How can I make some of my chapters “come to life”?What are some ways of extending a description of a...
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How can I make some of my chapters “come to life”?
What are some ways of extending a description of a scenery?How specific should descriptions of settings/appearances be?Are there any techniques that make complexity work?Writing techniques or exercises to improve ability to show rather than tell?I have three dead-end chapters. Should I keep them or remove them?How to hide something in plain sight (and keep it hidden)?How can I prevent the ends of my chapters from feeling forced?Is it bad storytelling to have things happen by complete chance?Is it best to make a description metaphorical, or upfront?present tense fiction - examples of it done well and common pitfallsHow can I give a novel a particular atmosphere?How much can I trust my players to remember previous states of the story and not get confused?
In my current WIP, I re-read through some of my chapters, and they seem completely dry and dull. I need to add some oomph to it- it seems my descriptions, and just plain storytelling (in some of my chapters) are mundane. What should I do to give it some excitement to keep the readers engaged?
creative-writing technique narrative
add a comment |
In my current WIP, I re-read through some of my chapters, and they seem completely dry and dull. I need to add some oomph to it- it seems my descriptions, and just plain storytelling (in some of my chapters) are mundane. What should I do to give it some excitement to keep the readers engaged?
creative-writing technique narrative
Hi Dawn. You tagged your question with creative-writing non-fiction which are mutually exclusive. While there is some overlap with these categories regarding your question, mostly you'd get very different answers. My guess is you want to dump them both and use fiction instead. Could you please edit it to make it clear? Thanks.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
Hi @Cyn, I removed the non-fiction tag, but kept the creative-writing tag. I am a creative writer, not a fiction writer, so I think creative-writing tag is more appropriate
– Dawn Kelli
8 hours ago
Great thank you. Because creative writing that has chapters but is not fiction is rather unusual, it might be helpful if you add a line in your question with a brief explanation, as it may help people answer. But it's not required if you're okay with some answers not being relevant to you specifically.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
2
@Cyn You're totally right! OMG, I don' t know where my mind is today! I obviously lost it facepalm I am a Creative-Writer and Fiction writer. Sorry! you'll have to forgive me. I guess I better grab another cup of coffee asap!
– Dawn Kelli
7 hours ago
add a comment |
In my current WIP, I re-read through some of my chapters, and they seem completely dry and dull. I need to add some oomph to it- it seems my descriptions, and just plain storytelling (in some of my chapters) are mundane. What should I do to give it some excitement to keep the readers engaged?
creative-writing technique narrative
In my current WIP, I re-read through some of my chapters, and they seem completely dry and dull. I need to add some oomph to it- it seems my descriptions, and just plain storytelling (in some of my chapters) are mundane. What should I do to give it some excitement to keep the readers engaged?
creative-writing technique narrative
creative-writing technique narrative
edited 50 mins ago
linksassin
2,842940
2,842940
asked 8 hours ago
Dawn KelliDawn Kelli
149110
149110
Hi Dawn. You tagged your question with creative-writing non-fiction which are mutually exclusive. While there is some overlap with these categories regarding your question, mostly you'd get very different answers. My guess is you want to dump them both and use fiction instead. Could you please edit it to make it clear? Thanks.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
Hi @Cyn, I removed the non-fiction tag, but kept the creative-writing tag. I am a creative writer, not a fiction writer, so I think creative-writing tag is more appropriate
– Dawn Kelli
8 hours ago
Great thank you. Because creative writing that has chapters but is not fiction is rather unusual, it might be helpful if you add a line in your question with a brief explanation, as it may help people answer. But it's not required if you're okay with some answers not being relevant to you specifically.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
2
@Cyn You're totally right! OMG, I don' t know where my mind is today! I obviously lost it facepalm I am a Creative-Writer and Fiction writer. Sorry! you'll have to forgive me. I guess I better grab another cup of coffee asap!
– Dawn Kelli
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Hi Dawn. You tagged your question with creative-writing non-fiction which are mutually exclusive. While there is some overlap with these categories regarding your question, mostly you'd get very different answers. My guess is you want to dump them both and use fiction instead. Could you please edit it to make it clear? Thanks.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
Hi @Cyn, I removed the non-fiction tag, but kept the creative-writing tag. I am a creative writer, not a fiction writer, so I think creative-writing tag is more appropriate
– Dawn Kelli
8 hours ago
Great thank you. Because creative writing that has chapters but is not fiction is rather unusual, it might be helpful if you add a line in your question with a brief explanation, as it may help people answer. But it's not required if you're okay with some answers not being relevant to you specifically.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
2
@Cyn You're totally right! OMG, I don' t know where my mind is today! I obviously lost it facepalm I am a Creative-Writer and Fiction writer. Sorry! you'll have to forgive me. I guess I better grab another cup of coffee asap!
– Dawn Kelli
7 hours ago
Hi Dawn. You tagged your question with creative-writing non-fiction which are mutually exclusive. While there is some overlap with these categories regarding your question, mostly you'd get very different answers. My guess is you want to dump them both and use fiction instead. Could you please edit it to make it clear? Thanks.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
Hi Dawn. You tagged your question with creative-writing non-fiction which are mutually exclusive. While there is some overlap with these categories regarding your question, mostly you'd get very different answers. My guess is you want to dump them both and use fiction instead. Could you please edit it to make it clear? Thanks.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
Hi @Cyn, I removed the non-fiction tag, but kept the creative-writing tag. I am a creative writer, not a fiction writer, so I think creative-writing tag is more appropriate
– Dawn Kelli
8 hours ago
Hi @Cyn, I removed the non-fiction tag, but kept the creative-writing tag. I am a creative writer, not a fiction writer, so I think creative-writing tag is more appropriate
– Dawn Kelli
8 hours ago
Great thank you. Because creative writing that has chapters but is not fiction is rather unusual, it might be helpful if you add a line in your question with a brief explanation, as it may help people answer. But it's not required if you're okay with some answers not being relevant to you specifically.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
Great thank you. Because creative writing that has chapters but is not fiction is rather unusual, it might be helpful if you add a line in your question with a brief explanation, as it may help people answer. But it's not required if you're okay with some answers not being relevant to you specifically.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
2
2
@Cyn You're totally right! OMG, I don' t know where my mind is today! I obviously lost it facepalm I am a Creative-Writer and Fiction writer. Sorry! you'll have to forgive me. I guess I better grab another cup of coffee asap!
– Dawn Kelli
7 hours ago
@Cyn You're totally right! OMG, I don' t know where my mind is today! I obviously lost it facepalm I am a Creative-Writer and Fiction writer. Sorry! you'll have to forgive me. I guess I better grab another cup of coffee asap!
– Dawn Kelli
7 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
One possibility is perhaps you weren't particularly engaged while writing this. Maybe it was a scene you just slogged through because you needed it. If you aren't personally interested, it's difficult --not impossible, but difficult --to make it interesting for the reader. Here's some good advice from author Rachel Aaron:
Every day, while I was writing out my little description of what I was going to write for the knowledge component of the triangle, I would play the scene through in my mind and try to get excited about it. I'd look for all the cool little hooks, the parts that interested me most, and focus on those since they were obviously what made the scene cool. If I couldn't find anything to get excited over, then I would change the scene, or get rid of it entirely. [emphasis added]
http://thisblogisaploy.blogspot.com/2011/06/how-i-went-from-writing-2000-words-day.html
Conversely, if you are excited by a part of the story --or were, when you wrote it --but it still reads poorly, then not enough of what makes this interesting is making it onto the page. You might need to flesh out your back story, make your descriptions more vivid or more full, or put more of the character and narrator's attitudes and outlooks into the writing. I used to think problems like this were plot or dialogue issues, but they're more likely to be issues of immersion --you haven't done the work to put your reader inside your settings, and inside your characters' hearts and minds.
Finally, sometimes a section just needs to be cut entirely. To quote Aaron again,
I decided then and there that, no matter how useful a scene might be for my plot, boring scenes had no place in my novels.
Many books would be greatly improved with some ruthless editing.
I think you're right- it's a scene that I slogged through. I'm doing it with most of my book, just rushing to put a chapter out.The reason being is that I'm a part of 2 book clubs and every week I have beta readers, so I constantly have to update so that my readers have new chapters to read. I'll have to go back and edit the chapters after I rushed through creating them. Also, as a Wattpad writer, it is recommended by the site that you update every week. This hard for me because after a long week of work, I'm sometimes not in the mood, but I have to otherwise I'll lose readers and followers.
– Dawn Kelli
2 hours ago
add a comment |
You can find some good tips and techniques for tackling description here and here. These questions have several good answers.
You may want to make sure you are adding plenty of conflict throughout your chapters. If your writing seems dull or boring, this might perk it up. Give your characters some resistance or challenges to overcome. It doesn't have to be earth shattering. Some fiesty dialogue or uncomfortable decision making might be enough, depending on where you are with your story.
Also remember most scenes should have their own arc, with rising and falling action, climax and resolution. (though on a much smaller scale than your main story arc or subplot arcs). While scenes don't necessarily equal chapters, they should overlap with your chapters in a way that each chapter gets a bit of the exciting stuff.
And, like @ChrisSunami mentioned, sometimes you just can't make it work and have to get rid of it. It can be devastating to undo something you've worked for hours or days on, but it only hurts for a minute. After I've dumped something I couldn't force into the story, the rest begins to flow so much better.
add a comment |
Put conflict in every scene. A protagonist and antagonist in every scene. A goal in every scene, and something that stands in the way of the goal.
To increase tension ('life') present the protagonist and antagonist as equally opposed with opposing forces. The protagonist wants to make it to the tae castle; the antagonist wants to keep the protagonist as a slave. The protagonist wants to summit Everest, the antagonist (nature) is a formidable opponent.
A goal in every scene, an antagonist in every scene. Kill the scenes that you don't need. Review the scene-sequel model of storytelling.
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
One possibility is perhaps you weren't particularly engaged while writing this. Maybe it was a scene you just slogged through because you needed it. If you aren't personally interested, it's difficult --not impossible, but difficult --to make it interesting for the reader. Here's some good advice from author Rachel Aaron:
Every day, while I was writing out my little description of what I was going to write for the knowledge component of the triangle, I would play the scene through in my mind and try to get excited about it. I'd look for all the cool little hooks, the parts that interested me most, and focus on those since they were obviously what made the scene cool. If I couldn't find anything to get excited over, then I would change the scene, or get rid of it entirely. [emphasis added]
http://thisblogisaploy.blogspot.com/2011/06/how-i-went-from-writing-2000-words-day.html
Conversely, if you are excited by a part of the story --or were, when you wrote it --but it still reads poorly, then not enough of what makes this interesting is making it onto the page. You might need to flesh out your back story, make your descriptions more vivid or more full, or put more of the character and narrator's attitudes and outlooks into the writing. I used to think problems like this were plot or dialogue issues, but they're more likely to be issues of immersion --you haven't done the work to put your reader inside your settings, and inside your characters' hearts and minds.
Finally, sometimes a section just needs to be cut entirely. To quote Aaron again,
I decided then and there that, no matter how useful a scene might be for my plot, boring scenes had no place in my novels.
Many books would be greatly improved with some ruthless editing.
I think you're right- it's a scene that I slogged through. I'm doing it with most of my book, just rushing to put a chapter out.The reason being is that I'm a part of 2 book clubs and every week I have beta readers, so I constantly have to update so that my readers have new chapters to read. I'll have to go back and edit the chapters after I rushed through creating them. Also, as a Wattpad writer, it is recommended by the site that you update every week. This hard for me because after a long week of work, I'm sometimes not in the mood, but I have to otherwise I'll lose readers and followers.
– Dawn Kelli
2 hours ago
add a comment |
One possibility is perhaps you weren't particularly engaged while writing this. Maybe it was a scene you just slogged through because you needed it. If you aren't personally interested, it's difficult --not impossible, but difficult --to make it interesting for the reader. Here's some good advice from author Rachel Aaron:
Every day, while I was writing out my little description of what I was going to write for the knowledge component of the triangle, I would play the scene through in my mind and try to get excited about it. I'd look for all the cool little hooks, the parts that interested me most, and focus on those since they were obviously what made the scene cool. If I couldn't find anything to get excited over, then I would change the scene, or get rid of it entirely. [emphasis added]
http://thisblogisaploy.blogspot.com/2011/06/how-i-went-from-writing-2000-words-day.html
Conversely, if you are excited by a part of the story --or were, when you wrote it --but it still reads poorly, then not enough of what makes this interesting is making it onto the page. You might need to flesh out your back story, make your descriptions more vivid or more full, or put more of the character and narrator's attitudes and outlooks into the writing. I used to think problems like this were plot or dialogue issues, but they're more likely to be issues of immersion --you haven't done the work to put your reader inside your settings, and inside your characters' hearts and minds.
Finally, sometimes a section just needs to be cut entirely. To quote Aaron again,
I decided then and there that, no matter how useful a scene might be for my plot, boring scenes had no place in my novels.
Many books would be greatly improved with some ruthless editing.
I think you're right- it's a scene that I slogged through. I'm doing it with most of my book, just rushing to put a chapter out.The reason being is that I'm a part of 2 book clubs and every week I have beta readers, so I constantly have to update so that my readers have new chapters to read. I'll have to go back and edit the chapters after I rushed through creating them. Also, as a Wattpad writer, it is recommended by the site that you update every week. This hard for me because after a long week of work, I'm sometimes not in the mood, but I have to otherwise I'll lose readers and followers.
– Dawn Kelli
2 hours ago
add a comment |
One possibility is perhaps you weren't particularly engaged while writing this. Maybe it was a scene you just slogged through because you needed it. If you aren't personally interested, it's difficult --not impossible, but difficult --to make it interesting for the reader. Here's some good advice from author Rachel Aaron:
Every day, while I was writing out my little description of what I was going to write for the knowledge component of the triangle, I would play the scene through in my mind and try to get excited about it. I'd look for all the cool little hooks, the parts that interested me most, and focus on those since they were obviously what made the scene cool. If I couldn't find anything to get excited over, then I would change the scene, or get rid of it entirely. [emphasis added]
http://thisblogisaploy.blogspot.com/2011/06/how-i-went-from-writing-2000-words-day.html
Conversely, if you are excited by a part of the story --or were, when you wrote it --but it still reads poorly, then not enough of what makes this interesting is making it onto the page. You might need to flesh out your back story, make your descriptions more vivid or more full, or put more of the character and narrator's attitudes and outlooks into the writing. I used to think problems like this were plot or dialogue issues, but they're more likely to be issues of immersion --you haven't done the work to put your reader inside your settings, and inside your characters' hearts and minds.
Finally, sometimes a section just needs to be cut entirely. To quote Aaron again,
I decided then and there that, no matter how useful a scene might be for my plot, boring scenes had no place in my novels.
Many books would be greatly improved with some ruthless editing.
One possibility is perhaps you weren't particularly engaged while writing this. Maybe it was a scene you just slogged through because you needed it. If you aren't personally interested, it's difficult --not impossible, but difficult --to make it interesting for the reader. Here's some good advice from author Rachel Aaron:
Every day, while I was writing out my little description of what I was going to write for the knowledge component of the triangle, I would play the scene through in my mind and try to get excited about it. I'd look for all the cool little hooks, the parts that interested me most, and focus on those since they were obviously what made the scene cool. If I couldn't find anything to get excited over, then I would change the scene, or get rid of it entirely. [emphasis added]
http://thisblogisaploy.blogspot.com/2011/06/how-i-went-from-writing-2000-words-day.html
Conversely, if you are excited by a part of the story --or were, when you wrote it --but it still reads poorly, then not enough of what makes this interesting is making it onto the page. You might need to flesh out your back story, make your descriptions more vivid or more full, or put more of the character and narrator's attitudes and outlooks into the writing. I used to think problems like this were plot or dialogue issues, but they're more likely to be issues of immersion --you haven't done the work to put your reader inside your settings, and inside your characters' hearts and minds.
Finally, sometimes a section just needs to be cut entirely. To quote Aaron again,
I decided then and there that, no matter how useful a scene might be for my plot, boring scenes had no place in my novels.
Many books would be greatly improved with some ruthless editing.
edited 7 hours ago
answered 7 hours ago
Chris SunamiChris Sunami
35.9k345133
35.9k345133
I think you're right- it's a scene that I slogged through. I'm doing it with most of my book, just rushing to put a chapter out.The reason being is that I'm a part of 2 book clubs and every week I have beta readers, so I constantly have to update so that my readers have new chapters to read. I'll have to go back and edit the chapters after I rushed through creating them. Also, as a Wattpad writer, it is recommended by the site that you update every week. This hard for me because after a long week of work, I'm sometimes not in the mood, but I have to otherwise I'll lose readers and followers.
– Dawn Kelli
2 hours ago
add a comment |
I think you're right- it's a scene that I slogged through. I'm doing it with most of my book, just rushing to put a chapter out.The reason being is that I'm a part of 2 book clubs and every week I have beta readers, so I constantly have to update so that my readers have new chapters to read. I'll have to go back and edit the chapters after I rushed through creating them. Also, as a Wattpad writer, it is recommended by the site that you update every week. This hard for me because after a long week of work, I'm sometimes not in the mood, but I have to otherwise I'll lose readers and followers.
– Dawn Kelli
2 hours ago
I think you're right- it's a scene that I slogged through. I'm doing it with most of my book, just rushing to put a chapter out.The reason being is that I'm a part of 2 book clubs and every week I have beta readers, so I constantly have to update so that my readers have new chapters to read. I'll have to go back and edit the chapters after I rushed through creating them. Also, as a Wattpad writer, it is recommended by the site that you update every week. This hard for me because after a long week of work, I'm sometimes not in the mood, but I have to otherwise I'll lose readers and followers.
– Dawn Kelli
2 hours ago
I think you're right- it's a scene that I slogged through. I'm doing it with most of my book, just rushing to put a chapter out.The reason being is that I'm a part of 2 book clubs and every week I have beta readers, so I constantly have to update so that my readers have new chapters to read. I'll have to go back and edit the chapters after I rushed through creating them. Also, as a Wattpad writer, it is recommended by the site that you update every week. This hard for me because after a long week of work, I'm sometimes not in the mood, but I have to otherwise I'll lose readers and followers.
– Dawn Kelli
2 hours ago
add a comment |
You can find some good tips and techniques for tackling description here and here. These questions have several good answers.
You may want to make sure you are adding plenty of conflict throughout your chapters. If your writing seems dull or boring, this might perk it up. Give your characters some resistance or challenges to overcome. It doesn't have to be earth shattering. Some fiesty dialogue or uncomfortable decision making might be enough, depending on where you are with your story.
Also remember most scenes should have their own arc, with rising and falling action, climax and resolution. (though on a much smaller scale than your main story arc or subplot arcs). While scenes don't necessarily equal chapters, they should overlap with your chapters in a way that each chapter gets a bit of the exciting stuff.
And, like @ChrisSunami mentioned, sometimes you just can't make it work and have to get rid of it. It can be devastating to undo something you've worked for hours or days on, but it only hurts for a minute. After I've dumped something I couldn't force into the story, the rest begins to flow so much better.
add a comment |
You can find some good tips and techniques for tackling description here and here. These questions have several good answers.
You may want to make sure you are adding plenty of conflict throughout your chapters. If your writing seems dull or boring, this might perk it up. Give your characters some resistance or challenges to overcome. It doesn't have to be earth shattering. Some fiesty dialogue or uncomfortable decision making might be enough, depending on where you are with your story.
Also remember most scenes should have their own arc, with rising and falling action, climax and resolution. (though on a much smaller scale than your main story arc or subplot arcs). While scenes don't necessarily equal chapters, they should overlap with your chapters in a way that each chapter gets a bit of the exciting stuff.
And, like @ChrisSunami mentioned, sometimes you just can't make it work and have to get rid of it. It can be devastating to undo something you've worked for hours or days on, but it only hurts for a minute. After I've dumped something I couldn't force into the story, the rest begins to flow so much better.
add a comment |
You can find some good tips and techniques for tackling description here and here. These questions have several good answers.
You may want to make sure you are adding plenty of conflict throughout your chapters. If your writing seems dull or boring, this might perk it up. Give your characters some resistance or challenges to overcome. It doesn't have to be earth shattering. Some fiesty dialogue or uncomfortable decision making might be enough, depending on where you are with your story.
Also remember most scenes should have their own arc, with rising and falling action, climax and resolution. (though on a much smaller scale than your main story arc or subplot arcs). While scenes don't necessarily equal chapters, they should overlap with your chapters in a way that each chapter gets a bit of the exciting stuff.
And, like @ChrisSunami mentioned, sometimes you just can't make it work and have to get rid of it. It can be devastating to undo something you've worked for hours or days on, but it only hurts for a minute. After I've dumped something I couldn't force into the story, the rest begins to flow so much better.
You can find some good tips and techniques for tackling description here and here. These questions have several good answers.
You may want to make sure you are adding plenty of conflict throughout your chapters. If your writing seems dull or boring, this might perk it up. Give your characters some resistance or challenges to overcome. It doesn't have to be earth shattering. Some fiesty dialogue or uncomfortable decision making might be enough, depending on where you are with your story.
Also remember most scenes should have their own arc, with rising and falling action, climax and resolution. (though on a much smaller scale than your main story arc or subplot arcs). While scenes don't necessarily equal chapters, they should overlap with your chapters in a way that each chapter gets a bit of the exciting stuff.
And, like @ChrisSunami mentioned, sometimes you just can't make it work and have to get rid of it. It can be devastating to undo something you've worked for hours or days on, but it only hurts for a minute. After I've dumped something I couldn't force into the story, the rest begins to flow so much better.
answered 50 mins ago
matildalee23matildalee23
7047
7047
add a comment |
add a comment |
Put conflict in every scene. A protagonist and antagonist in every scene. A goal in every scene, and something that stands in the way of the goal.
To increase tension ('life') present the protagonist and antagonist as equally opposed with opposing forces. The protagonist wants to make it to the tae castle; the antagonist wants to keep the protagonist as a slave. The protagonist wants to summit Everest, the antagonist (nature) is a formidable opponent.
A goal in every scene, an antagonist in every scene. Kill the scenes that you don't need. Review the scene-sequel model of storytelling.
add a comment |
Put conflict in every scene. A protagonist and antagonist in every scene. A goal in every scene, and something that stands in the way of the goal.
To increase tension ('life') present the protagonist and antagonist as equally opposed with opposing forces. The protagonist wants to make it to the tae castle; the antagonist wants to keep the protagonist as a slave. The protagonist wants to summit Everest, the antagonist (nature) is a formidable opponent.
A goal in every scene, an antagonist in every scene. Kill the scenes that you don't need. Review the scene-sequel model of storytelling.
add a comment |
Put conflict in every scene. A protagonist and antagonist in every scene. A goal in every scene, and something that stands in the way of the goal.
To increase tension ('life') present the protagonist and antagonist as equally opposed with opposing forces. The protagonist wants to make it to the tae castle; the antagonist wants to keep the protagonist as a slave. The protagonist wants to summit Everest, the antagonist (nature) is a formidable opponent.
A goal in every scene, an antagonist in every scene. Kill the scenes that you don't need. Review the scene-sequel model of storytelling.
Put conflict in every scene. A protagonist and antagonist in every scene. A goal in every scene, and something that stands in the way of the goal.
To increase tension ('life') present the protagonist and antagonist as equally opposed with opposing forces. The protagonist wants to make it to the tae castle; the antagonist wants to keep the protagonist as a slave. The protagonist wants to summit Everest, the antagonist (nature) is a formidable opponent.
A goal in every scene, an antagonist in every scene. Kill the scenes that you don't need. Review the scene-sequel model of storytelling.
answered 16 mins ago
DPTDPT
17.7k23396
17.7k23396
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Hi Dawn. You tagged your question with creative-writing non-fiction which are mutually exclusive. While there is some overlap with these categories regarding your question, mostly you'd get very different answers. My guess is you want to dump them both and use fiction instead. Could you please edit it to make it clear? Thanks.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
Hi @Cyn, I removed the non-fiction tag, but kept the creative-writing tag. I am a creative writer, not a fiction writer, so I think creative-writing tag is more appropriate
– Dawn Kelli
8 hours ago
Great thank you. Because creative writing that has chapters but is not fiction is rather unusual, it might be helpful if you add a line in your question with a brief explanation, as it may help people answer. But it's not required if you're okay with some answers not being relevant to you specifically.
– Cyn
8 hours ago
2
@Cyn You're totally right! OMG, I don' t know where my mind is today! I obviously lost it facepalm I am a Creative-Writer and Fiction writer. Sorry! you'll have to forgive me. I guess I better grab another cup of coffee asap!
– Dawn Kelli
7 hours ago