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Featured Author – AIMEE SAID – And New Writing Competition

Aimee Said is an Australian YA author.

Today she’s here to talk about how she wrote her novel, Little Sister, and she also has a fabulous free writing activity.

ABOUT “LITTLE SISTER”

When I started writing my second novel, Little Sister, I felt pretty confident. I’d been thinking about the story for six months, I thought I knew my characters well and I had a basic plot outline. It should’ve been a recipe for success but somewhere around the 20,000 word mark – a third of the way into the book – I got stuck.

It wasn’t that I’d run out of ideas, just the opposite: I had loads of options for what could happen to move the characters from Point A to Point B in the plot, but I couldn’t decide which would result in the best story. I thought if I just kept writing the story would sort itself out. But the more I wrote the further I got from my original outline, until I’d bypassed Point B altogether, arrived at an unplanned Point C and was hurtling towards a conclusion that I didn’t knew would be an unsatisfying end to the story.

I was now about 45,000 words and six months into writing. I knew something had gone drastically wrong and I knew I had to fix it, even though the idea of wasting all those words and all that time made me feel sick. So I stepped away from my computer and thought about it. And thought about it. And thought about it. Weeks later I was still thinking about it when I realised that I’d been so focused on what was going to happen that I’d lost sight of who it was happening to and how they would react (which would drive the next stage of the plot). I needed to get back in touch with my characters – especially my narrator, Al.

So I wrote a letter. Or rather, Al did. I looked back over all the notes I’d made about her: personality traits, likes, dislikes, dreams and fears, until I felt like I’d reconnected with her. Then, channeling my inner Al, I imagined her telling the story of what had happened to her over the past six weeks (the period that the book is set over). The letter took three hours to write and covered 10 pages. At the end of it I had about two paragraphs per day that the book is set over, describing what Al thought were the most significant events. I had my plot – the whole thing. More importantly, it was written in Al’s voice, with her reactions and her leading the action.

I did have to go back and delete about 20,000 words, but after writing that letter I was so in touch with Al and what she’d been through that I actually wanted to start again! Best of all, in telling me her story, Al mentioned a few things that I hadn’t known about her, that became subplots in the book.

It was a hard earned lesson, but what I took away from those torturous few months was that sometimes you have to let your characters lead the story. Trust them, they usually know what they’re doing.

WRITING ACTIVITY

Part of getting to know your characters is finding out their backstories – the things that happened in their lives to make them the people we meet in the story. Try answering some of these questions in your character’s voice:

  • What’s your nickname and how did you get it?
  • What’s the most embarrassing song on your iPod?
  • If you could only eat one food for the rest of your life, what would it be?
  • What five possessions would you grab if your house was on fire?
  • What’s the scariest thing that’s ever happened to you? How did it change you as a person?
  • What makes you smile, even when you’re feeling sad?
  • What was your favourite toy as a child? Do you still have it?
  • What question would you most hate to be asked in a game of Truth or Dare?
  • What’s the biggest lie you’ve ever told? Did you get away with it?

You can buy Aimee’s novel, Little Sister online at Boomerang Books or Fishpond

 

NEW WRITING COMPETITION OPENS  TODAY – THE THEME IS “THE JOURNEY”.

FIND OUT MORE AT OUR COMPETITION PAGE.

 

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WRITING COMPETITION WINNERS ANNOUNCED!

Thanks and congratulations to everyone who entered our 3rd Quarter Fact in Fiction Writing Competition.

Once again we had a large number of very high standard entries in this competition so please don’t be disheartened if you didn’t win a prize.

Entries that stood out were those with strong characters and voices where there was a piece of action or something to hook the reader in straight away.

Cancer was a subject that featured strongly in many works. If yours was a cancer story or you have written one on this theme, you might consider entering it in the annual Daffodil Day writing competition run by The Cancer Council.

There were some very powerful stories with strong themes and great writing and this made judging difficult but enjoyable.

TIPS FOR FUTURE COMPETITIONS

These are based on some of the things that prevented stories in this competition from being the best they could be.

  1. Stories must always be submitted according to submission guidelines stated.  This means them must be the stated length of 500 words and they must be set out correctly. “Double spaced” refers to the gap between the lines of text. If you select “Paragraph” from your “Format” menu, it should give you the option of choosing “line spacing”. Select “double”.
  2. Be consistent with the tense you are writing the story in…don’t change from past to present and back again.
  3. Always check your punctuation and spelling before submitting your entry. Read your story out aloud and this will help you pick up places where words have been accidentally missed out or the story doesn’t make sense.
  4. Too much telling and not showing. Don’t talk about what your characters said. Show them talking with dialogue. Don’t tell the reader about the things that have happened to a character, show them happening. This will involve the reader more in your story.
  5. Check your story for tension and conflict. These are the things that will keep your reader reading to find out what happens next.
  6.  You don’t have much time to hook your reader so get to the action as soon as possible.

I hope you find these hints helpful for future writing.

If you want to enter future competitions of any kind please check the submissions guidelines. Judges may mark you down if your manuscript isn’t formatted correctly.

Congratulations to all the worthy winners and to every one who wrote a story and had the courage to enter it.

Dee:)

COMPETITION RESULTS

Age 8-12

PLACE NAME STORY
1st Place Emily Ryan Sky Star
Highly Commended Caitlin Casady The Mesa
Highly Commended Kathleen Cuppen Breast Cancer
Highly Commended Lorna Armstrong That Day
Highly Commended Stella Elgood Field The Raid
Highly Commended Eliza Fletcher-Hobbs Bound for Botany Bay
Highly Commended Salina Poletta In Icy Waters
Highly Commended Gemma Boase-Bowden Smash
Highly Commended Frank Cooper The Sunday Disaster
Commended Erin Mckelvie The Rail to Safety
Commended Dominic Beaudequin Inside the Eureka Stockade
Commended Bryce Thomson Beck Granger
Commended Olivia Tollardo Love and Death
Commended Savannah W Havemann Eric the Red
Commended Matthew Dimotakis Rilamba
Commended Nicholas Dimotakis Scar
Commended Olivia Black Crazy Adventure
Commended Annie Quartermaine Crocodillus
Commended Lauren Tinkler Halfway Down the Banister
Commended Josie Cooper An Excerpt from Hugo
Commended Indiana Harris Wonders in a Forest

 

Teen Category

PLACE NAME STORY
1st Place Melodie Liu A Temporary Affliction
Highly Commended Kim Rance Connected by blood
Highly Commended Julie McNamee The Sun Will Shine Again
Highly Commended Phoebe. O. Morakinyo Black Cats
Commended Mikaela Hannen-Woolf Dolphin Song
Commended Reena Mukherjee Violet Miller, The Cook Of The Court
Commended Devindi Gunarathne Let it be

 

Adult Category

PLACE NAME STORY
1st Place Jo-Ann Spataro The Car that Ate Vegetables
Highly Commended Dimity Powell Undead Ed
Highly Commended Melissa Wray Cheese Ball Challenge
Commended Patricia Simmons Mona the China Elephant

Thanks again for entering our competition. All prize winners certificates will be sent out this week and book winners should receive their prizes shortly.

First place winner in the children’s and teen categories also receive a five-page manuscript assessment. Our adult winner receives a ten-page assessment. Please email your five pages, double-spaced in 12 point font with 3cm margins all round to dee@deescribe.com.au

Details of our NEW COMPETITION will also be advised soon. 

Happy writing:)

 

Dee

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