Case study

How To Swear Really &£$%^$ Well - A character curses and is given 10 points by a judge.
Writing
Robert Wood

How To Swear Really &£$%^$ Well

Like it or not, swearing, cursing, saying bad words, uttering profanities, being foul-mouthed, growling obscenities, cussing, effing and blinding, venturing imprecation, and even turning the air blue are facts of life. For many people, bad language is an everyday occurrence, while for others it’s a major taboo, but it’s certainly a feature of a realistic,

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Why Writers Like You Need To Know Their Key Event From Their First Plot Point - Alice tumbles down the rabbit hole, surrounded by clocks.
Writing
Robert Wood

Why Writers Like You Need To Know Their Key Event From Their First Plot Point

Inciting incident, key event, plot point… they’re useful terms for those who are comfortable with them, but more often than not, they’re treated as if they’re interchangeable. Sadly, these are terms that authors have treated pretty poorly over the years. They’ve swapped places, been used as synonyms, and eventually ended up as a homogeneous mass that

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“Start With The Action!” – What It Means And When You Should Do It - A cop and robber burst out of a book, mid-chase.
Writing
Hannah Collins

“Start With The Action!” – What It Means And When You Should Do It

If you’ve ever read an authors’ ‘How To’ book, attended a creative writing class or pretty much sought writing advice of any kind ever, you’re bound to have run into this phrase: ‘always start with the action’. It’s probably as ubiquitous as ‘show don’t tell’ and ‘do not, under any circumstances, use Comic Sans. EVER’.

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