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- First person talking to reader? - Writing Forums
Discussion in ' Word Mechanics ' started by James E, Jan 24, 2019 Hi guys and girls, I'm new here, so hello I have an introduction I would like to be in the first person but with the narrator talking directly to the reader The feel being as though the reader is sat talking to the narrator at a bar, so all dialogue but without any description
- How does it feel to have a broken nose vs just a hurt one?
2,832 Location: Massachusetts, USA James Berkley said: ↑ well we had just had a fight ( this was when we where dateing, her slaping me in public came after we broke up) and we where haveing makeup sex in the middle of it she bites my nose and twists brakeing it naturaly i am in pain holding my nose as she yells " and thats for calling me
- Differences between supernatural and non-supernatural horror
Within the general definition of horror fiction, including weird fiction, what do people think of the differences between supernatural and
- Letters when Spoken in Dialogue | Creative Writing Forums - Writing . . .
Aled James Taylor submitted a new resource: Letters when Spoken in Dialogue - How to spell the letters of abbreviations in dialogue Instead of ABCD;
- Do you believe white authors should be able to make black characters as . . .
James Patterson, Claire O'Dell, Edna O'Brien, Harriet Beacher Stowe Writing a black character shouldn't be anything different from writing a white character with the exception of color and hair If you think of it as different (how we talk and act) then you are writing stereotype And stereotype is wrong
- who else is writing an 80s story?
@James Hellfire, you might consider asking one of the moderators to move this thread to the Settings or the General Writing forum If you want to discuss the writing aspect of the topic, that is, and not watch us play around with Lounge-y side issues
- When does Romance become Erotica? - Writing Forums
I've never read anything by E L James or watched the movies, but from what everyone else says, its not "romance" at all I have read Avon romances before with a few steamy scenes here and there My question is, when does "Steamy romance" become "erotica?" In my view, it's when the sex scenes are the focus of the book
- Im having difficulty with this sentence | Creative Writing Forums . . .
I think it depends on the style of your writing in general Actually, both "James liked danger" and "James was drawn to danger like moths to a flame" could work in the right context The first one is elegant in its simplicity Would work for a story that describes the gritty reality of our world The second one sounds a bit exaggerated, as if said slightly tongue-in-cheek Would work for a
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