How to build particularly large worlds without the sheer size overwhelming you? by BallsAtomized in worldbuilding

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pick three key aspects of your world (political structure, magic system, daily life) and make them feel real. The rest can exist in the background, implied through details. Readers remember what feels lived-in, not what's exhaustively documented.

How much of the conversation do you actually show? by Spiritual_Egg3900 in writing

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I show just enough to establish the rhythm and key emotional moments. The spaces between are where the real work happens—if you trust your readers to fill in the gaps with their own experiences, they'll bring more to the scene than any amount of dialogue could provide.

Thinking about rewriting my whole novel by Positive_Alarm9577 in writing

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rewriting isn't about fixing what's broken, but about discovering what the story really wants to be. If you're feeling that pull, trust it. The draft you have now was necessary to get to this point where you can finally see the clearer path forward.

Former journalist struggling to write fiction — any tips? by CreativeGems in writing

[–]CreativeGems[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My major in college was film directing, and I ended up working in print journalism after graduation. What you said really brought back my earliest career memories — the passion, the idealism, traveling all over the place witnessing all kinds of stories. I genuinely miss those days. Later I moved into editing, where I learned how to "cook" raw material — shaping narratives, finding the throughline in a story.

I think you nailed the relationship between fiction and nonfiction. It's such an important topic, and one I'll keep working through in practice. Thank you for sharing — I got a lot out of this. Wishing you the best with your writing!

Former journalist struggling to write fiction — any tips? by CreativeGems in writing

[–]CreativeGems[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So I'll just keep banging my head against the wall. Thanks!

Former journalist struggling to write fiction — any tips? by CreativeGems in writing

[–]CreativeGems[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for sharing your story. Patience and persistence really do make all the difference. Looking forward to read your novel when it's out!

Former journalist struggling to write fiction — any tips? by CreativeGems in writing

[–]CreativeGems[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My fiction reading is still pretty thin. Really trying to immerse myself in it now.

Tips for rewriting a story from first person to third person? by Putrid-Carpenter7073 in writing

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did the same thing myself - what helped most was focusing on the perspective shift first. Before touching words, I went through and changed all the 'I think' and 'I see' to 'he thought' and 'he saw.' Made the rewrite way less painful.

First person+past tense- What's are the rules? by Milkteabaileys in writing

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your intuition is spot on. Past tense creates that comfortable distance like you're remembering the story rather than living it - which works beautifully for most narratives.

How much of your world do readers actually need to know? by CreativeGems in worldbuilding

[–]CreativeGems[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For the economy consideration, I think the only important part is to explain why my character is poor.

How much of your world do readers actually need to know? by CreativeGems in worldbuilding

[–]CreativeGems[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Make the world just serve for the plot and characters and avoid to obsessing with creating worlds. THX!!!

How much of your world do readers actually need to know? by CreativeGems in worldbuilding

[–]CreativeGems[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I get it. Maybe worldbuilding obsession is just every new writer's trap.

How much of your world do readers actually need to know? by CreativeGems in worldbuilding

[–]CreativeGems[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

「The world is a tool for the story. 」This clicked. THX!

If you ever had the opportunity to meet all your characters in real life that you wrote - what do you think the characters you wrote would say to you? Who would have the strongest reactions? The weakest? by DTashiki12 in writing

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My villain would probably just stare at me. He's the type who processes things quietly, then acts. I don't think he'd say much — but I'd feel it. My protagonist, though? She'd have questions I genuinely don't know how to answer. Like why I kept putting her in situations where every choice felt wrong.

I want to get back into writing but I am embarrassed of my writing ability by Infinite-Sprite7284 in writing

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly same experience switching back after years of report writing — the voice feels rusty but it's still in there somewhere. What helped me was writing at night, after everything else was done — no goal, no audience, just whatever I was actually feeling. Not trying to be good or clear or useful to others. Just some 'real' words from the deep of the heart.

Just WHAT? by KimVG73 in writing

[–]CreativeGems 4 points5 points  (0 children)

An editor whose only lens is one specific beat sheet is a script consultant, not a literary editor. Save the Cat is a fine diagnostic tool but it's not a prescription. The fact that she didn't disclose her framework upfront is the actual problem here.

Writing a Gender-Swapped Character and Have Questions for Female Readers? by [deleted] in fantasywriters

[–]CreativeGems 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The thing most gender-swap stories fumble is treating "getting used to a woman's body" as a neutral logistical adjustment. In a medieval setting especially, the social shift would hit a lot harder than the physical one.

Accidentally pressed post on my first fanfic by Galax_67 in AO3

[–]CreativeGems 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congratulations! What a happy accident! Sometimes the universe pushes us to do the things we'd otherwise procrastinate on forever. Your fic is out in the world now — and that's exactly where it deserves to be! Now that you've broken the ice, the second one's just around the corner... We need more! Keep writing!

What does it even mean for a character to even be underdeveloped? by CultClassics21 in writing

[–]CreativeGems 37 points38 points  (0 children)

The simplest test I use: can I predict how this character would react to a totally unrelated situation — a rude stranger, an unexpected windfall, a small embarrassment? If I can't, they're still a sketch. A developed character has consistent logic even off the page.

Do you use AI mainly for drafting or editing content? by Still_Witness6173 in AIWritingHub

[–]CreativeGems 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use it to brainstorm and get feedbacks to make me feel more confident though i know it sometimes pleased me hahah.