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On Writing and Worldbuilding, Volume I par…
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On Writing and Worldbuilding, Volume I (édition 2019)

par Timothy Hickson

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1743158,079 (4.11)1
Writing advice tends to be full of 'rules' and 'tips' which are either too broad to be helpful or outright wrong. In On Writing and World building, we will discuss specific and applicable ideas to consider, from effective methods of delivering exposition and foreshadowing, to how communication, commerce, and control play into the fall of an empire. ON WRITING Part I: Prologues Part II: The First Chapter Part III: The Exposition Problem Part IV: Foreshadowing Part V: Villain Motivation Part VI: Hero-Villain Relationships Part VII: Final Battles Part VIII: The Chosen One Part IX: Hard Magic Systems Part X: Soft Magic Systems Part XI: Magic Systems and Storytelling ON WORLDBUILDING Part XII: Polytheistic Religions Part XIII: Hidden Magical Worlds Part XIV: How Empires Rise Part XV: How Empires Work Part XVI: How Empires Fall EXCLUSIVE CONTENT Part XVII: How I Plan a Novel Dozens of side notes and extra thoughts on all these wonderful stories… (plus d'informations)
Membre:heleneswed
Titre:On Writing and Worldbuilding, Volume I
Auteurs:Timothy Hickson
Info:Publisher Unknown, Kindle Edition, 243 pages
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Mots-clés:olästa-i-bokhyllan

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On Writing and Worldbuilding: Volume I par Timothy Hickson

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Great book that gives real actionable advice on how to write and worldbuild ( )
  pgarri16 | Mar 5, 2022 |
To start with, despite a somewhat overblown feeling title, On Writing and Worldbuilding, Volume I is a solid book. It has piles of examples, a good dash of humor, and is well written enough to fly by.

I do not like the word ‘should’. Or, at least, I do not like how it has been used in books, videos, and lectures that purport to teach people how to write. The term ‘should’ is used often enough that authors might be tricked into thinking there is an objective way to write well. That there is some pantheon of writing deities who have brought forth the Ten Commandments of Writing, and that only the wise and sagelike amongst us can discern their will. Dare you write a book that is pure and unadulterated wish fulfillment? If you write a book that fails to use the three-act structure, curse ye! Doom awaits those that write vampire-romances with one-dimensional characters


It's funny and there are more than enough hints and examples to give you a few more ideas on how to improve your own writing and worldbuilding. I think my favorite comment in the entire work came right about at the beginning:

An author owes no obligation in their work other than to write the story they wish to read.


I would argue that not even that is an obligation, but it certainly helps. There's a passion to it you can feel and something I should probably pay a little more attention to in my own works.

On the downside, just about everything in this book comes almost directly from Hickson's Hello Future Me YouTube channel, specifically the On writing playlist. Certainly helpful if you prefer one medium over the other, but I've already seen all of his YouTube videos. It was interesting to see them in another form though.

Another interesting comment is that several chapters that deal with magic systems crib heavily from Sanderson's 'Three Rules of Magic'.

Sanderson wrote essays on what he calls the ‘Three Rules of Magic’, and the most important one for hard fantasy is the first: “An author’s ability to solve conflict with magic is directly proportional to how well the reader understands said magic.”


It's certainly good advice, but again, something I've seen before. In this case on the podcast, hosted by Sanderson among others. But again, different formats and it doesn't really hurt to listen to them both.

Overall, if you're interested in writing and worldbuilding, give this a whirl. At they very least, it's a greatly amusing read and maybe, just maybe, you'll learn something.
( )
  jpv0 | Jul 21, 2021 |
It’s one thing to say it, but it is another to show it. That is what I love so much about this book. Not only does the author ‘talk’ about the rules or ways a particular thing can be done, but he shows it using a plethora of examples from the work of well-known authors and media.

Full review along with my own inspired illustration at my blog: https://askmark.io/reviewed-on-writing-and-worldbuilding/ ( )
  askmark | Sep 13, 2019 |
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Writing advice tends to be full of 'rules' and 'tips' which are either too broad to be helpful or outright wrong. In On Writing and World building, we will discuss specific and applicable ideas to consider, from effective methods of delivering exposition and foreshadowing, to how communication, commerce, and control play into the fall of an empire. ON WRITING Part I: Prologues Part II: The First Chapter Part III: The Exposition Problem Part IV: Foreshadowing Part V: Villain Motivation Part VI: Hero-Villain Relationships Part VII: Final Battles Part VIII: The Chosen One Part IX: Hard Magic Systems Part X: Soft Magic Systems Part XI: Magic Systems and Storytelling ON WORLDBUILDING Part XII: Polytheistic Religions Part XIII: Hidden Magical Worlds Part XIV: How Empires Rise Part XV: How Empires Work Part XVI: How Empires Fall EXCLUSIVE CONTENT Part XVII: How I Plan a Novel Dozens of side notes and extra thoughts on all these wonderful stories

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