Wrighting my books?
Avreytime i wright my books i do a good job other then one big problem i dont relise till the end.
I repeat my words in the book because i can never exsplane my persons feelings i want them to have and trying to exsplane them ends up becomeing a problem for a little i just forgot about it.
But its so bad that it ends up not being good because theres so much of the repeating things.
I wont repeat the same word no but ill try exsplaneing an emostion i know my emostions just some of them are hard for me to exsplane. And ill end up exsplaneing them in many diffrent ways and not relise till i re read it then its like crap now it dosent look good and will take forever to fix.
how can i become a wrighter with this problem?!
(When i was little they new i had a hard time exsplaneing things but not some emostions)
I do get my emostions very well just some of them i dont understand very well and cant exsplane) and with know one knwoing back then i never got help. and now its messing with what i want to do when i get older become a good wrighter.
Kraichgauer
Veteran

Joined: 12 Apr 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 49,236
Location: Spokane area, Washington state.
Simple answer: rewrite!
Few of us mere mortals can write a masterpiece in a single draft. D.H. Lawrence allegedly could get away with a single draft; but as one of his rivals (another writer) when told this about Lawrence, answered dryly with: "You can tell."
But seriously; the first draft is rarely the finished product. Think of writing as working with clay - you continually mold your work of art till you have what you want.
My biggest problem is, I would continuously try reworking what I had written before I had finished the whole draft - and thus I'd get bogged down, and get frustrated or lose interest. My goal is to start rewriting only after a draft is complete.
But essentially, finish a draft, then work on a rewrite, in which you can develop your characters' emotions. Write as many drafts you think are necessary, till you believe you're saying what you want to say.
Finding a writers group might be helpful. That way, you have other writers giving you hopefully constructive criticism.
Hope this helped.
-Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer
Kraichgauer
Veteran

Joined: 12 Apr 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 49,236
Location: Spokane area, Washington state.
How do your characters act when they are angry, sad, happy, etc? I'm sure you've been told before, show, don't tell, in regard to writing. Describing a character's angry tears, or toothy grin is going to evoke an image in your reader's mind, much more than just telling how the character felt.
I hope I've been helpful.
-Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer
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