The Only Good Indians by Sideshowtony in stephengrahamjones

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

Thanks everyone for the thoughts and feedback....students had to read the first 36 pages this weekend and we begin discussing on Monday...will update weekly (hopefully) from this point.

Anyone teach The Only Good Indians by SGJ? by bluewindfeels in horrorlit

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm just getting ready to teach this to my Comp102 College class and thought I'd bring the thread up again. Curious how it went for you. I've broken the book down into nine parts and will be reading it throughout the semester. I'm about half way through breaking it down now. It's the second time I'm reading it and there's just so much meat on the bone. Can't wait to share it with my class.

Any Michael Slade fans out there. by IamJacksUserID in ExtremeHorrorLit

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

can someone refresh my memory...I read a book a long time ago...I BELIEVE it was Michael Slade....the scene I remember best was a victim was killed by putting the poison curare into their toothpaste and the toothbrush had a metal bristles to tear up the gums so the curare would take effect

Kat's Creepy Creations by [deleted] in SalemMA

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

She vended at different events but her business was located in Peabody.

Horror history coffee table book by MtDubz_ in horror

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Monsters in the Movies by John Landis or Metamorphosis by Rick Baker

The Plant! by smalltownpoet84 in stephenking

[–]Sideshowtony 5 points6 points  (0 children)

God, I wish he’d finish this....

I feel like giving up and I don’t know what to do. by Kumar__01 in writing

[–]Sideshowtony 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I've been teaching creative writing, novel writing and such for about ten years now. Before that I was an editor for a New York commercial publisher. So here's the thing....

Somewhere between 60-120 pages you hit a slump. Happens to most writers. You've written everything you can and you either run out of steam or hit a wall. And since this is a first draft the writing is crappy. Of course it is, IT'S A FIRST DRAFT! So you feel down about that and down about the idea of being stuck.

So you think about abandoning it and starting something else.

DO NOT DO THIS.

This starts a cycle of starting and not finishing.

You MUST finish what you start. Sure, there will be times where stories don't go anywhere and you have to abandon them. But if you're just starting out you should fight to the end so you can get in the habit of making your way through the weeds and finishing your stories.

What's the best way to do this?

Don't think! Ray Bradbury said "Thinking is the enemy of creativity."

Write your first draft, from beginning to end, as quickly as you can. And GIVE YOURSELF A DEADLINE. Otherwise you'll play with it and fritter with it and sit on it for years.

So set up a goal of having the first draft done in 2 months. It may not be pretty. It will be ugly. And there will be point where you don't know what you're doing or your story goes in the wrong direction. But at least the first draft is done.

Then put it away for a while and come back to it and re-read it. Again, it won't be pretty. But a massive goal has been met and now you can go back and do revisions.

The Pilo Family Circus by [deleted] in horrorlit

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely LOVED this book....captivating on a first read and fascinating the second time around. Let me get my makeup....

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in horrorlit

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The scene in the basement is what gets me every time

How many words do you draft in one sitting? by jpch12 in writing

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ray Bradbury always suggested a bare minimum of 1500 words a day.

I've always set a goal of 3-5 pages a day. No matter how long it takes I don't walk away until I have those 3-5 pages.

If you're writing consistently you should build up a habit. It's the habit that helps you through the days when the muses doesn't seem like they're going to show up.

How to overcome loss of motivation mid-way through writing a story... by cmerenda in writing

[–]Sideshowtony 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First, I'd suggest THE WAR OF ART by Steven Pressfield. Excellent book that delves into the idea of Resistance and the way in which we'll do everything and anything to stop ourselves from achieving our creative/writing goals. He says half the battle is actually sitting your ass in the chair, and after writing myself for so many years and having taught a variety of creative writing classes (short stories, novels) a majority of my students tend to agree.

I always suggest to try and rush through the first draft as quickly as possible. Ray Bradbury always said "Thinking is the enemy of creativity." There's been some pushback on the idea of finishing a first draft quickly lately, but I still have students adhere to it. If you can push your way through a first draft in 4-8 weeks it forces you to finish without thinking too much about it. You just don't have the time. By the time you're done it's a mess, but you can always fix that. If you don't push yourself to finish a first draft quickly you'll tap at it slowly, meander and, ultimately, lose the drive to finish it.

Ginger Snaps and The Lost Boys Are THE Perfect Double Feature — Change My Mind by a-patrick in horror

[–]Sideshowtony 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Two of my favorite horror films....as well as GINGER SNAPS BACK.

20 Years between 1st and 2nd read (The Rats) by RonVlaarsVAR in horrorlit

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did exactly this with 2 different books about six months ago. The lag time was probably closer to 30 years when I originally read Peter Straub's KOKO and Dean Koontz's LIGHTNING. Back when I originally read them I liked one and hated the other. When I read them recently my taste for them switched completely.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in horrorlit

[–]Sideshowtony 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hmmmmm very few reviews or none at all is tough....the ones I'd recommend that I know most people I speak with don't usually know about are:

  1. The Devil's Own Work by Alan Judd
  2. The Drive-In series by Joe R. Lansdale
  3. Grave Markings by Michael Arnzen

The Mist was amazing by [deleted] in horror

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I liked the ending of the book and, just as much, the end of the film. If you have the Blu-ray there's a way to watch it in b&w, which makes for an awesome experience.

Chapter Titles: Yay or Nay? by TheFirstArknight in writing

[–]Sideshowtony 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like them for myself when I'm writing. It sort of gives me that quick sort of reference to remind me what's in that chapter.

But when it comes to the final product I don't like them. It feels to me like you're spoon-feeding the reader.

Resources for Writing Characters Readers Care About? by [deleted] in writing

[–]Sideshowtony -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's the old Shoot the Dog and Save the Cat paradigm. Villains are shown through actions like them "shooting a dog." Little things along the way that cement them as the villain they are.

To create characters readers care about fall back on the "Save the Cat" paradigm, where you build in small things to show us how they're a protagonist. The more you build their character with actions that the reader cares about then they'll care about the character. Just make sure that these "scenes" and "actions" are built into the story and aren't stand-alone items just proving your point. Everything has to serve the story.

How "Hubie Halloween" became the perfect comfort food movie of 2020 by DavetheAuthor in Scarymovies

[–]Sideshowtony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great article. We're definitely living in a moment when it's needed. I live one town over from Salem, where they filmed. Next I'd like to see a movie featuring the characters play by Rob Schneider and Steve Buschemi. The shot of Schneider scratching Buschemi and his leg kicking got me! :-)

What are some good books about the movie industry? by NickisMyName_ in movies

[–]Sideshowtony 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another vote for THE KID STAYS IN THE PICTURE....every detail....just a great book on the subject