot in my novel

What do you call the holes in a flute?

Replacing HDD with SSD; what about non-APFS/APFS?

Stars Make Stars

What do you call a plan that's an alternative plan in case your initial plan fails?

Limit for e and 1/e

Cauchy Sequence Characterized only By Directly Neighbouring Sequence Members

Did the new image of black hole confirm the general theory of relativity?

What is the largest species of polychaete?



Help/tips for a first time writer?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Announcing our contest results!
Tags of the week! April 8-14, 2019: Punctuation & Naming — RESULTSThe psychology of starting a piece of writingWhat are some online guides for starting writers?Should I write my story if I haven't established a plot?Are there good tips on being a better *creative* writer?What are the key skills for a new technical writer?First-time meeting with publisher & editors (What to expect)Looking for some tips on how to improve writingFirst-time author…can I publish in English in Mexico?Punctuation help needed — first-time novelistHow do I handle a backstory big enough to be a story of its own?How to handle a massive info dump post-ending?How do you deal with Chapter 2 when Chapter 1 is a volcano opening?Is telling one of three convergent plot-line before moving to the next an acceptable alternative to interleaving them?










6















I’m starting to write a fiction novel. A friend of mine works in publishing and she thinks the plot for my book is great but I’m not sure how to start.
I know a lot of the details and I’ve thought up everything in my head but I don’t know how to change my thoughts into words.



I’ve always wanted to write and I did a few writing classes in high school but never really went anywhere with it as I went straight into working to save for a car.



How do I get started, to move from ideas to written words?



Not a duplicate of What are some online guides for starting writers? as they’re asking for writing guidelines whereas I’m asking for general tips on how to start my book.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    I have read the other one you think might be a duplicate but it’s sef not. No answers on there are what I was looking for

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:15






  • 3





    Just a note: All novels are fiction. Some agents have written that the sight of the words "fiction novel" is enough for them to reject a query out of hand! :-)

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:41






  • 2





    The Op did not ask for online guides

    – Rasdashan
    Mar 31 at 20:17






  • 2





    The duplicate question asks about online resources. This question asks for tips. Resources aren't tips so the other question cannot be a duplicate (even though some of the answerers to that question ignore the question and give advice that wasn't asked for and would be good answers here).

    – user37583
    Mar 31 at 20:51







  • 1





    I do not consider this a duplicate, either. The OP is not asking for online resources, but on how to start writing. IMO that is precisely the kind of question we should be answering.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 20:59















6















I’m starting to write a fiction novel. A friend of mine works in publishing and she thinks the plot for my book is great but I’m not sure how to start.
I know a lot of the details and I’ve thought up everything in my head but I don’t know how to change my thoughts into words.



I’ve always wanted to write and I did a few writing classes in high school but never really went anywhere with it as I went straight into working to save for a car.



How do I get started, to move from ideas to written words?



Not a duplicate of What are some online guides for starting writers? as they’re asking for writing guidelines whereas I’m asking for general tips on how to start my book.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    I have read the other one you think might be a duplicate but it’s sef not. No answers on there are what I was looking for

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:15






  • 3





    Just a note: All novels are fiction. Some agents have written that the sight of the words "fiction novel" is enough for them to reject a query out of hand! :-)

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:41






  • 2





    The Op did not ask for online guides

    – Rasdashan
    Mar 31 at 20:17






  • 2





    The duplicate question asks about online resources. This question asks for tips. Resources aren't tips so the other question cannot be a duplicate (even though some of the answerers to that question ignore the question and give advice that wasn't asked for and would be good answers here).

    – user37583
    Mar 31 at 20:51







  • 1





    I do not consider this a duplicate, either. The OP is not asking for online resources, but on how to start writing. IMO that is precisely the kind of question we should be answering.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 20:59













6












6








6


3






I’m starting to write a fiction novel. A friend of mine works in publishing and she thinks the plot for my book is great but I’m not sure how to start.
I know a lot of the details and I’ve thought up everything in my head but I don’t know how to change my thoughts into words.



I’ve always wanted to write and I did a few writing classes in high school but never really went anywhere with it as I went straight into working to save for a car.



How do I get started, to move from ideas to written words?



Not a duplicate of What are some online guides for starting writers? as they’re asking for writing guidelines whereas I’m asking for general tips on how to start my book.










share|improve this question
















I’m starting to write a fiction novel. A friend of mine works in publishing and she thinks the plot for my book is great but I’m not sure how to start.
I know a lot of the details and I’ve thought up everything in my head but I don’t know how to change my thoughts into words.



I’ve always wanted to write and I did a few writing classes in high school but never really went anywhere with it as I went straight into working to save for a car.



How do I get started, to move from ideas to written words?



Not a duplicate of What are some online guides for starting writers? as they’re asking for writing guidelines whereas I’m asking for general tips on how to start my book.







fiction getting-started first-time-author






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 12 at 1:11









Monica Cellio

17.1k23891




17.1k23891










asked Mar 31 at 13:51









FirstTimeWriterFirstTimeWriter

366




366







  • 2





    I have read the other one you think might be a duplicate but it’s sef not. No answers on there are what I was looking for

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:15






  • 3





    Just a note: All novels are fiction. Some agents have written that the sight of the words "fiction novel" is enough for them to reject a query out of hand! :-)

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:41






  • 2





    The Op did not ask for online guides

    – Rasdashan
    Mar 31 at 20:17






  • 2





    The duplicate question asks about online resources. This question asks for tips. Resources aren't tips so the other question cannot be a duplicate (even though some of the answerers to that question ignore the question and give advice that wasn't asked for and would be good answers here).

    – user37583
    Mar 31 at 20:51







  • 1





    I do not consider this a duplicate, either. The OP is not asking for online resources, but on how to start writing. IMO that is precisely the kind of question we should be answering.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 20:59












  • 2





    I have read the other one you think might be a duplicate but it’s sef not. No answers on there are what I was looking for

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:15






  • 3





    Just a note: All novels are fiction. Some agents have written that the sight of the words "fiction novel" is enough for them to reject a query out of hand! :-)

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:41






  • 2





    The Op did not ask for online guides

    – Rasdashan
    Mar 31 at 20:17






  • 2





    The duplicate question asks about online resources. This question asks for tips. Resources aren't tips so the other question cannot be a duplicate (even though some of the answerers to that question ignore the question and give advice that wasn't asked for and would be good answers here).

    – user37583
    Mar 31 at 20:51







  • 1





    I do not consider this a duplicate, either. The OP is not asking for online resources, but on how to start writing. IMO that is precisely the kind of question we should be answering.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 20:59







2




2





I have read the other one you think might be a duplicate but it’s sef not. No answers on there are what I was looking for

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 17:15





I have read the other one you think might be a duplicate but it’s sef not. No answers on there are what I was looking for

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 17:15




3




3





Just a note: All novels are fiction. Some agents have written that the sight of the words "fiction novel" is enough for them to reject a query out of hand! :-)

– Amadeus
Mar 31 at 17:41





Just a note: All novels are fiction. Some agents have written that the sight of the words "fiction novel" is enough for them to reject a query out of hand! :-)

– Amadeus
Mar 31 at 17:41




2




2





The Op did not ask for online guides

– Rasdashan
Mar 31 at 20:17





The Op did not ask for online guides

– Rasdashan
Mar 31 at 20:17




2




2





The duplicate question asks about online resources. This question asks for tips. Resources aren't tips so the other question cannot be a duplicate (even though some of the answerers to that question ignore the question and give advice that wasn't asked for and would be good answers here).

– user37583
Mar 31 at 20:51






The duplicate question asks about online resources. This question asks for tips. Resources aren't tips so the other question cannot be a duplicate (even though some of the answerers to that question ignore the question and give advice that wasn't asked for and would be good answers here).

– user37583
Mar 31 at 20:51





1




1





I do not consider this a duplicate, either. The OP is not asking for online resources, but on how to start writing. IMO that is precisely the kind of question we should be answering.

– Amadeus
Mar 31 at 20:59





I do not consider this a duplicate, either. The OP is not asking for online resources, but on how to start writing. IMO that is precisely the kind of question we should be answering.

– Amadeus
Mar 31 at 20:59










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















9














I have two previous answers that will help you, Here, on the Three Act Structure and Here, on Getting the first 50 pages or so started.



These are geared to discovery writers, like me, but if you already have a plot to follow, they can help you anyway.



The biggest mistake I see beginners make is they want to jump in too early on the "action" or the "big idea", they think it helps to start with a big fight or the aliens arriving or whatever.



This seldom works. The reason is because in a novel we readers need to care about the characters that are in danger, or being hurt, or that are fighting. Nearly every novel (and most movies) actually begin rather mildly; to introduce characters in their "normal world". This is done to invest the reader in the character(s) so they care about them, before you put them in a blender.



In the three act structure (which about 90% of all popular stories follow), the first 10% to 15% of the book is about the characters before any big conflicts or challenges.



The problem with beginners arises because the most memorable part of the beginning is the "inciting incident", something unusual that happens to the main characters about halfway through the first Act. That is after the introduction to the normal world, but the normal world is critical for the reader to know who this happens to so they care about her.



The first Act is about 25% of the story; in an 80,000 word novel that is 20,000 words. Halfway through is 10,000 words. The standard submission format for a novel (which is how I write mine) is about 250 words per page.



So, 10,000 words is 40 pages. That is a lot of writing about your character(s) normal world, their day to day life, their pre-existing relationships with family, friends, lovers, coworkers, their job (or school or whatever else they do most of their day), and other aspects of their pre-existing life in general. We need a sense of who we are going to follow on this adventure, what she is like, how she responds to problems, who she loves, and why she behaves like she does. Who causes her problems?



Part of this 40 pages is simultaneously introducing us to the setting. You don't have to do too much if this is a modern world without any magic, but you do have to find ways to naturally introduce and let us know about anything unusual; like magic, or aliens, or sci-fi elements, space travel, futuristic equipment, etc. Ditto for fantasy worlds, and fantasy cultures.



There is a lot to do in the first half of the first act, and it needs to be done in an entertaining way (not just a long lecture about how it all works; those are called "info dumps" and are terribly boring -- we show people how things work using scenes with characters doing things; we don't just pull them aside for a lesson about it).



But beginners often want to skip this, because they want to get to the drama. Don't be in a rush. Readers like to read! They don't mind that nothing big happens immediately, they are used to stories starting this way, in a normal world with normal things happening, and characters dealing with normal problems.



Clarification: This doesn't mean nothing happens, you also don't want to start with an infodump and lengthy description. You do want to start some drama and conflict from the first page, have your character(s) doing something while you also introduce their normal world. (details in the second link). This just doesn't have to be your main conflict or problem, that begins around the 1/8th mark (with the inciting incident). I recommend you begin with some every-day emergency. e.g. waking up an hour late, due to a power failure during the night. Or the car doesn't start, or the milk she bought two days ago for her breakfast cereal is already sour. Make her deal with a micro-crisis, so we see how she deals with a setback. It is important to make the reader want to turn from page 1 to page 2 to see what happens next; and an infodump or nothing happening will fail to do that.



Read up on the Three Act Structure, it will only take a few hours, so you can see how nearly all modern stories get structured. You can Google that and get millions of hits, if you want to read more.



The "structure" is about what happens, when it happens in the story, and what the results are; broadly speaking it is what you should be writing about in each section of your story.



The Three Act Structure is not like a rule you have to follow or you get rejected; it is actually the result of studying what is common in how very popular stories have been structured. It is just what we have noticed most well-received stories have in common. Following it won't guarantee you also write a great story -- What it can do is help you avoid writing a bad story with obvious flaws.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you! Just reading your answer has helped me immensely! You’re right, I, as a reader, like to read about the normal world of the characters even if nothing is happening yet. And I did start to think ‘I need to get the drama flowing straight away’ which obviously would have been a mistake.

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 15:47






  • 1





    @FirstTimeWriter The answer to that urge is in the second link. In a way you DO want to start drama (conflict) flowing straight away; but the conflict doesn't have to be the MAIN conflict of your story; it can be a normal, everyday emergency your main character has to deal with. Alice wakes up without the alarm -- then sees her alarm flashing 12:00 and realizes the power failed in the night and she's an hour late getting up. BANG! A lot of crap to do in a short amount of time. Any little non-life-changing crisis will do the trick, show us some "normal world" and how she deals with crises.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:14











  • That makes sense. Thanks :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:17


















5














What I do is get to know my characters well, my MC in particular, create a situation and see what happens. I write what occurs.



If you have all of the elements in your story ready, but that blank page is looking back at you, just pretend you are telling your story to a friend. Write what happens and see if it works for you.



We each have our own process, some quite strict and others fluid. Find what works for you and write.



Do not expect perfection. You say you are a beginner - I have several novels that will never see the light of day because their purpose was to improve my skill as a storyteller.



You have an advantage in that you have a friend in the business who has already told you that you have something worth writing. Many of us are looking for such a person to let us know if our work is something they would be interested in publishing, but you have an in.



My process works for me, but might not work for you. I name my character, that tells me who they are at their core. I start asking myself questions about him or her, then insert into a situation and start. If nothing interesting happens, that might be interesting if the character is intriguing enough. My character meets another and things start happening.



I occasionally read mine aloud to check for proper flow. The ear will catch what the eye does not.



Make sure that you like your characters. Do your best to make the important ones as well rounded and real as you can. Give dimension to the walk-ons too, but less is required there as they are not the focus of the story.



Feel free to choose multiple protagonists and do whatever works for your story.



In my case, my characters drive the plot and frequently change direction. I strive to remain true to them, keeping their actions and thoughts in character.



No matter what happens - keep writing.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you! They’re really great tips. I guess I’ll start with writng it out like I’m telling a friend :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 14:59



















2














Starting from a blank page is always hard.




Read Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg. It's an excellent
book to get you writing.




Writing, you will find, is like any art. Like learning the piano, or learning ballet. If you drown yourself in the technicalities, you will soon become overwhelmed and won't be able to hold all that information in your head anyway. Structure, character development, dialogue, description, theme, imagery, etc. etc. are things that take time to master. Just tie your shoes and stand with flat feet. Open the lid and make noises with the keys. Don't try to write a masterpiece from scratch.



Natalie's advice is beautiful. Go to the stationery store and buy a crappy, cheap notebook. Buy a fast pen that moves across the page as quickly as your thoughts. And just write. Let the words pour out without checking yourself or editing any of them.



Crappy notebooks, as opposed to beautiful hardback tomes, free you to write absolute crap. But out of that dung heap, you can dig for gems. It composts over time (as Natalie puts it) and thoughts become refined.



But if you stare at the blank page waiting for diamonds to spring from your fingertips, you'll never write anything.




“Almost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts.” -- Anne
Lamott.




How to start? Just write! Let yourself go. Have fun. Spill your soul on the page.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    Thanks! I’ll have to get that book and have a read. Sounds like a great idea to just write down my thoughts too!

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Apr 5 at 14:04












Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "166"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fwriting.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f44227%2fhelp-tips-for-a-first-time-writer%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














I have two previous answers that will help you, Here, on the Three Act Structure and Here, on Getting the first 50 pages or so started.



These are geared to discovery writers, like me, but if you already have a plot to follow, they can help you anyway.



The biggest mistake I see beginners make is they want to jump in too early on the "action" or the "big idea", they think it helps to start with a big fight or the aliens arriving or whatever.



This seldom works. The reason is because in a novel we readers need to care about the characters that are in danger, or being hurt, or that are fighting. Nearly every novel (and most movies) actually begin rather mildly; to introduce characters in their "normal world". This is done to invest the reader in the character(s) so they care about them, before you put them in a blender.



In the three act structure (which about 90% of all popular stories follow), the first 10% to 15% of the book is about the characters before any big conflicts or challenges.



The problem with beginners arises because the most memorable part of the beginning is the "inciting incident", something unusual that happens to the main characters about halfway through the first Act. That is after the introduction to the normal world, but the normal world is critical for the reader to know who this happens to so they care about her.



The first Act is about 25% of the story; in an 80,000 word novel that is 20,000 words. Halfway through is 10,000 words. The standard submission format for a novel (which is how I write mine) is about 250 words per page.



So, 10,000 words is 40 pages. That is a lot of writing about your character(s) normal world, their day to day life, their pre-existing relationships with family, friends, lovers, coworkers, their job (or school or whatever else they do most of their day), and other aspects of their pre-existing life in general. We need a sense of who we are going to follow on this adventure, what she is like, how she responds to problems, who she loves, and why she behaves like she does. Who causes her problems?



Part of this 40 pages is simultaneously introducing us to the setting. You don't have to do too much if this is a modern world without any magic, but you do have to find ways to naturally introduce and let us know about anything unusual; like magic, or aliens, or sci-fi elements, space travel, futuristic equipment, etc. Ditto for fantasy worlds, and fantasy cultures.



There is a lot to do in the first half of the first act, and it needs to be done in an entertaining way (not just a long lecture about how it all works; those are called "info dumps" and are terribly boring -- we show people how things work using scenes with characters doing things; we don't just pull them aside for a lesson about it).



But beginners often want to skip this, because they want to get to the drama. Don't be in a rush. Readers like to read! They don't mind that nothing big happens immediately, they are used to stories starting this way, in a normal world with normal things happening, and characters dealing with normal problems.



Clarification: This doesn't mean nothing happens, you also don't want to start with an infodump and lengthy description. You do want to start some drama and conflict from the first page, have your character(s) doing something while you also introduce their normal world. (details in the second link). This just doesn't have to be your main conflict or problem, that begins around the 1/8th mark (with the inciting incident). I recommend you begin with some every-day emergency. e.g. waking up an hour late, due to a power failure during the night. Or the car doesn't start, or the milk she bought two days ago for her breakfast cereal is already sour. Make her deal with a micro-crisis, so we see how she deals with a setback. It is important to make the reader want to turn from page 1 to page 2 to see what happens next; and an infodump or nothing happening will fail to do that.



Read up on the Three Act Structure, it will only take a few hours, so you can see how nearly all modern stories get structured. You can Google that and get millions of hits, if you want to read more.



The "structure" is about what happens, when it happens in the story, and what the results are; broadly speaking it is what you should be writing about in each section of your story.



The Three Act Structure is not like a rule you have to follow or you get rejected; it is actually the result of studying what is common in how very popular stories have been structured. It is just what we have noticed most well-received stories have in common. Following it won't guarantee you also write a great story -- What it can do is help you avoid writing a bad story with obvious flaws.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you! Just reading your answer has helped me immensely! You’re right, I, as a reader, like to read about the normal world of the characters even if nothing is happening yet. And I did start to think ‘I need to get the drama flowing straight away’ which obviously would have been a mistake.

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 15:47






  • 1





    @FirstTimeWriter The answer to that urge is in the second link. In a way you DO want to start drama (conflict) flowing straight away; but the conflict doesn't have to be the MAIN conflict of your story; it can be a normal, everyday emergency your main character has to deal with. Alice wakes up without the alarm -- then sees her alarm flashing 12:00 and realizes the power failed in the night and she's an hour late getting up. BANG! A lot of crap to do in a short amount of time. Any little non-life-changing crisis will do the trick, show us some "normal world" and how she deals with crises.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:14











  • That makes sense. Thanks :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:17















9














I have two previous answers that will help you, Here, on the Three Act Structure and Here, on Getting the first 50 pages or so started.



These are geared to discovery writers, like me, but if you already have a plot to follow, they can help you anyway.



The biggest mistake I see beginners make is they want to jump in too early on the "action" or the "big idea", they think it helps to start with a big fight or the aliens arriving or whatever.



This seldom works. The reason is because in a novel we readers need to care about the characters that are in danger, or being hurt, or that are fighting. Nearly every novel (and most movies) actually begin rather mildly; to introduce characters in their "normal world". This is done to invest the reader in the character(s) so they care about them, before you put them in a blender.



In the three act structure (which about 90% of all popular stories follow), the first 10% to 15% of the book is about the characters before any big conflicts or challenges.



The problem with beginners arises because the most memorable part of the beginning is the "inciting incident", something unusual that happens to the main characters about halfway through the first Act. That is after the introduction to the normal world, but the normal world is critical for the reader to know who this happens to so they care about her.



The first Act is about 25% of the story; in an 80,000 word novel that is 20,000 words. Halfway through is 10,000 words. The standard submission format for a novel (which is how I write mine) is about 250 words per page.



So, 10,000 words is 40 pages. That is a lot of writing about your character(s) normal world, their day to day life, their pre-existing relationships with family, friends, lovers, coworkers, their job (or school or whatever else they do most of their day), and other aspects of their pre-existing life in general. We need a sense of who we are going to follow on this adventure, what she is like, how she responds to problems, who she loves, and why she behaves like she does. Who causes her problems?



Part of this 40 pages is simultaneously introducing us to the setting. You don't have to do too much if this is a modern world without any magic, but you do have to find ways to naturally introduce and let us know about anything unusual; like magic, or aliens, or sci-fi elements, space travel, futuristic equipment, etc. Ditto for fantasy worlds, and fantasy cultures.



There is a lot to do in the first half of the first act, and it needs to be done in an entertaining way (not just a long lecture about how it all works; those are called "info dumps" and are terribly boring -- we show people how things work using scenes with characters doing things; we don't just pull them aside for a lesson about it).



But beginners often want to skip this, because they want to get to the drama. Don't be in a rush. Readers like to read! They don't mind that nothing big happens immediately, they are used to stories starting this way, in a normal world with normal things happening, and characters dealing with normal problems.



Clarification: This doesn't mean nothing happens, you also don't want to start with an infodump and lengthy description. You do want to start some drama and conflict from the first page, have your character(s) doing something while you also introduce their normal world. (details in the second link). This just doesn't have to be your main conflict or problem, that begins around the 1/8th mark (with the inciting incident). I recommend you begin with some every-day emergency. e.g. waking up an hour late, due to a power failure during the night. Or the car doesn't start, or the milk she bought two days ago for her breakfast cereal is already sour. Make her deal with a micro-crisis, so we see how she deals with a setback. It is important to make the reader want to turn from page 1 to page 2 to see what happens next; and an infodump or nothing happening will fail to do that.



Read up on the Three Act Structure, it will only take a few hours, so you can see how nearly all modern stories get structured. You can Google that and get millions of hits, if you want to read more.



The "structure" is about what happens, when it happens in the story, and what the results are; broadly speaking it is what you should be writing about in each section of your story.



The Three Act Structure is not like a rule you have to follow or you get rejected; it is actually the result of studying what is common in how very popular stories have been structured. It is just what we have noticed most well-received stories have in common. Following it won't guarantee you also write a great story -- What it can do is help you avoid writing a bad story with obvious flaws.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you! Just reading your answer has helped me immensely! You’re right, I, as a reader, like to read about the normal world of the characters even if nothing is happening yet. And I did start to think ‘I need to get the drama flowing straight away’ which obviously would have been a mistake.

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 15:47






  • 1





    @FirstTimeWriter The answer to that urge is in the second link. In a way you DO want to start drama (conflict) flowing straight away; but the conflict doesn't have to be the MAIN conflict of your story; it can be a normal, everyday emergency your main character has to deal with. Alice wakes up without the alarm -- then sees her alarm flashing 12:00 and realizes the power failed in the night and she's an hour late getting up. BANG! A lot of crap to do in a short amount of time. Any little non-life-changing crisis will do the trick, show us some "normal world" and how she deals with crises.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:14











  • That makes sense. Thanks :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:17













9












9








9







I have two previous answers that will help you, Here, on the Three Act Structure and Here, on Getting the first 50 pages or so started.



These are geared to discovery writers, like me, but if you already have a plot to follow, they can help you anyway.



The biggest mistake I see beginners make is they want to jump in too early on the "action" or the "big idea", they think it helps to start with a big fight or the aliens arriving or whatever.



This seldom works. The reason is because in a novel we readers need to care about the characters that are in danger, or being hurt, or that are fighting. Nearly every novel (and most movies) actually begin rather mildly; to introduce characters in their "normal world". This is done to invest the reader in the character(s) so they care about them, before you put them in a blender.



In the three act structure (which about 90% of all popular stories follow), the first 10% to 15% of the book is about the characters before any big conflicts or challenges.



The problem with beginners arises because the most memorable part of the beginning is the "inciting incident", something unusual that happens to the main characters about halfway through the first Act. That is after the introduction to the normal world, but the normal world is critical for the reader to know who this happens to so they care about her.



The first Act is about 25% of the story; in an 80,000 word novel that is 20,000 words. Halfway through is 10,000 words. The standard submission format for a novel (which is how I write mine) is about 250 words per page.



So, 10,000 words is 40 pages. That is a lot of writing about your character(s) normal world, their day to day life, their pre-existing relationships with family, friends, lovers, coworkers, their job (or school or whatever else they do most of their day), and other aspects of their pre-existing life in general. We need a sense of who we are going to follow on this adventure, what she is like, how she responds to problems, who she loves, and why she behaves like she does. Who causes her problems?



Part of this 40 pages is simultaneously introducing us to the setting. You don't have to do too much if this is a modern world without any magic, but you do have to find ways to naturally introduce and let us know about anything unusual; like magic, or aliens, or sci-fi elements, space travel, futuristic equipment, etc. Ditto for fantasy worlds, and fantasy cultures.



There is a lot to do in the first half of the first act, and it needs to be done in an entertaining way (not just a long lecture about how it all works; those are called "info dumps" and are terribly boring -- we show people how things work using scenes with characters doing things; we don't just pull them aside for a lesson about it).



But beginners often want to skip this, because they want to get to the drama. Don't be in a rush. Readers like to read! They don't mind that nothing big happens immediately, they are used to stories starting this way, in a normal world with normal things happening, and characters dealing with normal problems.



Clarification: This doesn't mean nothing happens, you also don't want to start with an infodump and lengthy description. You do want to start some drama and conflict from the first page, have your character(s) doing something while you also introduce their normal world. (details in the second link). This just doesn't have to be your main conflict or problem, that begins around the 1/8th mark (with the inciting incident). I recommend you begin with some every-day emergency. e.g. waking up an hour late, due to a power failure during the night. Or the car doesn't start, or the milk she bought two days ago for her breakfast cereal is already sour. Make her deal with a micro-crisis, so we see how she deals with a setback. It is important to make the reader want to turn from page 1 to page 2 to see what happens next; and an infodump or nothing happening will fail to do that.



Read up on the Three Act Structure, it will only take a few hours, so you can see how nearly all modern stories get structured. You can Google that and get millions of hits, if you want to read more.



The "structure" is about what happens, when it happens in the story, and what the results are; broadly speaking it is what you should be writing about in each section of your story.



The Three Act Structure is not like a rule you have to follow or you get rejected; it is actually the result of studying what is common in how very popular stories have been structured. It is just what we have noticed most well-received stories have in common. Following it won't guarantee you also write a great story -- What it can do is help you avoid writing a bad story with obvious flaws.






share|improve this answer















I have two previous answers that will help you, Here, on the Three Act Structure and Here, on Getting the first 50 pages or so started.



These are geared to discovery writers, like me, but if you already have a plot to follow, they can help you anyway.



The biggest mistake I see beginners make is they want to jump in too early on the "action" or the "big idea", they think it helps to start with a big fight or the aliens arriving or whatever.



This seldom works. The reason is because in a novel we readers need to care about the characters that are in danger, or being hurt, or that are fighting. Nearly every novel (and most movies) actually begin rather mildly; to introduce characters in their "normal world". This is done to invest the reader in the character(s) so they care about them, before you put them in a blender.



In the three act structure (which about 90% of all popular stories follow), the first 10% to 15% of the book is about the characters before any big conflicts or challenges.



The problem with beginners arises because the most memorable part of the beginning is the "inciting incident", something unusual that happens to the main characters about halfway through the first Act. That is after the introduction to the normal world, but the normal world is critical for the reader to know who this happens to so they care about her.



The first Act is about 25% of the story; in an 80,000 word novel that is 20,000 words. Halfway through is 10,000 words. The standard submission format for a novel (which is how I write mine) is about 250 words per page.



So, 10,000 words is 40 pages. That is a lot of writing about your character(s) normal world, their day to day life, their pre-existing relationships with family, friends, lovers, coworkers, their job (or school or whatever else they do most of their day), and other aspects of their pre-existing life in general. We need a sense of who we are going to follow on this adventure, what she is like, how she responds to problems, who she loves, and why she behaves like she does. Who causes her problems?



Part of this 40 pages is simultaneously introducing us to the setting. You don't have to do too much if this is a modern world without any magic, but you do have to find ways to naturally introduce and let us know about anything unusual; like magic, or aliens, or sci-fi elements, space travel, futuristic equipment, etc. Ditto for fantasy worlds, and fantasy cultures.



There is a lot to do in the first half of the first act, and it needs to be done in an entertaining way (not just a long lecture about how it all works; those are called "info dumps" and are terribly boring -- we show people how things work using scenes with characters doing things; we don't just pull them aside for a lesson about it).



But beginners often want to skip this, because they want to get to the drama. Don't be in a rush. Readers like to read! They don't mind that nothing big happens immediately, they are used to stories starting this way, in a normal world with normal things happening, and characters dealing with normal problems.



Clarification: This doesn't mean nothing happens, you also don't want to start with an infodump and lengthy description. You do want to start some drama and conflict from the first page, have your character(s) doing something while you also introduce their normal world. (details in the second link). This just doesn't have to be your main conflict or problem, that begins around the 1/8th mark (with the inciting incident). I recommend you begin with some every-day emergency. e.g. waking up an hour late, due to a power failure during the night. Or the car doesn't start, or the milk she bought two days ago for her breakfast cereal is already sour. Make her deal with a micro-crisis, so we see how she deals with a setback. It is important to make the reader want to turn from page 1 to page 2 to see what happens next; and an infodump or nothing happening will fail to do that.



Read up on the Three Act Structure, it will only take a few hours, so you can see how nearly all modern stories get structured. You can Google that and get millions of hits, if you want to read more.



The "structure" is about what happens, when it happens in the story, and what the results are; broadly speaking it is what you should be writing about in each section of your story.



The Three Act Structure is not like a rule you have to follow or you get rejected; it is actually the result of studying what is common in how very popular stories have been structured. It is just what we have noticed most well-received stories have in common. Following it won't guarantee you also write a great story -- What it can do is help you avoid writing a bad story with obvious flaws.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 days ago

























answered Mar 31 at 15:35









AmadeusAmadeus

59.2k677188




59.2k677188












  • Thank you! Just reading your answer has helped me immensely! You’re right, I, as a reader, like to read about the normal world of the characters even if nothing is happening yet. And I did start to think ‘I need to get the drama flowing straight away’ which obviously would have been a mistake.

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 15:47






  • 1





    @FirstTimeWriter The answer to that urge is in the second link. In a way you DO want to start drama (conflict) flowing straight away; but the conflict doesn't have to be the MAIN conflict of your story; it can be a normal, everyday emergency your main character has to deal with. Alice wakes up without the alarm -- then sees her alarm flashing 12:00 and realizes the power failed in the night and she's an hour late getting up. BANG! A lot of crap to do in a short amount of time. Any little non-life-changing crisis will do the trick, show us some "normal world" and how she deals with crises.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:14











  • That makes sense. Thanks :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:17

















  • Thank you! Just reading your answer has helped me immensely! You’re right, I, as a reader, like to read about the normal world of the characters even if nothing is happening yet. And I did start to think ‘I need to get the drama flowing straight away’ which obviously would have been a mistake.

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 15:47






  • 1





    @FirstTimeWriter The answer to that urge is in the second link. In a way you DO want to start drama (conflict) flowing straight away; but the conflict doesn't have to be the MAIN conflict of your story; it can be a normal, everyday emergency your main character has to deal with. Alice wakes up without the alarm -- then sees her alarm flashing 12:00 and realizes the power failed in the night and she's an hour late getting up. BANG! A lot of crap to do in a short amount of time. Any little non-life-changing crisis will do the trick, show us some "normal world" and how she deals with crises.

    – Amadeus
    Mar 31 at 17:14











  • That makes sense. Thanks :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 17:17
















Thank you! Just reading your answer has helped me immensely! You’re right, I, as a reader, like to read about the normal world of the characters even if nothing is happening yet. And I did start to think ‘I need to get the drama flowing straight away’ which obviously would have been a mistake.

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 15:47





Thank you! Just reading your answer has helped me immensely! You’re right, I, as a reader, like to read about the normal world of the characters even if nothing is happening yet. And I did start to think ‘I need to get the drama flowing straight away’ which obviously would have been a mistake.

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 15:47




1




1





@FirstTimeWriter The answer to that urge is in the second link. In a way you DO want to start drama (conflict) flowing straight away; but the conflict doesn't have to be the MAIN conflict of your story; it can be a normal, everyday emergency your main character has to deal with. Alice wakes up without the alarm -- then sees her alarm flashing 12:00 and realizes the power failed in the night and she's an hour late getting up. BANG! A lot of crap to do in a short amount of time. Any little non-life-changing crisis will do the trick, show us some "normal world" and how she deals with crises.

– Amadeus
Mar 31 at 17:14





@FirstTimeWriter The answer to that urge is in the second link. In a way you DO want to start drama (conflict) flowing straight away; but the conflict doesn't have to be the MAIN conflict of your story; it can be a normal, everyday emergency your main character has to deal with. Alice wakes up without the alarm -- then sees her alarm flashing 12:00 and realizes the power failed in the night and she's an hour late getting up. BANG! A lot of crap to do in a short amount of time. Any little non-life-changing crisis will do the trick, show us some "normal world" and how she deals with crises.

– Amadeus
Mar 31 at 17:14













That makes sense. Thanks :)

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 17:17





That makes sense. Thanks :)

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 17:17











5














What I do is get to know my characters well, my MC in particular, create a situation and see what happens. I write what occurs.



If you have all of the elements in your story ready, but that blank page is looking back at you, just pretend you are telling your story to a friend. Write what happens and see if it works for you.



We each have our own process, some quite strict and others fluid. Find what works for you and write.



Do not expect perfection. You say you are a beginner - I have several novels that will never see the light of day because their purpose was to improve my skill as a storyteller.



You have an advantage in that you have a friend in the business who has already told you that you have something worth writing. Many of us are looking for such a person to let us know if our work is something they would be interested in publishing, but you have an in.



My process works for me, but might not work for you. I name my character, that tells me who they are at their core. I start asking myself questions about him or her, then insert into a situation and start. If nothing interesting happens, that might be interesting if the character is intriguing enough. My character meets another and things start happening.



I occasionally read mine aloud to check for proper flow. The ear will catch what the eye does not.



Make sure that you like your characters. Do your best to make the important ones as well rounded and real as you can. Give dimension to the walk-ons too, but less is required there as they are not the focus of the story.



Feel free to choose multiple protagonists and do whatever works for your story.



In my case, my characters drive the plot and frequently change direction. I strive to remain true to them, keeping their actions and thoughts in character.



No matter what happens - keep writing.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you! They’re really great tips. I guess I’ll start with writng it out like I’m telling a friend :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 14:59
















5














What I do is get to know my characters well, my MC in particular, create a situation and see what happens. I write what occurs.



If you have all of the elements in your story ready, but that blank page is looking back at you, just pretend you are telling your story to a friend. Write what happens and see if it works for you.



We each have our own process, some quite strict and others fluid. Find what works for you and write.



Do not expect perfection. You say you are a beginner - I have several novels that will never see the light of day because their purpose was to improve my skill as a storyteller.



You have an advantage in that you have a friend in the business who has already told you that you have something worth writing. Many of us are looking for such a person to let us know if our work is something they would be interested in publishing, but you have an in.



My process works for me, but might not work for you. I name my character, that tells me who they are at their core. I start asking myself questions about him or her, then insert into a situation and start. If nothing interesting happens, that might be interesting if the character is intriguing enough. My character meets another and things start happening.



I occasionally read mine aloud to check for proper flow. The ear will catch what the eye does not.



Make sure that you like your characters. Do your best to make the important ones as well rounded and real as you can. Give dimension to the walk-ons too, but less is required there as they are not the focus of the story.



Feel free to choose multiple protagonists and do whatever works for your story.



In my case, my characters drive the plot and frequently change direction. I strive to remain true to them, keeping their actions and thoughts in character.



No matter what happens - keep writing.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you! They’re really great tips. I guess I’ll start with writng it out like I’m telling a friend :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 14:59














5












5








5







What I do is get to know my characters well, my MC in particular, create a situation and see what happens. I write what occurs.



If you have all of the elements in your story ready, but that blank page is looking back at you, just pretend you are telling your story to a friend. Write what happens and see if it works for you.



We each have our own process, some quite strict and others fluid. Find what works for you and write.



Do not expect perfection. You say you are a beginner - I have several novels that will never see the light of day because their purpose was to improve my skill as a storyteller.



You have an advantage in that you have a friend in the business who has already told you that you have something worth writing. Many of us are looking for such a person to let us know if our work is something they would be interested in publishing, but you have an in.



My process works for me, but might not work for you. I name my character, that tells me who they are at their core. I start asking myself questions about him or her, then insert into a situation and start. If nothing interesting happens, that might be interesting if the character is intriguing enough. My character meets another and things start happening.



I occasionally read mine aloud to check for proper flow. The ear will catch what the eye does not.



Make sure that you like your characters. Do your best to make the important ones as well rounded and real as you can. Give dimension to the walk-ons too, but less is required there as they are not the focus of the story.



Feel free to choose multiple protagonists and do whatever works for your story.



In my case, my characters drive the plot and frequently change direction. I strive to remain true to them, keeping their actions and thoughts in character.



No matter what happens - keep writing.






share|improve this answer















What I do is get to know my characters well, my MC in particular, create a situation and see what happens. I write what occurs.



If you have all of the elements in your story ready, but that blank page is looking back at you, just pretend you are telling your story to a friend. Write what happens and see if it works for you.



We each have our own process, some quite strict and others fluid. Find what works for you and write.



Do not expect perfection. You say you are a beginner - I have several novels that will never see the light of day because their purpose was to improve my skill as a storyteller.



You have an advantage in that you have a friend in the business who has already told you that you have something worth writing. Many of us are looking for such a person to let us know if our work is something they would be interested in publishing, but you have an in.



My process works for me, but might not work for you. I name my character, that tells me who they are at their core. I start asking myself questions about him or her, then insert into a situation and start. If nothing interesting happens, that might be interesting if the character is intriguing enough. My character meets another and things start happening.



I occasionally read mine aloud to check for proper flow. The ear will catch what the eye does not.



Make sure that you like your characters. Do your best to make the important ones as well rounded and real as you can. Give dimension to the walk-ons too, but less is required there as they are not the focus of the story.



Feel free to choose multiple protagonists and do whatever works for your story.



In my case, my characters drive the plot and frequently change direction. I strive to remain true to them, keeping their actions and thoughts in character.



No matter what happens - keep writing.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 4 at 5:43

























answered Mar 31 at 14:26









RasdashanRasdashan

9,76311160




9,76311160












  • Thank you! They’re really great tips. I guess I’ll start with writng it out like I’m telling a friend :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 14:59


















  • Thank you! They’re really great tips. I guess I’ll start with writng it out like I’m telling a friend :)

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Mar 31 at 14:59

















Thank you! They’re really great tips. I guess I’ll start with writng it out like I’m telling a friend :)

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 14:59






Thank you! They’re really great tips. I guess I’ll start with writng it out like I’m telling a friend :)

– FirstTimeWriter
Mar 31 at 14:59












2














Starting from a blank page is always hard.




Read Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg. It's an excellent
book to get you writing.




Writing, you will find, is like any art. Like learning the piano, or learning ballet. If you drown yourself in the technicalities, you will soon become overwhelmed and won't be able to hold all that information in your head anyway. Structure, character development, dialogue, description, theme, imagery, etc. etc. are things that take time to master. Just tie your shoes and stand with flat feet. Open the lid and make noises with the keys. Don't try to write a masterpiece from scratch.



Natalie's advice is beautiful. Go to the stationery store and buy a crappy, cheap notebook. Buy a fast pen that moves across the page as quickly as your thoughts. And just write. Let the words pour out without checking yourself or editing any of them.



Crappy notebooks, as opposed to beautiful hardback tomes, free you to write absolute crap. But out of that dung heap, you can dig for gems. It composts over time (as Natalie puts it) and thoughts become refined.



But if you stare at the blank page waiting for diamonds to spring from your fingertips, you'll never write anything.




“Almost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts.” -- Anne
Lamott.




How to start? Just write! Let yourself go. Have fun. Spill your soul on the page.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    Thanks! I’ll have to get that book and have a read. Sounds like a great idea to just write down my thoughts too!

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Apr 5 at 14:04
















2














Starting from a blank page is always hard.




Read Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg. It's an excellent
book to get you writing.




Writing, you will find, is like any art. Like learning the piano, or learning ballet. If you drown yourself in the technicalities, you will soon become overwhelmed and won't be able to hold all that information in your head anyway. Structure, character development, dialogue, description, theme, imagery, etc. etc. are things that take time to master. Just tie your shoes and stand with flat feet. Open the lid and make noises with the keys. Don't try to write a masterpiece from scratch.



Natalie's advice is beautiful. Go to the stationery store and buy a crappy, cheap notebook. Buy a fast pen that moves across the page as quickly as your thoughts. And just write. Let the words pour out without checking yourself or editing any of them.



Crappy notebooks, as opposed to beautiful hardback tomes, free you to write absolute crap. But out of that dung heap, you can dig for gems. It composts over time (as Natalie puts it) and thoughts become refined.



But if you stare at the blank page waiting for diamonds to spring from your fingertips, you'll never write anything.




“Almost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts.” -- Anne
Lamott.




How to start? Just write! Let yourself go. Have fun. Spill your soul on the page.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    Thanks! I’ll have to get that book and have a read. Sounds like a great idea to just write down my thoughts too!

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Apr 5 at 14:04














2












2








2







Starting from a blank page is always hard.




Read Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg. It's an excellent
book to get you writing.




Writing, you will find, is like any art. Like learning the piano, or learning ballet. If you drown yourself in the technicalities, you will soon become overwhelmed and won't be able to hold all that information in your head anyway. Structure, character development, dialogue, description, theme, imagery, etc. etc. are things that take time to master. Just tie your shoes and stand with flat feet. Open the lid and make noises with the keys. Don't try to write a masterpiece from scratch.



Natalie's advice is beautiful. Go to the stationery store and buy a crappy, cheap notebook. Buy a fast pen that moves across the page as quickly as your thoughts. And just write. Let the words pour out without checking yourself or editing any of them.



Crappy notebooks, as opposed to beautiful hardback tomes, free you to write absolute crap. But out of that dung heap, you can dig for gems. It composts over time (as Natalie puts it) and thoughts become refined.



But if you stare at the blank page waiting for diamonds to spring from your fingertips, you'll never write anything.




“Almost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts.” -- Anne
Lamott.




How to start? Just write! Let yourself go. Have fun. Spill your soul on the page.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer













Starting from a blank page is always hard.




Read Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg. It's an excellent
book to get you writing.




Writing, you will find, is like any art. Like learning the piano, or learning ballet. If you drown yourself in the technicalities, you will soon become overwhelmed and won't be able to hold all that information in your head anyway. Structure, character development, dialogue, description, theme, imagery, etc. etc. are things that take time to master. Just tie your shoes and stand with flat feet. Open the lid and make noises with the keys. Don't try to write a masterpiece from scratch.



Natalie's advice is beautiful. Go to the stationery store and buy a crappy, cheap notebook. Buy a fast pen that moves across the page as quickly as your thoughts. And just write. Let the words pour out without checking yourself or editing any of them.



Crappy notebooks, as opposed to beautiful hardback tomes, free you to write absolute crap. But out of that dung heap, you can dig for gems. It composts over time (as Natalie puts it) and thoughts become refined.



But if you stare at the blank page waiting for diamonds to spring from your fingertips, you'll never write anything.




“Almost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts.” -- Anne
Lamott.




How to start? Just write! Let yourself go. Have fun. Spill your soul on the page.



Good luck!







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 4 at 13:32









GGxGGx

6,83811343




6,83811343







  • 1





    Thanks! I’ll have to get that book and have a read. Sounds like a great idea to just write down my thoughts too!

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Apr 5 at 14:04













  • 1





    Thanks! I’ll have to get that book and have a read. Sounds like a great idea to just write down my thoughts too!

    – FirstTimeWriter
    Apr 5 at 14:04








1




1





Thanks! I’ll have to get that book and have a read. Sounds like a great idea to just write down my thoughts too!

– FirstTimeWriter
Apr 5 at 14:04






Thanks! I’ll have to get that book and have a read. Sounds like a great idea to just write down my thoughts too!

– FirstTimeWriter
Apr 5 at 14:04


















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Writing Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fwriting.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f44227%2fhelp-tips-for-a-first-time-writer%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Boston (Lincolnshire) Stedsbyld | Berne yn Boston | NavigaasjemenuBoston Borough CouncilBoston, Lincolnshire

Ballerup Komuun Stääden an saarpen | Futnuuten | Luke uk diar | Nawigatsjuunwww.ballerup.dkwww.statistikbanken.dk: Tabelle BEF44 (Folketal pr. 1. januar fordelt på byer)Commonskategorii: Ballerup Komuun55° 44′ N, 12° 22′ O

Serbia Índice Etimología Historia Geografía Entorno natural División administrativa Política Demografía Economía Cultura Deportes Véase también Notas Referencias Bibliografía Enlaces externos Menú de navegación44°49′00″N 20°28′00″E / 44.816666666667, 20.46666666666744°49′00″N 20°28′00″E / 44.816666666667, 20.466666666667U.S. Department of Commerce (2015)«Informe sobre Desarrollo Humano 2018»Kosovo-Metohija.Neutralna Srbija u NATO okruzenju.The SerbsTheories on the Origin of the Serbs.Serbia.Earls: Webster's Quotations, Facts and Phrases.Egeo y Balcanes.Kalemegdan.Southern Pannonia during the age of the Great Migrations.Culture in Serbia.History.The Serbian Origin of the Montenegrins.Nemanjics' period (1186-1353).Stefan Uros (1355-1371).Serbian medieval history.Habsburg–Ottoman Wars (1525–1718).The Ottoman Empire, 1700-1922.The First Serbian Uprising.Miloš, prince of Serbia.3. Bosnia-Hercegovina and the Congress of Berlin.The Balkan Wars and the Partition of Macedonia.The Falcon and the Eagle: Montenegro and Austria-Hungary, 1908-1914.Typhus fever on the eastern front in World War I.Anniversary of WWI battle marked in Serbia.La derrota austriaca en los Balcanes. Fin del Imperio Austro-Húngaro.Imperio austriaco y Reino de Hungría.Los tiempos modernos: del capitalismo a la globalización, siglos XVII al XXI.The period of Croatia within ex-Yugoslavia.Yugoslavia: Much in a Name.Las dictaduras europeas.Croacia: mito y realidad."Crods ask arms".Prólogo a la invasión.La campaña de los Balcanes.La resistencia en Yugoslavia.Jasenovac Research Institute.Día en memoria de las víctimas del genocidio en la Segunda Guerra Mundial.El infierno estuvo en Jasenovac.Croacia empieza a «desenterrar» a sus muertos de Jasenovac.World fascism: a historical encyclopedia, Volumen 1.Tito. Josip Broz.El nuevo orden y la resistencia.La conquista del poder.Algunos aspectos de la economía yugoslava a mediados de 1962.Albania-Kosovo crisis.De Kosovo a Kosova: una visión demográfica.La crisis de la economía yugoslava y la política de "estabilización".Milosevic: el poder de un absolutista."Serbia under Milošević: politics in the 1990s"Milosevic cavó en Kosovo la tumba de la antigua Yugoslavia.La ONU exculpa a Serbia de genocidio en la guerra de Bosnia.Slobodan Milosevic, el burócrata que supo usar el odio.Es la fuerza contra el sufrimiento de muchos inocentes.Matanza de civiles al bombardear la OTAN un puente mientras pasaba un tren.Las consecuencias negativas de los bombardeos de Yugoslavia se sentirán aún durante largo tiempo.Kostunica advierte que la misión de Europa en Kosovo es ilegal.Las 24 horas más largas en la vida de Slobodan Milosevic.Serbia declara la guerra a la mafia por matar a Djindjic.Tadic presentará "quizás en diciembre" la solicitud de entrada en la UE.Montenegro declara su independencia de Serbia.Serbia se declara estado soberano tras separación de Montenegro.«Accordance with International Law of the Unilateral Declaration of Independence by the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government of Kosovo (Request for Advisory Opinion)»Mladic pasa por el médico antes de la audiencia para extraditarloDatos de Serbia y Kosovo.The Carpathian Mountains.Position, Relief, Climate.Transport.Finding birds in Serbia.U Srbiji do 2010. godine 10% teritorije nacionalni parkovi.Geography.Serbia: Climate.Variability of Climate In Serbia In The Second Half of The 20thc Entury.BASIC CLIMATE CHARACTERISTICS FOR THE TERRITORY OF SERBIA.Fauna y flora: Serbia.Serbia and Montenegro.Información general sobre Serbia.Republic of Serbia Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA).Serbia recycling 15% of waste.Reform process of the Serbian energy sector.20-MW Wind Project Being Developed in Serbia.Las Naciones Unidas. Paz para Kosovo.Aniversario sin fiesta.Population by national or ethnic groups by Census 2002.Article 7. Coat of arms, flag and national anthem.Serbia, flag of.Historia.«Serbia and Montenegro in Pictures»Serbia.Serbia aprueba su nueva Constitución con un apoyo de más del 50%.Serbia. Population.«El nacionalista Nikolic gana las elecciones presidenciales en Serbia»El europeísta Borís Tadic gana la segunda vuelta de las presidenciales serbias.Aleksandar Vucic, de ultranacionalista serbio a fervoroso europeístaKostunica condena la declaración del "falso estado" de Kosovo.Comienza el debate sobre la independencia de Kosovo en el TIJ.La Corte Internacional de Justicia dice que Kosovo no violó el derecho internacional al declarar su independenciaKosovo: Enviado de la ONU advierte tensiones y fragilidad.«Bruselas recomienda negociar la adhesión de Serbia tras el acuerdo sobre Kosovo»Monografía de Serbia.Bez smanjivanja Vojske Srbije.Military statistics Serbia and Montenegro.Šutanovac: Vojni budžet za 2009. godinu 70 milijardi dinara.Serbia-Montenegro shortens obligatory military service to six months.No hay justicia para las víctimas de los bombardeos de la OTAN.Zapatero reitera la negativa de España a reconocer la independencia de Kosovo.Anniversary of the signing of the Stabilisation and Association Agreement.Detenido en Serbia Radovan Karadzic, el criminal de guerra más buscado de Europa."Serbia presentará su candidatura de acceso a la UE antes de fin de año".Serbia solicita la adhesión a la UE.Detenido el exgeneral serbobosnio Ratko Mladic, principal acusado del genocidio en los Balcanes«Lista de todos los Estados Miembros de las Naciones Unidas que son parte o signatarios en los diversos instrumentos de derechos humanos de las Naciones Unidas»versión pdfProtocolo Facultativo de la Convención sobre la Eliminación de todas las Formas de Discriminación contra la MujerConvención contra la tortura y otros tratos o penas crueles, inhumanos o degradantesversión pdfProtocolo Facultativo de la Convención sobre los Derechos de las Personas con DiscapacidadEl ACNUR recibe con beneplácito el envío de tropas de la OTAN a Kosovo y se prepara ante una posible llegada de refugiados a Serbia.Kosovo.- El jefe de la Minuk denuncia que los serbios boicotearon las legislativas por 'presiones'.Bosnia and Herzegovina. Population.Datos básicos de Montenegro, historia y evolución política.Serbia y Montenegro. Indicador: Tasa global de fecundidad (por 1000 habitantes).Serbia y Montenegro. Indicador: Tasa bruta de mortalidad (por 1000 habitantes).Population.Falleció el patriarca de la Iglesia Ortodoxa serbia.Atacan en Kosovo autobuses con peregrinos tras la investidura del patriarca serbio IrinejSerbian in Hungary.Tasas de cambio."Kosovo es de todos sus ciudadanos".Report for Serbia.Country groups by income.GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP) OF THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA 1997–2007.Economic Trends in the Republic of Serbia 2006.National Accounts Statitics.Саопштења за јавност.GDP per inhabitant varied by one to six across the EU27 Member States.Un pacto de estabilidad para Serbia.Unemployment rate rises in Serbia.Serbia, Belarus agree free trade to woo investors.Serbia, Turkey call investors to Serbia.Success Stories.U.S. Private Investment in Serbia and Montenegro.Positive trend.Banks in Serbia.La Cámara de Comercio acompaña a empresas madrileñas a Serbia y Croacia.Serbia Industries.Energy and mining.Agriculture.Late crops, fruit and grapes output, 2008.Rebranding Serbia: A Hobby Shortly to Become a Full-Time Job.Final data on livestock statistics, 2008.Serbian cell-phone users.U Srbiji sve više računara.Телекомуникације.U Srbiji 27 odsto gradjana koristi Internet.Serbia and Montenegro.Тренд гледаности програма РТС-а у 2008. и 2009.години.Serbian railways.General Terms.El mercado del transporte aéreo en Serbia.Statistics.Vehículos de motor registrados.Planes ambiciosos para el transporte fluvial.Turismo.Turistički promet u Republici Srbiji u periodu januar-novembar 2007. godine.Your Guide to Culture.Novi Sad - city of culture.Nis - european crossroads.Serbia. Properties inscribed on the World Heritage List .Stari Ras and Sopoćani.Studenica Monastery.Medieval Monuments in Kosovo.Gamzigrad-Romuliana, Palace of Galerius.Skiing and snowboarding in Kopaonik.Tara.New7Wonders of Nature Finalists.Pilgrimage of Saint Sava.Exit Festival: Best european festival.Banje u Srbiji.«The Encyclopedia of world history»Culture.Centenario del arte serbio.«Djordje Andrejevic Kun: el único pintor de los brigadistas yugoslavos de la guerra civil española»About the museum.The collections.Miroslav Gospel – Manuscript from 1180.Historicity in the Serbo-Croatian Heroic Epic.Culture and Sport.Conversación con el rector del Seminario San Sava.'Reina Margot' funde drama, historia y gesto con música de Goran Bregovic.Serbia gana Eurovisión y España decepciona de nuevo con un vigésimo puesto.Home.Story.Emir Kusturica.Tercer oro para Paskaljevic.Nikola Tesla Year.Home.Tesla, un genio tomado por loco.Aniversario de la muerte de Nikola Tesla.El Museo Nikola Tesla en Belgrado.El inventor del mundo actual.República de Serbia.University of Belgrade official statistics.University of Novi Sad.University of Kragujevac.University of Nis.Comida. Cocina serbia.Cooking.Montenegro se convertirá en el miembro 204 del movimiento olímpico.España, campeona de Europa de baloncesto.El Partizan de Belgrado se corona campeón por octava vez consecutiva.Serbia se clasifica para el Mundial de 2010 de Sudáfrica.Serbia Name Squad For Northern Ireland And South Korea Tests.Fútbol.- El Partizán de Belgrado se proclama campeón de la Liga serbia.Clasificacion final Mundial de balonmano Croacia 2009.Serbia vence a España y se consagra campeón mundial de waterpolo.Novak Djokovic no convence pero gana en Australia.Gana Ana Ivanovic el Roland Garros.Serena Williams gana el US Open por tercera vez.Biography.Bradt Travel Guide SerbiaThe Encyclopedia of World War IGobierno de SerbiaPortal del Gobierno de SerbiaPresidencia de SerbiaAsamblea Nacional SerbiaMinisterio de Asuntos exteriores de SerbiaBanco Nacional de SerbiaAgencia Serbia para la Promoción de la Inversión y la ExportaciónOficina de Estadísticas de SerbiaCIA. Factbook 2008Organización nacional de turismo de SerbiaDiscover SerbiaConoce SerbiaNoticias de SerbiaSerbiaWorldCat1512028760000 0000 9526 67094054598-2n8519591900570825ge1309191004530741010url17413117006669D055771Serbia