Compulsive Admin

Knock Down Drag Out Write! Day 05

Jason and Leah incorporate one of Leah’s dreams into their fiction and Leah trash talks her stupid, no account, muse.

The story Jason is refering to involving “Little Men” is the author Paul Broks. Jason originally heard the story on Radio Lab.

Also, you can find us at nanowrimo.org if you search for Compulsive Creative.

Also, our couple discusses the benefits of a separation, and Leah threatens to ‘end it’ after all.

Knock Down Drag Out Write! Day 04

Uh-ohhh…

In this episode Jason gets hung up on the meaning of what a fictional journal should or should not look like.

How close to reality should fictional journaling get?  Listen to day four of KDDoW! and give us your thoughts.  Important issue or nit picking?

 

Novel Writing Day 3

Jason and Leah talk through their plot at the park. They later return and write it all out with whiteboards.

At this point they have planned out through Act 1.

Act 1

Act 1 is all about establishing characters, backgrounds, and rules of the universe within a book.

Book mentioned: Invisible Ink: A Practical Guide to Building Stories that Resonate by Brian McDonald

Knock Down Drag Out Write! Day 2

In day 2, Jason and Leah discuss their inability to meet their goals of 833 words a day (Leah stands at 431, Jason 100) because it turns out that neither one has agreed on a genre, enemy or ending.  It occurs to Jason and Leah that they may not know anything about anything, except for the fact that they are wading into deep, literary, doo-doo.

What genre are our writers writing?  What’s in a first act?  How do you insert a little fantasy into the story?  And what will Jason and Leah be willing to sacrifice in order to bring this novel in on time?

Word Count for a Novel

National Novel Writing Month website puts the number of words at 50,000 instead of the 40,000+ we mentioned in Day 1 of the podcast.

Tools

If you are interested in getting your hands on the random Genre generator, we will be giving it away to everyone on our mailing list. You can sign-up by clicking the red button bellow.
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Genres

  • Comedy – focus on humor throughout a story.
  • Crime/Detective – fiction about a committed crime, how the criminal gets caught, and the repercussions of the crime
  • Drama – focusing on an in-depth development of realistic characters who must deal with realistic emotional struggles.
  • Fantasy – fiction with strange or otherworldly settings or characters; fiction which invites suspension of reality
  • Horror – fiction in which events evoke a feeling of dread and sometimes fear in both the characters and the reader
  • Mystery – fiction dealing with the solution of a crime or the unraveling of secrets
  • Realistic/Historical – story that is true to life
  • Romance – focus on the relationship and romantic love between two people
  • Science fiction – story based on impact of actual, imagined, or potential science, usually set in the future or on other planets
  • Suspense/Thriller – fiction about harm about to befall a person or group and the attempts made to evade the harm
  • Tragedy – a form of drama based on human suffering that invokes in its audience an accompanying catharsis or pleasure in the viewing
  • Western – set in the American Old West frontier and typically set in the late eighteenth to late nineteenth century

Your Thoughts?

Do you think Jason and Leah’s approach is a good one?

How is your writing going? We would love to hear from you in the comments below.
We read them all!

Novel Writing Podcast – Coming Soon

Yesterday (November 1st) was the start of National Write a Novel Month.

This means my it is time to execute our Nanowrimo collaboration experiment of writing a novel with my wife in 30 days. It is a very lofty goal. To reach it, we will have to focus on moving the story forward and getting words on the paper instead of making it perfect the first time.

We already hit our first challenge. We didn’t have an answer to:

What is a novel?

Talking it over with Leah, we were not sure on what the criteria is for a book to be called a novel.

We looked at:

  • Word count
  • Number of pages
  • A Sense of permanence
  • The number of big words

Eventually, we agreed on using National Novel Writing Month’s official length requirement of 50,000 words.

This means we will be required to produce 1,666.66 words per day (50,000 words/30 days). Since Leah and I will be working together, we will split that daily word count to 833.33 words per day (1,666.66 words/2 of us).

At first I was feeling it was a bit of a cheat to have two people writing a novel. To make it fair, we are adding an extra challenge.

The Podcast

For the duration of November, I will be writing a novel with my wife and recording that journey with a daily podcast called Knock-Down, Drag-out write. The show will be up any day now. We already uploaded it to iTunes and are just waiting for them to hit publish.

Why?

The big answer is that it will be fun and challenging.

And who knows. Maybe our book will be successful or Leah and I can make a few dollars teaching others how to write novels. Anything is possible at this point. It is very exciting to day dream about the possibilities.

Want to write a novel over the next 30 Days?

If so, please join your fellow writers who receive exclusive daily writing tips and resources!
Click on the red button below!

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Knock Down Drag Out Write! Day 01

In the first episode of Knock Down Drag Out Write!, Jason and Leah ask, how will they find the time to write 50,000 words by the end of November?  Just what is collaborative fiction writing anyway?  The when the where, and the sheer skepticism of ability…

Listen as they pick their characters, settings, problems, and solutions out of thin air.  This could be very interesting, or very, very, very, vague.  Can they knit together the lots they’ve drawn without their lives unraveling?

Our Plot

Using the automatic plot generator, below is what we have to include in our novel.

The plot we picked.

 

Prologue to podcast

Welcome, Welcome, Welcome!

In today’s episode, Jason and Leah discuss what their process for November 1st is going to look like.

They talk about things such as what they think a ‘novel’ really is, what shape their narrative could take, and also how they’re going to avoid arguments by literally drawing characters, settings, problems, and solutions out of a bucket.

What is a novel?

You can use your own definition, but Leah is going with 50,000 words.

Jason is sticking with The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America definition of novel as having a minimum of 40,000 words.

Automatic Scene Builder

Below is a picture of our buckets that contain suggestions on pieces of paper.

Plot Building Buckets

12 Basic Principles of Animation

In the world of animated entertainment, few works can compare to those of Walt Disney. Part of that is thanks to animators Ollie Johnston and Frank Thomas’ 12 Basic Principles of Animation. Which they talk about in their 1981 book The Illusion of Life: Disney Animation.

A strict adherence to this 12 basic animation principles lends artists an almost uncanny appeal, and if you follow these concepts, the sky is the limit for your creations.

1. The Squash and Stretch

When a soft object hits something hard, it will temporarily change in shape but not in bulk. Its volume must go somewhere, so while the impacted side flattens, the item itself will stretch in the opposite direction.

Squash and Stretch

2. Anticipation

Before hitting a golf ball, you must start by swinging the club, and not many people can jump in the air without first bending their knees. In animation, such anticipatory movements add to the realism.

Mario CrouchingMario Jumping

3. Staging

The ideas you present to an audience must be clear. With creative lighting, framing and camera angles, a good animator can focus on what where the action will be while minimizing unneeded detail.

Staging

4. Straight-Ahead Action and Pose-to-Pose

With the straight-ahead action technique, you draw the scene from start to finish one frame at a time. While this does create a fluid movement, it can also wreak havoc with proportion. In pose-to-pose animation, on the other hand, you start by creating a few key frames, filling in the missing ones later.

Straight Ahead and Pose to Pose

5. Follow-Through, Overlap, and Drag

The various parts of any item can move at different speeds. According to the concept of follow-through, it’s looser sections continue moving after it comes to a halt. The principle of overlapping action deals with the various speeds at which different parts travel, and in line with the theory of drag, some sections of an item may lag behind after its mass is in motion.

Follow through and overlapping action

6. Slow In and Slow Out

All moving objects need some time to get up to speed or stop. Devoting a few extra frames to the start and finish of any action will increase the realistic effect.

Slow in and slow out

7. Arc

Non-mechanical action always moves in arcs that flatten out as speed increases and widen when negotiating turns. Natural motion that fails to follow this rule will always look erratic.

Arc Arc Foot

8. Secondary Action

The character that simultaneously walks and chews gum is exhibiting secondary action. When using this technique, be sure that it focuses attention on the main action rather than detracting from it.

Secondary Action Secondary Action 02

9. Timing

The perceptive animator knows how many frames it takes to show an action at the proper speed. When used correctly, this principle allows animated objects to conform to the laws of physics and can help to establish a character’s mood and personality.

Timing

10. Exaggeration

Exaggerated motion can lend interest to an otherwise static and boring scene, but using it excessively can confuse or annoy the viewer.

Exaggeration

11. Solid Drawing

To keep your animated figures from resembling paper dolls, you must give them weight and volume. The concept of solid drawing deals with the proper use of light and shadow to delineate shapes and define anatomy.

Solid drawing

12. Appeal

A figure that lacks charisma will leave the audience cold. While the use of symmetrical or baby-faced features will add to any character’s likeability, a well-conceived villain will often be equally appealing.

Appeal

A Special Nod to Disney

Most animators nowadays attribute the great success of Disney creations to the use of these 12 time-tested principles. Mastering them is sure to improve your own animation endeavors.