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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Becky Levine, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. PiBoIdMo Day 6: Cut It Into Teeny-Tiny Pieces Like Becky Levine (plus a giveaway!)

by Becky Levine

Here you are, participating in PiBoIdMo. All you have to do this month is come up with ideas. Okay, you have to come up with 30 ideas. But still—short, sweet; bing-bang; and you’re there.

There’s a second goal, though, behind these 30 days. And that goal is that, once the month is over, we will all take at least one of these ideas and turn it into a story. Which means, first, writing that story. And then…yes, eventually, revising it.

We could debate for hours whether it’s harder to write a novel or a picture book. We could debate for more hours which is easier to revise. Especially when you’ve got critique feedback about that project staring you in the face.

Sure, when your critique partner tells you to work on dialogue in your novel, you know you’re facing a lot of dialogue over a lot of pages. That’s work. On the other hand, when your critique partner tells you to fix the dialogue in your picture book, you’re staring at ten, maybe twelve words, with which to get it right.

Let’s face it. Revision, any revision, is hard.

But…the thing I love about revising a picture book is actually the thing that seems the toughest—the tiny number of words you have to write with.

When I critique a novel and pass that feedback onto the writer, I tend to talk about the big things that aren’t working yet. I’ll tell them that I think their hero needs a more specific goal in each scene, or I’ll talk about weaving any necessary background information into the action. And then I’ll make this suggestion: Take one chapter and play. Figure out your hero’s goal in one scene, set up some obstacles, and then revise that chapter until you have the pacing and tension just right. What have you done? Well, you’ve successfully revised a scene, yes. But you’ve also taught yourself a lot more about scene structure, and now you can go on to all the other scenes in the story and make them tight and tense and active.

When I first started getting critique feedback on my picture book, I felt overwhelmed in a kind of backward way. I was used to thinking on the bigger scale of a novel, feeling that I had plenty of time and space to understand that feedback and revise around it. With the picture book, all that time and space was suddenly compressed. I felt like a Mime-in-a-Box; every time I made a turn or tried to stretch, I ran into an invisible, but very solid wall.

The freedom came when I realized that, I needed to tackle the revision in the same way I attacked novel rewrites. I needed to take one scene and revise one problem. The only difference was that my one scene would be 150 words, instead of 1,500. Yes, that was a challenge, but it was also doable. If I needed to make my dialogue more powerful, sure, I only had a dozen words to play with, but those words were right there for me to see, in one tiny chunk on one page. Instant feedback. Change one word and see if it makes things better. Nope? Change it again. Yes? Great. Move on to the next. Yes, every word matters (and I do think it matters more than in a novel), but every word also makes a difference. A big difference. And you can see it happen, or not, really, really fast.

And guess what? You know when I said, above, that I recommend revising a novel by working on one problem in one scene, then extrapolating what you’ve learned to all the other scenes in the story? Well, how much easier (and faster) does that become in a picture book? Especially if you’re using a repetitive structure and some repetitive wording? Once you figure out, in your teeny, tiny picture-book scene what isn’t working and how to fix it, carrying that change through the rest of the story can be greased lightning.

10 Comments on PiBoIdMo Day 6: Cut It Into Teeny-Tiny Pieces Like Becky Levine (plus a giveaway!), last added: 11/6/2011
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2. Day Three: 2-Week NaNoWriMo-themed Blog Book Tour for the New Plot Whisperer Book

Today The Plot Whisperer: Secrets of Story Structure Any Writer Can Master is featured at:


Becky is the author of The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide.
We both share a love of writing and exploring the elements of a good story. Having known me for years, Becky gives a long-view of the Plot Whisperer book.

****She is offering a two free books giveaway.

Master Schedule of the 2-week blog tour for the Plot Whisperer book.

For step-by-step guidance into pre-plotting your novel, memoir, screenplay, refer to:
The Plot Whisperer: Secrets of Story Structure Any Writer Can Master
For more about the Universal Story and writing a novel, memoir or screenplay, visit the Monday Plot Book Group series (A directory to this 2nd plot series is to the left of this post and scroll down a bit) and visit the first Plot Series: How Do I Plot a Novel, Memoir, Screenplay? on YouTube. (A directory of all the steps to the 1st plot series is to the right of this post.)
and visit:
0 Comments on Day Three: 2-Week NaNoWriMo-themed Blog Book Tour for the New Plot Whisperer Book as of 1/1/1900
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3. soup of the day: the writing & critique group survival guide by becky levine


"My new favorite is Lindt's Excellence Intense Pear Bar. One square of that and I'm writing (or critiquing!) productively for the next hour." ~ Becky Levine

       

It's here! It's here! It's finally here!

Official pub day for The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide: How to Give and Receive Feedback, Self-Edit, and Make Revisions (Writer's Digest Books, 2010), by the one and only Becky Levine!

Whew! That's some title, and friends, it lives up to every word, every paragraph, every page. As soon as I got my copy, I dove right into it, and ever since, one thought keeps running through my mind: how I wish I had this book 20 years ago. It would have made my writer's journey so much easier, with all its great advice and guidelines about how to take one's writing to the next level.

Yes, it's that good.


Writer's essentials by Cunning Stunt.

One always hears how crucial it is to find a critique partner or join a group, whether in-person or online. But it's not always that straightforward or easy. So much depends on the dynamics of the group -- identifying goals, becoming an "expert" in your fellow writers' genres, and making sure there is a sound level of commitment across the board. We've all heard horror stories (maybe even experienced them firsthand), of insensitive critiquers, writers who don't/won't listen to feedback with an open mind, personality clashes that impede progress and productivity, and so on. 


Throngs all over the world (or kitchen) celebrate the book's release.

We've also read other books about writer's groups that offer only general guidelines, or address genres different from the ones we're interested in. And how many emphasize the importance of getting feedback on your work, but don't tell you exactly how to proceed with revisions once you've received those comments?

Becky's book is easily the most comprehensive book I've ever seen on this subject. It's thorough, highly detailed, well organized, and most important, accessible. Whether you write for adults or children, and you're interested in fiction, nonfiction, memoir, self-help books, magazine articles, or travel writing; whether you're new to critique groups or are already well established in one, you'll find the help you need or ways to improve. I especially like Section II: Telling the Story: How to Critique Fiction. There are separate chapters devoted to explaining how to critique for plot, character, point of view and voice, dialogue, description, and scene structure.


alphabet soup critique group session.

I also like that Becky has addressed some of the more sensitive issues surrounding critique groups. How do you assess the compatibility of the members? What if you're not getting the kind of help you need? What if someone gets overly defensive about the comments he/she receives? How do you leave

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4. Great interview with Becky Levine

Check out this lovely interview with Becky Levine, otherwise known around these parts as, well, [info]beckylevine .

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