z
barefootrunner wrote:ThatPsycho, go with the one that you are the most like. That way you can better envision her responses and actions. Or, if you are feeling adventurous, try an old male character, something you have never done before at all.
To help you create characters, spend some time in an old-age home for elders, or if you want a small child, at a creche or play park. Shadow people who might become characters. Go people-watching at a mall or café. (Just don't let that big man realise that you are trying to copy his walk!)
The more realistic your characters, the more people will enjoy reading about them.
Don't give in to the blank-page monster!
melg23 wrote:For some reason I always develop my stories around random scenes that stick in my head so when I'm writing, I can only think about how I'm going to reach those specific scenes in the story and it's so distracting and i struggle being able to close the gap between dramatic scenes so I get writer's block WAY too much and i just get so darn frustrated.
Gender:
Points: 25520
Reviews: 308