网站综合信息 writerunboxed.com
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    • Writer Unboxed – about the craft and b 
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    • Writer Unboxed about the craft and business of fiction 
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    • about the craft and business of fiction 
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    • 域名年龄:18年2个月17天  注册日期:2006年08月06日  到期时间:2016年08月06日
      注册商:GODADDY.COM, LLC 
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    writerunboxed.com

    域名年龄: 18年2个月17天
    注册时间: 2006-08-06
    到期时间: 2016-08-06
    注 册 商: GODADDY.COM, LLC

    获取时间: 2015年03月11日 01:52:35
    Domain Name: WRITERUNBOXED.COM
    Registrar: GODADDY.COM, LLC
    Sponsoring Registrar IANA ID: 146
    Whois Server: whois.godaddy.com
    Referral URL: http://registrar.godaddy.com
    Name Server: NS1.IPAGE.COM
    Name Server: NS2.IPAGE.COM
    Status: clientDeleteProhibited http://www.icann.org/epp#clientDeleteProhibited
    Status: clientRenewProhibited http://www.icann.org/epp#clientRenewProhibited
    Status: clientTransferProhibited http://www.icann.org/epp#clientTransferProhibited
    Status: clientUpdateProhibited http://www.icann.org/epp#clientUpdateProhibited
    Updated Date: 2014-08-07
    Creation Date: 2006-08-06
    Expiration Date: 2016-08-06

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    Domain Name: WRITERUNBOXED.COM
    Registrar URL: http://www.godaddy.com
    Registrant Name: Kathleen Bolton
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    Name Server: NS2.IPAGE.COM
    DNSSEC: unsigned

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    抓取时间:2019年06月20日 01:55:23
    网址:http://writerunboxed.com/
    标题:Writer Unboxed – about the craft and business of fiction
    关键字:Writer Unboxed about the craft and business of fiction
    描述:about the craft and business of fiction
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    HomeAbout WUDisclosuresRSS & EmailSocial MediaFAQs & ContactUnconferenceHomeAbout WUDisclosuresRSS & EmailSocial MediaFAQs & ContactUnconferenceBe Careful, or You’ll End Up in My NovelJune 19, 2019 By Kathleen McCleary 7 Comments   Flickr Creative Commons: Theo CrazzolaraSo here’s my dirty little secret about writing fiction: Most of my characters begin with a real person. And before friends and acquaintances start thumbing through my novels, wondering if they should be outraged, let me emphasize that the key word here is “begin.” And let me also suggest that you may want to give it a try if you haven’t already.Plenty of authors “steal” from real life—Harper Lee based To Kill a Mockingbird’s Dill Harris on Truman Capote; Harry Potter’s Severus Snape was a fictional portrait of John Nettleship, one of J.K. Rowling’s teachers; and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz’s Glinda the Good Witch was based on L. Frank Baum’s mother-in-law. (Truly! She was a suffragist and abolitionist who also fought for Native American rights.)Real people—meaning people I know personally and people I’ve never met but know of, such as actors or authors or politicians—are a wonderful entry point into character. It’s like having an outline of a person you can color in and embellish, something much more manageable than trying to draw a person from scratch. It does not mean I think of someone I know, change the name and hair color, then work to provide a scrupulous portrait of that person in words. As every author knows, characters take on a life of their own, and say and do things we never expected or meant for them to say and do, and in the process becoming utterly and only themselves.In my second novel I knew that one of the main characters would be a woman aged 75-plus, someone earthy and strong, with common sense and a good sense of humor. I found inspiration in the author Betty MacDonald, who grew up in the Pacific Northwest in the 1920s and 30s. My character, also named Betty, had a quick wit, no tendency for self-pity, and was physically strong, traits I stole from Betty MacDonald. She was also passionate, married to a serial philanderer, suffered multiple miscarriages, fell in love with a neighbor with whom she carried on an adulterous affair for decades, and a devoted mother—all things I made up. I made up her appearance and her childhood and her siblings and her relationships with her siblings. She’s still one of the richest characters I’ve ever written.Four ways to use real people to find your characters: [Read more…]8+TweetPocketPrintEmail Print This Post Filed Under: CRAFT Tagged With: advice for writers, characters, CRAFT, inspiration, Kathleen McCleary, writing, writing lifeThe Editor’s Clinic:  Problem ChildJune 18, 2019 By Dave King 9 Comments     Child narrators can be a problem. Children don’t yet have the experience or self-awareness to understand what’s going on around them.  So if you write intimately from their point of view, usi

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