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November 21, 2009
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The Fire in Fiction
March 19, 2009
• Writing instruction and exercises from a noted literary agent. • Techniques for improving every aspect of your fiction—from plot to characters to setting and beyond. • Interactive exercises for infusing your story with richness and passion. ![]() The Fire in Fiction by Donald Maass Writer's Digest Books, 2009 ISBN-13: 978-1-58297-506-1 ISBN-10: 1-58297-506-X $17.99 paperback, 272 pages Buy Now Read an Excerpt! Find out how to develop your story around its most pivotal moments in this excerpt from Chapter Two: Characters Who Matter. About the Book We’ve all read them: novels by our favorite authors that disappoint. Uninspired and lifeless, we wonder what happened. Was the author in a hurry? Did she have a bad year? Has he lost interest altogether? Something similar is true of a great many unpublished manuscripts. They are okay stories that never take flight. They are unoriginal. They don’t grip the imagination, let alone the heart. They merit only a shrug and a polite dismissal by agents and editors. It’s almost as if the author is afraid to truly commit to the story. It doesn’t have to be that way. In The Fire in the Fiction, successful literary agent and author Donald Maass shows you not only how to infuse your story with deep conviction and fiery passion, but how to do it over and over again. The book features: • Techniques for capturing a special time and place, creating characters whose lives matter, nailing multiple-impact plot turns, making the supernatural real, infusing issues into fiction, and more. • Story-enriching exercises at the end of every chapter to show you how apply the practical tools just covered to your own work. • Rich examples drawn from contemporary novels as diverse as The Lake House, Water for Elephants, and Jennifer Government to illustrate how various techniques work in actual stories. Plus, Maass introduces an original technique that any novelist can use any time, in any scene, in any novel, even on the most uninspired day … to take the most powerful experiences from your personal life and turn those experiences directly into powerful fiction. Tap into The Fire in Fiction, and supercharge your story with originality and spark! About the Author Donald Maass heads the Donald Maass Literary Agency in New York City, which represents more than 150 novelists and sells more than 150 novels every year to publishers in America and overseas. He is a past president of the Association of Authors Representatives, Inc., and is the author of several books of interest to fiction writers: The Career Novelist (now available as a free download from his agency’s Web site), Writing the Breakout Novel, and Writing the Breakout Novel Workbook. His Web site is www.maassagency.com. Table of Contents INTRODUCTION Status Seekers and Storytellers Playing With Fire Chapter 1: Protagonists vs. Heroes Average Joes, Jane Does, and Dark Protagonists Cutting Heroes Down to Size Greatness Protagonists vs. Heroes Practical Tools Chapter 2 : Characters Who Matter Special Ordinary Antagonists Practical Tools Chapter 3: Scenes That Can’t Be Cut Outer and Inner Turning Points Dialogue Striding Forward, Falling Back First Lines, Last Lines The Tornado Effect Practical Tools Chapter 4 : The World of the Novel Linking Details and Emotions Measuring Change Over Time History is Personal Seeing Through Characters’ Eyes Conjuring a Milieu Setting as a Character Practical Tools Chapter 5: A Singular Voice Giving Characters Voice Details and Delivery Different Ways of Relating a Story Practical Tools Chapter 6: Making the Impossible Real The Skeptical Reader Making Characters Afraid Focus on Villains Verisimilitude: Pseudoscience, Genuine Facts Scary Monsters Practical Tools Chapter 7: Hyperreality The Secrets of Satire Funny People, Funny Places Sending Up Society Funny Voices Practical Tools Chapter 8: Tension All the Time Tension in Dialogue Tension in Action Tension in Exposition Transforming Low-Tension Traps Tension Where There Is None Practical Tools Chapter 9: The Fire in Fiction Our Common Experience Our Uncommon Experiences The Moral of the Story The Fire in Fiction Practical Tools More From the publishers of Writer's Digest Great discounts and membership discounts in the Writer's Digest Shop Check out WritersMarket.com - Where & How To Sell What You Write The Best in Writing Instructions on the Web: WritersOnlineWorkshops.com |
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