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Fantasy Author & Fiction Editor

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Morning Pages: After Many Miles

January 31, 2022 by Cameron Montague Taylor Leave a Comment

Welcome to Morning Pages — it’s time for a monthly roundup. I hope you have your pencils sharpened and ready to write. Want to join in on the fun? Pick a prompt, set your timer* and get ready to let the words flow. Feel free to post the results of your work in the comments below where we chat about writing and (if the mood strikes us) get a craft discussion going.

If you want critique from other commenters, use #YESTHANKS in your comment. Otherwise, you can tell us about your flash fic and the process you went through to write it. And of course, I’m always open to hear what you think about my excerpts!

*you can write for as long as you want, but most folks choose 15-30 minutes.

What I learned this month: Oh BOY have I learned about craft this month.

Throughout January, I’ve read a craft book called Story Genius by Lisa Cron. She uses a different method for structuring story and building character than I’ve ever seen, and working through her story-building guide has helped me hone the way I think about construction and character alike.

One of my favorite concepts from story genius: The story begins long before the first page of the novel. By page one, the protagonist has a complex history and relationship with themself and others. These preexisting story elements shaped the protagonist to be who they are, and therefore set them up to confront the story’s external problem head-on: a problem they’re uniquely ill-equipped to solve.

In order to build out the ‘first half’ of the story, or the part that happens before page one, Cron provides several exercises to assist with story concept, character backstory / development, and scene structure. This month, I tackled prompts for my upcoming novella, Deathmark. They helped me learn about Cyprian, the protagonist, and Jael, his love interest–and how their backstories and transformative memories intertwine to make them 1) ideal partners who will 2) have a terrible time solving the story’s external problem.

If you haven’t yet read Story Genius, I highly recommend it! Though Cron’s process can feel somewhat prescriptive, the prompts and exercises were generative enough that I was able to look past some of the book’s issues and appreciate the new perspective it gave me on craft.

The Prompts:

“The ocean is a sentient being–a trickster–who entertains itself by messing with people. What happens when it falls in love with a sailor?”

Sister Ocean was many years old when she first saw him.

“Self-destruct.”

Not all characters handle difficult backstories well. Jael Soti from Deathmark is most certainly in that category.

“After Many Miles” by the Ghost of Paul Revere

A song prompt in the Oceana ‘verse yielded a story about the long journey to the afterlife.

“Write a traumatic or otherwise pivotal event from your character’s childhood that impacted who they became as an adult.”

“Keri Lake:” Deathmark. Cyprian Cavish has always looked out for his little brother.

Picture Prompts

“The Watcher:” Have care with what you say in front of them, lest you disappear like the others.

Get Involved!

Answer the prompts or dive straight in and respond to others’ comments — let’s share our knowledge, our experience, and have a discussion we can all learn from! Don’t want to miss a post? Subscribe to the blog in the sidebar to get notified about new posts.

Today’s questions:

  • What’s your favorite craft of writing resource?
  • Why / what did it teach you?

Looking for more writing? Become a Patron!

In addition to flash fiction, my Patreon hosts full-length novels, artwork, behind-the-scenes worldbuilding, and more. Click below to check out the tiers I offer and support the blog!

Click to visit my patreon!

Filed Under: Morning Pages Tagged With: character development, craft of writing, fiction writing prompts, flash fiction, picture prompt, story genius, writing, writing community, writing exercises, writing inspiration, writing prompts, writing the first draft

Morning Pages: Stormbringer

December 30, 2021 by Cameron Montague Taylor Leave a Comment

Welcome to Morning Pages — it’s time for a monthly roundup. I hope you’ve got your pencils sharpened and ready to write. Wanna join in on the fun? Read the prompt, set your timer* and get ready to let the words flow. Feel free to post the results of your work in the comments below where we chat about writing and (if the mood strikes us) get a craft discussion going.

If you want critique from other commenters, use #YESTHANKS in your comment. Otherwise, you can tell us about the flash fic and the process you went through to write it. And of course, I’m always open to hear what you think about my excerpts!

*you can write for as long as you want, but most folks choose 15-30 minutes.

What I learned this month: This month’s ‘what I learned’ is entirely in honor of the song prompt I answered in early December.

This isn’t the first time I’ve ever had to make something in response to a song prompt, though usually it’s less of a direct challenge and more of an organic thing — a song that catches my attention, a lyric that earworms, an idea that germinates while I’m listening. I always end up looking for the lyrics to the whole song afterward. In part, it’s to check to make sure I’m not quoting something horrific or absurd. Other times, it’s hunting for more inspiration or understanding. And sometimes, I end up striking gold and finding out that a song like Mercy Street was inspired by a poem — one with even richer lines and source material to draw from.

I don’t read or write much poetry because the medium has never felt comfortable to me. Prose is what I know. But I think I’d like to understand poetry better (and take a class, perhaps), because the precision of imagery and figurative language poets command has always awed me. It’s certainly a place where I’d like to make my story-prose stronger, because while I can write visually, it never comes naturally.

So… I challenged myself this week and tried to write a prose poem. As many things I write often are, it’s dark, and not-so-subtly about mental health struggles.

The Prompts:

“Mercy Street by Peter Gabriel.”

A prose poem based on my first ever song-prompt.

“Deathmark”

Jael Soti was born with a terrible curse.

“Ugly sweater party.”

In keeping with the holiday spirit, Arden wears ugly sweaters to all holiday-themed parties.

“When the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve, we turn and kiss the person standing next to us—whether it’s romantic, platonic, or familial. What do characters in your universe do to celebrate the New Year? (And: if you write romance or romantic subplots, how could you incorporate the kiss tradition from our world into yours?)”

“First Light:” Oceana ‘verse. Val is tired of how the gossips disparage his nephew.

Picture Prompts

A man sitting on a rock in the middle of a lake. Lighting and storms are leaving his hands and traveling up into the sky. Lighting arcs overhead, and the far horizon is red with sunrise or sunset.

“Stormbringer:” He did his summoning at daybreak.

Get Involved!

Answer the prompts or dive straight in and respond to others’ comments — let’s share our knowledge, our experience, and have a discussion we can all learn from! Don’t want to miss a post? Subscribe to the blog in the sidebar to get notified about new posts.

Today’s questions:

  • Do you tackle mental health issues in your writing?
  • Do you do so in order to process a piece of your experience, for the sake of increased representation, or both?

Looking for more writing? Become a Patron!

In addition to extra flash fiction (at least once a week), my Patreon hosts my full-length novels, artwork, behind-the-scenes worldbuilding, and more. Click below to check out the tiers I offer and support the blog!

Click to visit my patreon!

Filed Under: Morning Pages Tagged With: fiction writing prompts, flash fiction, picture prompt, writing exercises, writing inspiration, writing prompts

Morning Pages: Who He Is

September 9, 2021 by Cameron Montague Taylor Leave a Comment

Welcome to Morning Pages — it’s time for a monthly roundup. I hope you’ve got your pencils sharpened and ready to write. Wanna join in on the fun? Pick a prompt, set your timer* and get ready to let the words flow. Feel free to post the results of your work in the comments below where we chat about writing and (if the mood strikes us) get a craft discussion going.

If you want critique from other commenters, use #YESTHANKS in your comment. Otherwise, you can tell us about the flash fic and the process you went through to write it. And of course, I’m always open to hear what you think about my excerpts!

*you can write for as long as you want, but most folks choose 15-30 minutes.

What I learned this month: The gay pronoun problem defeats me even at the best of times.

For those of you who aren’t familiar with the GPP, it’s when you’re trying to choreograph a scene between two characters who share a pronoun. It hit me harder than usual this month (though to be fair, most of the characters in this month’s roundup shared a scene with their same-gender partner, so I did this to myself). The choreography in “Who He Is” proved particularly difficult to sort out, especially in the beginning when Mel attempted to carry Nev into a tent. Two sets of limbs, and all of them belong to a “he” — a predicament, indeed!

This month, I also wrote a short blog post about epithets in fiction (and defeating the GPP), so I made a particular point of watching how I navigated the GPP during edits. It turns out, my natural response is to delete as many pronouns as possible for the sake of increased clarity. Thus, instead of writing, “Nev had fisted [his/Nev’s] hands in the front of [his/Mel’s] coat, I deleted pronoun #1 and wrote “Nev had a fistful of his coat” — the subject of the second ‘his’ mostly implied by the prior sentence.

Interested in reading more about the GPP (and finding tips on how to avoid resorting to epithets like *the Potionmaster fisted hands in the Prince’s coat*? Say no more. Here’s the blog post on epithets.

The Prompts:

“Show a funerary service in a world that isn’t ours.”

“Last Farewell:” Oceana ‘verse. It’s never easy to lose a parent.

“There’s a woman working in the lighthouse on the old point. She sings to the fishermen every time it’s rainy or foggy and it’s hard to see the light. Write a story from the POV of one of these fishermen.”

Miss Eliza might be borderline tone-deaf, but that doesn’t bother the local fishermen.

“That’s not who he is.”

Mel from The Dark Arm of the Maker sees Neveshir perform dangerous magic for the first time.

“Snowed In.”

Oceana ‘verse. Men who’ve lived their whole lives in the tropics dream of snow.

“Oh, I’ve seen plenty.”

Siath from the Oceana ‘verse is a good brother, even if a nosy one.

Picture Prompts

“Connect the dots:” Oceana ‘verse. Some games are more fun when your partner has freckles.

Get Involved!

Answer the prompts or dive straight in and respond to others’ comments — let’s share our knowledge, our experience, and have a discussion we can all learn from! Don’t want to miss a post? Subscribe to the blog in the sidebar to get notified about new posts.

Today’s questions:

  • Do you have any tried and true tricks for getting around the GPP?
  • What are they?

Looking for more writing? Become a Patron!

In addition to extra flash fiction (at least once a week), my Patreon hosts my full-length novels, artwork, behind-the-scenes worldbuilding, and more. Click below to check out the tiers I offer and support the blog!

Filed Under: Morning Pages Tagged With: Dark Arm of the Maker, fiction writing prompts, flash fiction, picture prompt, writing community, writing exercises, writing inspiration, writing prompts

Morning Pages: Righting Wrongs

June 6, 2021 by Cameron Montague Taylor 1 Comment

Welcome to Morning Pages — it’s time for a monthly roundup. I hope you’ve got your pencils sharpened and ready to write. Wanna join in on the fun? Read the prompt, set your timer* and get ready to let the words flow. Feel free to post the results of your work in the comments below where we chat about writing and (if the mood strikes us) get a craft discussion going.

If you want critique from other commenters, use #YESTHANKS in your comment. Otherwise, you can tell us about the flash fic and the process you went through to write it. And of course, I’m always open to hear what you think about my excerpts!

*you can write for as long as you want, but most folks choose 15-30 minutes.

What I learned this month: I’ve been crafting stories in my head since I was a little kid. I don’t think that’s a particularly unique trait—I think the unique bit is how I wrote so many of those stories down, and finished approximately none of them. I have endless writing notebooks kicking around drawers in my apartment, and because the writing isn’t quality (look, some of them date back to middle school) I tend to overlook them as sources of inspiration.

The thing is… there’s nothing wrong with the ideas I came up with. The flaws were always in the execution—because it takes a heckin’ long time to develop any kind of writing craft, and I certainly wasn’t there when I jotted down the ideas for those stories.

But flaws in craft have nothing to do with concept flaws, and I’m starting to see that I shouldn’t stop myself from revisiting old ideas just because the dialogue is wooden or the descriptions are awkward. The fun part about rereading my writing notebooks is revisiting the stories, not how they’re told. And now, years later, I finally have the ability to retell them the way they originally deserved to be written.

I’m not sure I’ll end up throwing any of these old ideas on the backburner pile, but hey—I might. Either way, it was worth revisiting one of them in the short after which this roundup is named. Check out Righting Wrongs for a window into Teenage!Cee’s head.

The Prompts:

“Put the main character from one of your books into the circus.”

Turns out, Arden from the Oceana ‘verse is a decent aerialist.

“It will take the rest of my life to right the wrongs I’ve done.”

Revisiting Crecia: a world I built when I was a kid.

“Beware the Six-Toed Cat.”

Anya from Weaver doesn’t put much stock in advice from psychics. (Maybe she should.)

“If you find yourself in need of an answer, blow out a candle and ask the smoke. But ask quickly–it can’t stay around for long.”

An old King wonders whether he was right to wear the crown.

“The island is made of skeletons, creatures big and small polished into shining bone roads. The people who live there are peaceful. So far.”

“Albatross:” A shipwrecked sailor pays for his errors.

“You’re Spoiling Me.”

Neveshir from Dark Arm of the Maker has a hard time believing he deserves kindness.

Picture Prompts

“Monolith:” Arden and Val from the Oceana ‘Verse explore a foreign land.

Get Involved!

Answer the prompts or dive straight in and respond to others’ comments — let’s share our knowledge, our experience, and have a discussion we can all learn from! Don’t want to miss a post? Subscribe to the blog in the sidebar to get notified about new posts.

Today’s questions:

  • Have you ever rewritten a story you started as a kid? How much time passed between the original idea occurring to you and the rewrite happening?
  • Were you happy with the end result? Why/why not?

Looking for more writing? Become a Patron!

In addition to extra flash fiction (at least once a week), my Patreon hosts my full-length novels, artwork, behind-the-scenes worldbuilding, and more. Click below to check out the tiers I offer and support the blog!

Filed Under: Morning Pages Tagged With: fiction writing prompts, flash fiction, picture prompt, rewrites, writing community, writing exercises, writing inspiration, writing prompts

Morning Pages: Not My Problem

May 2, 2021 by Cameron Montague Taylor 4 Comments

Welcome to Morning Pages — it’s time for a monthly roundup. I hope you’ve got your pencils sharpened and ready to write. Wanna join in on the fun? Read the prompt, set your timer* and get ready to let the words flow. Feel free to post the results of your work in the comments below where we chat about writing and (if the mood strikes us) get a craft discussion going.

If you want critique from other commenters, use #YESTHANKS in your comment. Otherwise, you can tell us about the flash fic and the process you went through to write it. And of course, I’m always open to hear what you think about my excerpts!

*you can write for as long as you want, but most folks choose 15-30 minutes.

What I learned this month: Wow, getting into a brand new character’s head is difficult.

I’ve started a new novel called Tombs of Glass, which at the moment I suspect will turn into a duology. It has three (possibly four) POV characters and the protagonist, Indra, is the most taciturn of the lot. Even after multiple free writes, her voice remains difficult to pin down. Difficult and changeable! She’s sounded completely different every time I’ve gone to write her.

Complicating matters, she starts off the book having recently experienced a significant tragedy. Her recalcitrance has made it difficult for me to convey not only what she’s going through, but the stakes for failure to the reader. It wasn’t all that long ago that I was complaining about the wordiness of anxious characters, and I take it back! I no longer want this change of pace!

I say that, but I don’t mean it. Writing Indra will expand my narrative skills, and I’m absolutely looking forward to seeing how her voice develops over the coming weeks. The closest I’ve come so far is in “Not My Problem,” the piece this post is named after. It’s linked below and unlocked on my Patreon — check it out!

The Prompts:

“Switchblade + Candle.”

“Not My Problem“: Indra takes care of her flock and doesn’t give a damn about the rest of them.

“Why is there a magic portal in the bathtub?”

It’s bad enough he’s hung over — now he needs to wrangle the space-time continuum?

“Why do the townsfolk fear you?”
“Because I can do what they can’t.”
“Such as?”
“Mind my own business, for one.”

Ackernar isn’t popular with the townsfolk.

“Five ways Character X didn’t find out that Characters Y and Z were together… and one way they did.”

Verne from the Oceana ‘verse is utterly oblivious.

“For the first time ever, he had the admiration of the one he most admired.”

“Admiration“: James doesn’t know what to do beneath the full focus of Maestro’s attention.

“I Remember You”

Indra from Tombs of Glass has a bone to pick.

“Watch”

In the most literal sense, sailors spend a lot of time watching their vessels.

“First Meetings”

Long-gone worldbuilding backstory from the Oceana ‘verse. Two legendary characters meet.

Picture Prompts

“Same Spirit Every Night“: Anya and El from Weaver meet a friendly ghost.

Get Involved!

Answer the prompts or dive straight in and respond to others’ comments — let’s share our knowledge, our experience, and have a discussion we can all learn from! Don’t want to miss a post? Subscribe to the blog in the sidebar to get notified about new posts.

Today’s questions:

  • How do you find your characters’ voices?
  • Are there any writing exercises in particular you like to do when you’re preparing to start writing?

Looking for more writing? Become a Patron!

In addition to extra flash fiction (at least once a week), my Patreon hosts my full-length novels, artwork, behind-the-scenes worldbuilding, and more. Click below to check out the tiers I offer and support the blog!

Click the image or visit http://www.patreon.com/ceemtaylor to become a patron!

Filed Under: Morning Pages Tagged With: character development, character voice, characterization, fiction writing prompts, flash fiction, picture prompt, writing, writing community, writing exercises, writing inspiration, writing prompts, writing the first draft

Morning Pages: Tattoo

April 6, 2021 by Cameron Montague Taylor 5 Comments

Welcome to Morning Pages — it’s time for a monthly roundup. I hope you’ve got your pencils sharpened and ready to write. Wanna join in on the fun? Read the prompt, set your timer* and get ready to let the words flow. Feel free to post the results of your work in the comments below where we chat about writing and (if the mood strikes us) get a craft discussion going.

If you want critique from other commenters, use #YESTHANKS in your comment. Otherwise, you can tell us about the flash fic and the process you went through to write it. And of course, I’m always open to hear what you think about my excerpts!

*you can write for as long as you want, but most folks choose 15-30 minutes.

What I learned this month: My subconscious mind is plotting against me.

After my first three months of Morning Pages, I assumed future work would shake out to have a similar ratio; about half of my pages were in known universes (prior or future works of mine), while the other half were completely new. This month not only disrupted that ratio *hard* (all but two fics were in known universes), it went after much rarer characters — all of them from stories I have yet to write.

I know I’m ready to write a story when I start daydreaming about it. Eventually, I get to a point where my mind can’t hold onto all the little scenes I’ve played out like movies in my head, and I start to write — jotted notes, at first, just so I don’t forget what I’ve been picturing. Those notes become the scaffold for what eventually becomes a novel (or an epic, in Oceana’s case). Imagine my surprise — and horror! — when not one, but three different universes clamored for attention throughout the month. All the power in the world to the multi-drafters among you, but I’m absolutely not one of them, so although I’ll never look the inspiration gift horse in the mouth, friends, I am nervous.

Why are all of them talking to me right now?

What do they want?

And at what point will they be ready for me to start writing?

(Fiction writers, I know you feel me on this one.)

The Prompts:

“Tattoo”

A priest has the legacy of conquest and oppression inked into his skin.

“There was a rumor that the driftwood on Blacksand Beach was once a man.”

“Driftwood“: Sometimes shapeshifters get desperate.

“For thirty pieces of silver, he sold out his handler.”

Neveshir from Dark Arm of the Maker didn’t have it easy in his military days. He fought back.

“Talisman + Symphony + Gold”

Val from the Oceana Series hates the symphony, but there’s one person who can persuade him to go.

“If they only knew…”

Max Battista isn’t so easy to intimidate.

Picture Prompts

↑ The last army to march through the gate had disappeared.

← That night, the string sextet played at the waterfront.

Get Involved!

Answer the prompts or dive straight in and respond to others’ comments — let’s share our knowledge, our experience, and have a discussion we can all learn from! Don’t want to miss a post? Subscribe to the blog in the sidebar to get notified about new posts.

Today’s questions:

  • How long do you spend ‘marinating’ on story ideas before you write about them?
  • Do you need your characters to live with you for a while before you can get them onto the page?

Filed Under: Morning Pages Tagged With: craft of writing, fiction writing prompts, flash fiction, picture prompt, writing, writing community, writing exercises, writing inspiration, writing prompts, writing the first draft

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