THE WRITER'S WORKBOOK - Free

THE WRITER'S WORKBOOK - free

Hello hello, it's me!

Today I'm here to tell you about each feature of "The Writer's Workbook", which you can download for free.

THE WRITER'S WORKBOOK - Free

Note: this workbook has two variations, so you can print it or use it digitally as a PDF.

I designed this workbook in an intuitive way so that the plot progresses as you go further in the exercises. It is divided in six big categories: Idea & Plot, Character Development, World Building, Writing, Journal, and Resources.

Note: feel free to skip exercises or to complete them in any other order than the one suggested by me!

IDEA & PLOT

This section is meant to help you develop your idea before you even know who your characters are.

In this part, you will choose the central conflict, write down keywords about your idea, and draw a mind map. Then, you'll proceed to find your voice through different exercises, to then find each key point of the plot, from exposition to resolution.

It's also in this part that you are going to come up with plot twists and the ending of the book.

CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT

Here, as the name says, you will completely develop all your characters, from the protagonist to the side characters. You will also have the opportunity to develop their relationships through mind maps and brainstorming processes.

WORLDBUILDING

Just like the other categories, worldbuilding is a fundamental step when plotting a novel.

In this workbook, you'll be asked to draw or generate a map of your world so that you always have it near you whenever you need it. There are also some prompts to fill out about it, and locations to create and explore.

In this part, you can also make a timeline for all the main events in your world.

WRITING

Now that most of your story is planned, it's time to think about writing it!

This section is perfect to come up with the best title for your book, brainstorming and develop the opening scene, and fully developing each key point using the snowflake method.

There's also a place to write down all the scenes and chapters you want to include in your book and check it off as you write it.

JOURNAL

This part is for you to reflect on your writing goals, on your ideas, and to see your progress. It's important to check this often and make sure you always have your goals in mind!

RESOURCES

Here you will find some useful resources from writing communities to courses and softwares to help you in this process and, hopefully, make it easier!

THE WRITER'S WORKBOOK

If you don't have it already grab it now here! It's completely free and I'm sure it will help you develop your new idea <3

More Posts from Blogmarkostuff and Others

11 years ago

A song to remember the great Oscar Chávez 

1 year ago

Capitulo 5: La llave

Entre la selva inhóspita de Karkamistán figuran selvas y mas selvas, con animales magnificentes porque la naturaleza ha sido prodigiosa en esos lares. La flora y la fauna cuenta como una fotografía de los antigüos amazonas, y los árboles grandísimos tapan en ocasiones la sombra para otras especies de vegetación que requieren la filtración del sol, aunque una de cal por otra de arena, pues otros animales usan estos espaciosos para su recreación, permiténdoles descansar tras los inclementes tiempos y calurosos días de la selva. 

Un león se refresca en las aguas, en las pequeñas laderas que abre el río con su atropellado caudal, mientras el rinoceronte se mete en el afluente para refrescarse de las inclemencias del tiempo, y las garzas esperan pacientemente a los peces en las laderas del rio.

Un rio acompaña la vegetación frondosa y es tan vasto como el Nilo y alimenta miles y miles de kilómetros entre la selva donde pueden encontrarse bagres, peces cocodrilos peces tiburones y belugas. El río tiene cascadas inmensas como las del Niagara Falls, y millones y millones de litros de agua caen de sus pluviales para alimentar a una población conocida como la ciudad de Dunkaham. 

La ciudad tiene la reputación de ser un centro que atrae millones de visitantes de toda las naciones, y los cielos son llenos no tan sólo de aves y pájaros, sino de sus hovers en el cielo, autos chicos semejantes a aviones, asi como naves espaciales que utilizan el entorno de la selva par flotar y estacionar sus vehículos a un lado, arriba de su fauna. Después, al impulso de una señal, los taxis áereos recogen los pasajeros, que vienen de tierras extrañas más allá de Marte y Júpiter y la Luna. Descendientes de papas y mamas terrenales, alejados por las decenas de años en el espacio, y que ahora visitan la Tierra natal y están ahi congregados, con vestidos especiales porque la usanza y la adaptación al ambiente era sólo válido para otras galaxias y entornos. Los extranjeros, inmigrantes, portaban trajes especiales y por sus trajes se reconocían si provenían de Marte, Jupiter o Neptuno o la Luna. porque a mayor lejanía de la Tierra,  mayor grado de toxicidad en las galaxias, y por lo tanto, los elementos de protección y trajes en el cuerpo eran más complejos, porque en la Tierra no se sabía cómo actuarían esos elementos en las razas hibrídas de papa y mama terrestre, por los que se pedía una estadía de 15 días. 

  Los edificios parecen flotar entre la selva, y los rascacielos típicos tocan las nubes, mientras desde los rascacielos se observan la cantidad innumerable de caminos futuristicos que penden en el cielo sin torres de sostenimiento, sino con torres de flotadores, hovers board especiales que trabajan dia y noche para sostener los caminos como motores que marchan y no paran todos los días del año.. 

La ciudad se sostenia sobre esas plataformas gigantes de hover boards en sus caminos, en sus edificios, en sus poblaciones, y tras innumerable experimentos en otras galaxias y planetas para hacer habitable el ambiente, transportaron esa tecnología a la Tierra y descubrieron el arte de hacer flotar inmensas cantidades de moles de hierro y cemento, donde ya los terremotos no causaban los daños que solían hacer antes de su descubrimiento.

Y ahí, en esa ciudad, perdido entre la selva inhóspita, unos principes y delegados, y nobles se reúnen en el Palacio de Karkamistán para hablar con Rey Lorton sobre un acontecimiento inesperado en unos de sus reinos.

Platican los jefes de Estado con los nobles, los duques con los príncipes, los obispos con los Reyes acerca de las implicaciones y comentarios de la Reyna Helena, que ponía en desbalance el reino natural de la descendencia de los príncipes y reyes, porque la Reyna en un apartado y remoto lugar de Karkamistán se niega a entregar la llave, y esa llave traía una definición.

La Reyna Helena prefería sembrar dudas respecto a linajes y posibilidades para esconder las verdaderas razones de sus actuaciones, y lanzar señuelos en la corte por lo que ahora los dirigentes y los nobles del reino exigían al Rey que la Reina en esos lugares dispensara la llave.

La llave abria una puerta o la cerraba, la puerta de la realidad o la puerta de la magia, no insertar la llave en el engranaje de la puerta, dejaba en el suspenso el mundo donde se mueven los caracteres.

En el mundo de la magia estaban cubiertos, en el mundo de las realidades no tanto. En el mundo de la magia había carruseles, y príncipes y castillos y nobles y reyes; en el mundo de las realidades había trabajo y mas trabajo, realidades de comportamientos humanos entre dos, separaciones, llantos, dolores, amores, compromisos.

La llave se introducía en el pivote de la puerta, y se daban dos o tres vueltas en la hendidura para que las dentaduras del cerrojo fueran sensibles a abrir los demás componentes de la puerta, y pudieran, todos los elementos de la perilla, girar en armonía entre izquierdas y derechas, izquierdas y derechas, izquierdas y derechas hasta hacer el click que abre la puerta, y después tocar la palanca para empujar la entrada.

Y la Reina tenia miedo de dar esa llave, porque sabia que la introducción de la llave en el pivote de la puerta, no solo causaría que se movieran todos los mecanismos antigüos del cerrojo, que nadie había usado por largo tiempo, sino también las posibilidades que abría, porque lubricarían los engranajes de la puerta y cantidad innumerable de aventuras podrían pasar abriendo esa puerta, porque era dejar libre y en libertad al que tuviera la llave, con la posibilidad de quedarse en un mundo o en otro, y eso le asustaba, especialmente si había descendencia.

Dar la llave era algo más que abrir una puerta. 

Si doy la llave, decía la Reyna, vulneraré mi mundo y trastocará las fibras de mi pensamiento y recorreré por caminos inhóspitos donde no sé que pueda pasar. Si no doy la llave, al menos, controlo mi mundo sin las locuras en que me lleve dar la llave.

Oh Reina, Reina, cuánta sapiencia existe en la entrega de las llaves por el  juego inhóspito, incompresible, mágico, incontrolable, irreverente, pasional.

Los búhos cantan cucu-cucu, cucu-cucu en la noche, pero esta vez no era por un aviso de peligro, sino un aviso de destino, y la Reina tendría qué buscar hacia donde quería que la puerta se abriera o cerrara, entre la magia o la realidad, porque entregando las llaves lubricaba el mecanismo antigüo del pasado que no quería abrir.

Ahí en el pueblo, en esa congregación todos sabían que la Reyna Helena tendría que soltar las llaves al Rey para que el Rey pudiera ejercer un pleno dominio de su Reino entre las realidades y la magias que estaban en su mundo.

En el pueblo, todo mundo lo sabia, porque la voz del búho cantaba cucu-cucu por las noches y no callaría hasta que anunciara un amor o una despedida, porque los tiempos, así como las estaciones habían cambiado ya.

Al cerrojo había que darle izquierdas y derechas, izquierdas y derechas, izquierdas y derechas para abrirlo, y la llave ella la tenia.

La llave de su liberación, o la llave de su perdición, izquierdas o derechas, la llave de su felicidad o la llave de su angustia, izquierdas o derechas, entre las realidades o las magias.

Las llaves entregan reinos y establecen paz entre los que habitan

Daria la Reyna la llave, perdiendo el control de su mundo, y poniéndolo a disposición de otro para su uso, goce y disfrute y provecho y beneficio de las partes? O permanecería, como ahora, sólo aprovechando a conveniencia lo que viniera para ella. 

La Reyna desearía ser ahora Madame Bovary en una corte de nobles por una incredulidad en el amor y su encomienda? O sería la que entrelazara los brazos de duques con dineros, para ella auspiciar sentidos de afirmación y pertenencia en ellos, cuando otros jóvenes estuvieran contemplando la belleza que trae el barón avejentado en sus brazos, y en el Castillo, cambiando los pańales de sus amores en residencias lujosas?

Entregaría la Reyna las llaves de su paz, y su alegría, y sometería su voluntad al Rey?

Queen, Queen, when are you going to diminish your beauty and your ego,  so you can build a house of your own in a everlasting peace?

Pero la Reyna tenía también un secreto que se deslizaba en las noches por su cama, su amiga, su fiel amiga. Amazona de la Selva, con figura excepcional, piernas torneadas de fibras que le acompañaba en sus noches de soledad.

Pero en el pueblo no todos mundo conocía su secreto, al contrario, sonreían porque los búhos en las noches anunciaban cucu-cucu como conociendo las escenas del futuro suceso , y la Reina tendría qué mostrar sus colores verdaderos (true colors) y salir del closet de su definición, y el Rey salir de dudas porque ahora sus pensamientos estaban en aquella imagen “no me ande besando” suscitando suspicacias en el recuerdo. 

Entregaría la Reyna la llave o celebraría el Proud Week, con toda su gama de colores?

FIN DEL CAPÍTULO 5

1 year ago

Fic Titles: Alphabet P-R

Take one and start to create!

P

Pain of my life

Panic at the Laundromat

Paper cuts

Paper hearts (easy to tear)

Past mistakes

Peer-pressured

People we met in supermarkets

People will talk (no matter what)

Perfect moment to forget

Perfect little angel

Perhaps someday

Pest control

Pillow talk

Pinky promises

Playing favourites

Pocket full of sorrow

Pour me a drink (or two or more)

Power of kisses

Praying to her body

Pressed flowers and love letters

Pretty little lies

Pride and Problems

Primal Instinct

Promises made, promises kept

Pushing boundaries

♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡

Q

Qualifications to kick ass

Qualified answers to unqualified questions

Quality content

Quantity over quality

Questionable taste

Questioning the status quo

Quarantine with the enemy

Quarrels over nothing

Quintessentially the two of us

Quiet nights together

Quite a spectacle

Quite the catch

Quick decisions

Quoting the classics

Queen of messing up

Queendom comes

Quests and how to avoid them

Quickening the appetite

Quivering (keep me warm)

Quivering with emotions

Questionnaire for a partner

Quitting unhealthy habits

♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡

R

Rain clouds over your head

Rain on our parade

Rainy days at the sea

Raw power

Ready for whatever

Real people, real problems

Reality check

Reality comes back for you

Rebellion in her blood

Religious experience

Reputation to uphold

Rescue’s on the way

Reunions (and how to avoid them)

Reunited with my love

Rights and wrongs

Rising to the top (where we belong)

Romance is not dead (yet)

Rose-tinted glasses

Rosy dreams

Royal pain in the ass

Ruby eyes

Ruin me (please)

Ruins of us

Rules of friends-with-benefits

Ruling over her kingdom

Find more titles: A-C|D-F|G-I|J-L|M-O|S-T|U-V|W-X|Y-Z + Numbers

>>All the Fic Titles.

If you like my blog and want to support me, you can buy me a coffee! And check out my Instagram!🥰

6 years ago

“Jot, Bin, Pants”: An Outline Method to Get Your Writing Back on Track

“Jot, Bin, Pants”: An Outline Method To Get Your Writing Back On Track

One of the biggest struggles of being a writer is often feeling like you’re not good enough, no matter how much you’re writing. Today, writer Cassandra Lee Yieng shares an outlining method that’s helped her move past feelings of doubt and create the stories that she wants to write:

Much has been said about conquering the blank page, be it called writer’s block or imposter syndrome. We’re often inundated with brusque advice like “write an outline”, “fake it till you make it”, and “just write” (Reminds me of that Pirates of the Caribbean scene). It’s easy to presume that the people offering that advice have a tough exterior, and nobody likes being intimidated. To counter that, I’d like to shed light on my writing journey, and how I helped get myself out of a writing funk.

My university major was math, but one of my most devastating writing experiences was a Huffington Post piece on the math of snooker. A simple error—an oversight of a miscalculation—stopped my other submitted posts from being published. I could no longer reach the broad readership I once enjoyed, and I stopped blogging for at least a year.

Keep reading

1 year ago

Suspense and Foreshadowing—Two Great Tools for Writers

I’ve found that foreshadowing and suspense often get confused. Sometimes writers even forget about them. It’s time for a quick reminder about why these are such great tools for writers and how you can use them in your next story.

What is Suspense?

Anyone can put together points in a story’s plot map. You’ve got your inciting incident, a few things that happen to move the story along, then the climax and resolution.

Suspense is what keeps the reader’s eyes glued to the page in between each of those stages.

It works in every genre and helps every story. It may even be what your work is missing if you’re stuck in your WIP because you’ve lost interest.

Example: Carver is a restaurant server and sees his crush, Aiden, get seated at Table 2 with his friends. He’s had this crush for forever and decides it’s now or never. He has to ask Aiden out before he leaves after dinner.

Where’s the suspense?: There’s an emotional suspense in the relatability of feeling nervous about asking someone out after crushing on them for a while. There’s also time-related suspense because sooner than later, Aiden will pay the check and leave. The clock is running out from the moment Carver makes his decision.

Where could you add suspense?: Carver might need to take on more tables because his coworker leaves for a family emergency. He’s rushing around twice as busy for the rest of the night. Then other guests need extra things, like another set of silverware or a ketchup refill. The night passes quickly, so Carver almost misses Aiden walking out to his car.

What is Foreshadowing?

Foreshadowing helps build your suspense. It’s one of the key ingredients that you can work into your first draft while you’re writing or while you’re in the editing process.

You don’t need foreshadowing in every story to create suspense or keep your reader interested. However, it can be a great way to support it.

Example: After Carver decides to stop by Aiden’s table before he leaves, he’s so busy serving other tables that the group in his window booth get up and leave. They’re irritated that their food is late, so they talk with the manager before leaving for another restaurant.

Why is this foreshadowing?: It demonstrates how the events building the suspense—the other server leaving suddenly and forcing Carver to serve twice as many tables—make it more likely that Carver will miss Aiden. It also mirror’s Carver’s Worst Case Scenario: that he’s now too busy to fulfill his goal before Aiden leaves, because he was too busy with his other tables to get food to his guests before they left too.

Other Forms of Suspense

Suspense can happen in a few ways besides general plot points. You can also heighten the tension with things like:

Making your characters feel the suspense for the reader (they get anxious, start acting out of fear, feel their stomach knot up, verbally snap at another character).

Changing the scenery (the lights go dark because the power goes out, other characters step between the protagonist and their goal, the protagonist must leave due to an unforeseen reason).

Using specific descriptive word choices (maybe the vibe in a room becomes tense, someone feels agitated, a foul odor burns at the protagonist’s nose and makes them uncomfortable)

Varying your sentence structure (choppy sentences create suspense, while long sentences sound more monotonous).

Introducing conflict for the protagonist (make things go wrong so they have to sweat through a few challenges to reach their goals).

Other Forms of Foreshadowing

You may have heard of a few of these before, but they could still be something your story needs to deepen your plot or become more gripping. Think about adding foreshadowing tools like:

Flashbacks: maybe your protagonist has tried and failed/succeeded at a similar goal before

Chekov’s gun: introduce something that your character will use in the future (could be a literal gun, an object that they’ll use later to accomplish their goal, a person they’ll come back to for the friendship they seek, a trauma they’re pushing away and eventually have to face)

A prophecy: could be a literal prophecy from an oracle, but could also be something lighthearted in a fortune cookie, a Magic 8 ball, something a character mentions in passing to the protagonist, etc.

Symbolism: your character might set out for their first day on a job and drive there in a terrible thunderstorm, show up to the wrong location, immediately break the copy machine, etc. Something negative in the environment or a character making a bad choice/mistake can be symbolic for their overall goal or phase of life.

A red herring: your character believes somebody or something to be their antagonist/the reason for their conflicts, but it turns out to be something or somebody else

When to Use Foreshadowing or Suspense

It would be great if every writer knew exactly how to use one or both of these tools while they were working through their first draft. That might be possible if you’ve spent a long time figuring out the exact plot before sitting down to write, but that isn’t always the case.

You could add new elements of suspense or moments of foreshadowing while you’re in the process of writing. Just make sure you note what your wrote and why so you can carry that thread through to its completion or revelation later on.

You can also add these moments while editing. If your first draft feels like it’s missing something, adding in a new conflict and revising to work it into the rest of the draft could greatly improve your story. It’s also possible to drop a foreshadowing device in one chapter and jump ahead to another to make it reappear/complete the foreshadowing.

11 years ago

El Corazón Terco

Marco A. Romero

Y yo le he dicho al corazón que es un tonto,

que no entiende de razones; 

que no puede querer a quien ingratamente lastima.

Y le doy las razones 

pero es un corazón torpe 

y no entiende; 

sólo entiende que quiere mucho

y deja de lado todo raciocinio... 

Y  lo he acusado de ser tonto,

de no pensarlo bien, 

que debe producir cosas

que razonan

que sus razonamientos

no tienen lógica  

que es infantil, 

que no ha madurado, 

que va a ser lacerado otra vez, 

que asi se ha estancado durante muchos años,  

que asi no llegaría a ningun lado, 

que sus caminos eran torcidos, 

que estaban condenados al fracaso.

Le dije que se callara y que escuchara,

que fuera mas realista:

que la hipotenusa al cuadrado era igual a la suma al cuadrado de los catetos "a" y" b";

que dos mas dos son cuatro

que cuatro por dos son ocho

y ocho dieciséis y

Que brincara la tablita 

(como manera de ajustarse a una realidad objetiva)...

Y después de haber presentado -previamente- la base científica le dije: 

que estaba incapacitado para razonar 

que no conocía la naturaleza de sus acciones,

que me caía MAL cuando no pensaba, 

que sus padres habian vivido la misma situación 

(ya dándole un poco de terapia transaccional,

  y empezándose a acalorar por actitud tan testaruda)

Y el reclamo subió aun mas a tono rojo (o sea enfurecido)

 y le dije que necesitaba terapia, 

terapia de 20 años, y en prision carcelaria

 (para que meditara todo el tiempo)

 y además, sin derecho a libertad condicional 

(para asegurar que repensara doblemente las cosas )

FRENTE A ESTA MI EXASPERACION 

POR ESTA INCOMPRENSION MIA...

Y al quejarme tanto,

al desgañitar mi voz, 

de tanta queja,

me deja escuchar 

como algo allá          p        e       r        d       i       d        o, 

como algo allá       l                    e                           j                              a                                n                  o, 

con esa voz nítida 

y con la sencillez

y discreción 

que el corazón 

tiene:

 "Es que

no

fui hecho,

para 

producir 

frutos, 

ajenos  

al mio".

Con-razón, dije 

 y cerre el pico, 

y ya no dije más.

2 years ago

What Is an Inciting Incident? Learn How to Write a Great One

Inciting incidents hook readers. They take stories in an entirely new direction or get the plot moving faster.

It’s the moment when Lucy discovers Narnia in the wardrobe or Gandalf introduces the thirteen dwarves to Bilbo.

Every great story has a fascinating inciting incident. Here are a few tips to come up with your own.

What Is an Inciting Incident?

An inciting incident is an event that causes chaos or change in the protagonist’s life. It kickstarts the story’s plot by compelling the protagonist forward. This can happen in the first chapter of a novel or the first few pages of a short story.

There are also three types of inciting incidents:

Coincidental: an event that’s unexpected or accidental. (Someone finds gold in their backyard or crashes their car into another vehicle and finds out their best friend was the other driver.)

Causal: an action or event the protagonist chooses to do. (Your protagonist files for divorce or gives in to their lifelong urge to start a restaurant.)

Off-page: an event that happens before the story starts or outside of the protagonist’s experience. (A country drops a bomb on the protagonist’s hometown while they’re at work one day or the protagonist’s best friend goes missing ten years before your story starts.)

Tips for Writing Inciting Plot Points

Now that you know the two types of inciting incidents, use these tips to create plot-activating moments that make your audience buckle in for a long night of reading.

1. Make the Protagonist’s World Flip

A great inciting incident causes a significant imbalance in your protagonist’s life. They should start making decisions or changes they wouldn’t have before as they respond to the incident. 

Consider the almost-car-crash in Twilight. Sure, you could argue that moving to Forks is the inciting incident for Bella. It’s definitely the first incident that gets the plot going, but the story only shifts into vampire mode when Edward saves her from getting hit in the school’s parking lot. She notices his insane strength and speed, so she starts questioning who he is.

The inhuman features that intrigue Bella also hook the reader. You keep reading to find out how she discovers he’s a vampire and when/how the big reveal happens.

Her discovery that vampires exist also changes how she interacts with and understands her world. It radically alters her life path, well before she gets to know his family or the other supernatural beings in Forks.

2. Keep the Magnitude a Mystery

Sometimes major life moments happen and we don’t realize how significant they are. You could bump into a person at the grocery store, only to recognize them at a farmer’s market a week later and start a conversation. That person might be your future romantic partner who changes your life, but you don’t realize that while you’re standing between shelves of pasta and spaghetti sauce.

Don’t be afraid of leaving your inciting incident a mystery to your protagonist. Moments of excitement or terror can be great for starting your plot, but sometimes a hint of mystery intrigues readers too.

3. Align the Incident With Your Theme

You might know what your character is going to experience on their journey to the plot resolution but have no idea what your inciting incident should be.

If you can’t think of something, consider your theme. What event or circumstance would start your protagonist on a learning journey that exemplifies your theme?

Let’s imagine a scenario where you’re writing a coming-of-age story. Ultimately, you want your protagonist to recognize they have no control over their lives and find security in the community they build around themselves.

To make that initial loss of control happen, you could pick an inciting incident like someone breaking into their home. During the robbery, the criminal accidentally sets the house on fire. Your protagonist’s family loses everything and has to start over.

This event would align with your protagonist’s inner conflict. Focusing on inner conflict can be another perspective if you’re unsure what your theme is.

Let’s say your protagonist wants to go to college to provide for their family, but they get kicked off of their soccer team for cheating on a test. A soccer scholarship is the only way they could to college, but that chance disappears forever. They have to make a series of choices after that to find a new way to pay for college, which is the rest of your plot.

-----

Inciting incidents are important, so try thinking about yours apart from your stories. When they carry thematic weight or flip your protagonist’s world upside down, you’ll know you’ve created an incident that will hook your readers.

11 years ago

Con motivo de la Navidad, deje permear buenos sentimientos para compartir con los demás y disfrútelos... Es un buen tiempo para sembrar cosas buenas.

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blogmarkostuff - My Blog
My Blog

Here you will find some of the things that I really like. I like writing, music, poems, and producing any idea that comes to my mind. I hope you like it!

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