Sunday, March 20, 2011

SPRING!!

HAPPY FIRST DAY OF SPRING!

I’m suffering from Spring Fever! Does anyone else find it difficult to write when you want to go outside and enjoy the fresh breezes? Trade winds are blowing here, trees are bending, skies are clear, and I can’t seem to focus on a new story.

TIP: When you are experiencing a block in your thought processes, take a walk.

CLMcK

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Happy Saint Patrick's Day!

Today, everyone is Irish – or pretends to be! Since I have a bit o’ the Irish in me, as well as the Scottish, I take pride in the wearin’ o’ the green today. I certainly don’t want to get pinched!]

The Irish world is full of fantasy and Wee Folk. We have our mischief maker, the  Leprechaun; our harbinger of death, the banshee; and the beloved faierie  spirits and sprites. We have dwarfs and gnomes, pixies and elves – anything your fancy desires.

 When you are writing fantasy, these various fantasy folk of Ireland make wonderful characters. Each has a specific personality and behavioral traits. I’m not sure which of them is my favorite, but I know I’ll find a place for each of them in future stories.

 Until then, I leave you with an Irish blessing for this day:

May the love and protection
Saint Patrick can give
Be yours in abundance
As long as you live.

TIP: Read all you can about the traditions and legends that surround these creatures as you begin your journey into fantasy-land.

CLMcK

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Where Do Our Fantasies Originate?

In the truest sense of the word, all fiction is fantasy because it is something that has not actually taken place. My last post talked about the wonderful imaginings that are behind fantasy writing.


Yet the question remains, “where do our fantasies originate?” From childhood we have made up stories. Somewhere along our educational path, we were told to stop making up things. Parents and teachers called them “lies,” but we knew better. We knew we were creating a fantasy world, one that the adults could never enter.


Fantasies are the stuff of our early dreams. If we have not allowed anyone to take those away from us, we have the makings of a terrific fantasy tale right inside us. 

My suggestion is to simply start writing - anything. I believe that if we start writing down our current dreams, we will begin to retrieve those stories that lie buried in our unconscious.


TIP: Pick an image that pops out of your thoughts and write a brief outline of a story. If you put enough of these stories together, you may start to have a viable story line.

CLMcK

Thursday, March 10, 2011

What Determines Fantasy Writing?

In psychological terms, a fantasy is something that hasn’t happened yet. We might say to a client, “What is your fantasy about this situation?” In other words, “How do you see this event coming about in the future?” or “What do you think is going to happen?”


In literary terms, we might think of fantasy in several different aspects. We may create entirely new worlds, with new financial terms, new ways of preparing and eating food, new vocabulary, new creatures that are not human the way we know humanity. The plants and geography may be totally new creations. 


Our fantasy might occur in an imaginary world of Little People, talking animals, magic and witchcraft, dragons and unicorns, vampires and werewolves. These fantasies take on whatever form our thoughts make of them, and often they are ruined when put on the movie screen.


Time can be suspended, we can be taken on the “way back” machine, or placed on fast forward to a time that hasn’t been revealed to us. We can take humans and project them into another millenium in our imaginations.


TIP: Go back to your favorite fantasy fiction and list everything in it that is new or different from your ordinary world here on Earth. 


CLMcK

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Welcome To My Fantasy World

Authors live in more than one world. I live in the everyday world of highway traffic, household chores, employment. I live in several other worlds of imagination, castles in the air, fantasy characters.

On this page, you will discover a few of those worlds where I live. These worlds come to me whether I am sitting at the computer or in that hypnogogic state as I fall asleep at night, as I drive to work in the mornings or tend my garden at home.

Everyone has these worlds, and yet, not everyone will let these worlds go beyond their thoughts. I urge you to put them down on paper or on the hard drive of your computer. Someday these worlds could come together to form a book that others will read. If not, you still will have developed a rich world where you can play.

Tip: Start now by jotting down the first few words that come to mind when you think of “fantasy.” Let that be the first entry in your “fantasy journal.”

~ CLMcK ~