Tag Archives: Research

Resources for Writers, Part 3

Okay folks, if you’re just joining us now and are wondering about Part 1 and Part 2, click on the links for more extra chewy, chocolific research goodness. (Yeah, chocolific. It’s an awesome word.)

So here is the third installment of resources for writers, resources that are curious, strange, cool, and, hopefully, a bit useful.

Jewish Encyclopedia

English: The Jewish Encyclopedia

Interested in reading up on Kabbalah? (Or Cabala, or Qabalah, or Qabala, etc.) Curious about the siege of Masada or the Maccabean Revolt? Then you need to get yourself here, to the online Jewish Encyclopedia. It’s voluminous, with thousands of entries. Any research you need to do on Jewish culture or history needs to start here.

Internet Sacred Text Archive

Deutsch: Grimoire Papst Honorius, Rom 1760

This is another site that will keep your attention for far too long. It’s an online database of almost every religious text available (and we’re talking some strange, esoteric stuff here). You can buy a CD-ROM with the texts on it, but hey, read them for free online! You’ll find grimoires, Freemasonry, Patristic Christian theology, UFO religions, and Confucianism, to name just a few. It’s everything from alchemy to Zoroastrianism. It’s almost mind-boggling how much stuff is here.

Concise Encyclopedia of Economics

English: Wall Street sign on Wall Street

Let’s be honest: Few people know much about economics today. Depending on your perspective, socialists are evil or free-marketers are evil, but we throw around terms (and associated epithets) without knowing much about them. Well, take some time to learn. I love this site.

Dictionary of Symbolism

A-Z

Here’s another fun one, brought to us by some people with far too much time on their hands at the University of Michigan. What are the meanings in folklore and religion for, say, the tongue? Or mud? Or even the color yellow? Click around and have some fun. (Bonus question: Who knows what the symbol just above this paragraph represents? Any takers?)

Encyclopedia of Science Fiction

English: Icon from Nuvola icon theme for KDE 3...

One last one for this week’s list: We have the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. All of you scifi writers out there, jump up together and rejoice! (Well, if you’re big into scifi, you may have already known about this one.) I don’t think it’s as user-friendly as some of the other online encyclopedias that you’ll find, but once you get the hang of it, it’s pretty helpful.

Anyway, that’s it for now. And as always, if you have a good addition to these lists of mine, send me a note. Happy writing all!

C.T.

Resources for Writers, Part 2

As the first part of this series was rather well-received, I thought that since it’s been a week, I’d put up Part 2. So, if you’re looking for some more good–and curious, creative, even bizarre–resources to help you as you plot out your next writing project (or as you’re plugging along on your present one), take note of our next little list. Here we go:

1. American Folklore

paul bunyan and babe the blue ox in bemidji

American folklore at its best: Paul and Babe.

Trying to give your next thriller or paranormal fantasy a little historical heft? Check out some of the best in American folklore, myths, superstitions, and urban legends. (Actually, it’s North American, as it draws from folktales and legends popular in Canada and Mexico as well.)

2. Crime Scene Investigator Network

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

Where I teach, we offer a Criminal Justice major, and I find that so many of my students who are CJ majors think they’re going to one day be working in a lab with lasers, touch screen computers, electron microscopes and Dexter Morgan‘s blood spatter room. Well, they’re going to be disappointed. Still, if you want some crime scene specifics for your next project, check this site out. It points you in lots of interesting directions.

3. The Mystica and Mythical-Folk

The Mystical Sign of Four.

Crazy symbols, huh? Yeah, I don’t know what they mean either. So click over to these sites and see what you can find. We have a lot of paranormal and fantasy writers out there, I know, and these sites can be treasure troves for all things mystical. Looking for articles on shamanism, Atlantis, psychic vampires or the Rainbow Monster? Then check these sites out.

4. Symbols.com

sidewalk symbols

Speaking of crazy symbols, symbols.com is the grandaddy of them all when it comes to signs and symbols online. This is actually the online version of a book written a number of years ago by Swedish academic Carl Liungman. (Many public libraries, in fact, have it on their reference shelves, it’s that popular.) Honestly, I love this site. It’s endlessly diverting. In fact, I’m heading over there right after finishing this post.

5. Military Factory

F-15 Eagle

F-15 Eagle (Photo credit: James L Monckton)

When you’re righting your next espionage thriller, please please puh-leeese don’t be the writer who knows absolutely nothing about weaponry. Revolvers are different from semi-automatics, and semi-automatics are not automatics (many in the media mess this one up all the time). The Imperial Japanese flew  Zeros and Americans don’t fly MiGs. Got it? No? Okay, then head over to the Military Factory. Their pages on the weaponry of World War II are especially good.

Okay folks, how are we doing? I’m only giving you five resources this time, to keep you hungry for more.

And as usual, let me know if you have any links to interesting writer’s resources. If I like it, I might put it in a future list! Happy researching and, of course, happy writing folks!

C.T.

Resources for Writers, Part 1

As you can guess from the title, I’m thinking of making this a recurring topic on this blog, perhaps weekly (or more, but we’ll see). In my other, non-C.T. Westing life, I’m a college instructor, and I usually teach Internet technology and academic research. I have an M.S. in Library Science, so I’m very much into academic research.

And so I thought it might be nice–and fun, perhaps–to list some interesting, helpful, even wacky, web resources that writers might use in their research and writing. Le’s start the list.

The Online Etymology Dictionary

Online Etymology Dictionary

I use this one quite a bit, and I love it. Looking to do a little background research on a particular word? Check out its root! After a few trips here, you’ll find yourself–if you’re anything like me, that is–wasting plenty of time, just plugging in random words, just to see if they’re Latin, Greek, or Hebrew derivatives.

The Random Name Generator

Cover of "What's in a Name?"

Come on, you know that Ulysses Loeblein and Dominick Kalkbrenner are perfect names for your next buddy cop story. Okay, maybe not perfect. But you’ll have some fun with this random name generator, and honestly, after a little poking around, it did help me find the names for a few characters I’ve been developing.

CIA World Factbook

CIA - The World Factbook -- Brazil-1.jpg

I actually use this tool in my classes every semester. I point my students to this site, ask them to find me things like the literacy rate for Gabon or the female life expectancy of Mongolia. It’s a nice website to test students’ basic research skills. And you’ll find volumes of information–statistics, data, random facts–for any research that you’re doing on any country on earth.

Making of America

main_moa

Here’s a great tool (it’s actually two related databases, one run by Cornell, the other by the University of Michigan) for any research you’re doing on early American history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. They’re full of primary source materials, scanned in for your use. I used these sites a lot while in grad school for my other degree. They’re fantastic resources.

Exit Mundi

The Earth Explodes

Now for the crazy stuff. Welcome to Exit Mundi, your online resource for all the crazy end-of-world (and some end-of-universe) scenarios your mind can scare up (scare, of course, being the operative word, as some of the stuff is a little unsettling). Writing some scifi or horror? You’ve found the right place.

Monstrous.com

Little vampire

Speaking of finding the right place, Monstrous.com is one of those sites that will suck up your entire day, it’s so interesting. (And scary. Yes, some of it’s kinda scary.) Need some background for your gothic thriller or YA fantasy? Want to get some information on Wendigo or Pazuzu? You’ve found yourself a home. Full of images, first-hand accounts of “sightings” (yeah, it gets a bit out there), and the site’s affiliated Monstropedia, once you get to the site, you may never leave.

The Paranormal Network

It's a ghost!

How about one last one for today? For you fanatical paranormal fiction writers (you know who you are!), you’ll love the Paranormal Network, if you haven’t already found it. Ghosts, alien encounters, angelology, crop circles, spiritualism, cryptozoology, it has everything to tickle your metaphysical fancy.

So how’s that for the start of a new series? Start clicking away on those computers, and see where the sites bring you. And if you know of a good online resource, something interesting, helpful, or wacky, I’d love to hear about it. Send me a note or let me know in the comments below. I may even add it to my next list! (And I’ll add a link to your blog or Twitter feed along with it.)

Happy researching and happy writing folks.

C.T.

Ten Tips for Writers

You’ll find lists and lists online of the most important things for a writer to remember, so just add mine to the mix. I chose tips that I need to hear as well, so in writing to you all I’m also writing to myself. I struggle with many of these and need a constant reminder of them. So, like them or not, here’s the Top Ten.

1. Write–Sure, this may go without saying. But it’s easier to dream about writing than it is to actually write. Writing is a discipline and requires training, like training your body at the gym. You don’t like to work out, but you do it because it’s the only way to get in shape. See writing in the same light. Don’t just wait for inspiration, or you won’t write anything. Sit down and do it. Worry about the quality of your writing later on.

2. Edit–A great plot and compelling characters will be undone by misspellings and bad grammar. So edit like crazy. And if you don’t trust your own editing skills, find a professional editor. But find a professional. An English degree and a love for books don’t make someone an editor. But the editing process also involves taking out unnecessary parts. Rule of thumb: If you can shorten a passage, do so. Avoid unnecessary, distracting, or repetitive description. Are adverbs always necessary? Often they’re not. Oh yes, and there are times when sentence fragments are appropriate. It’s up to you to find out when.

3. Learn to Read Out Loud–You assume that what you’re writing is good. But does it sound good? This is especially important for dialogue. Our written dialogue often sounds stilted, formulaic, and awkward. Read it to yourself. Or better yet, get a friend to read one part, and you read the other. Make it like a screen test or a play rehearsal.

4. Know Your Limitations–We’ve all heard the old adage, “Write what you know.” You love romance, you read romance, you know romance novels better than anyone, so why write historical fiction? Stick with what you know. Now, this doesn’t mean you can’t someday write historical fiction, but you’ll have to get to know the genre in the same way that you know romance.

5. Research–Get the details correct. It’s like in so many Hollywood action movies, where the hero slips a magazine into his gun and starts firing, without ever chambering a round! Investigate everything in your story, from clothing to buildings to food choices. If you don’t catch an error in a detail, one of your readers certainly will. Do your research. In fact, you might find that you enjoy doing it.

6. Read–Yes, it seems obvious. But to many aspiring writers, it isn’t. Read classic literature, best-selling novels, poems, plays, non-fiction, essays, anything and everything. You’re reading not just for pleasure or information, but to see how other authors do it, how they craft characters and navigate plots and paint scenes with words. By reading, you’re learning from experts.

7. Avoid Clichés–When everything you write “shines like the sun” or “runs like a bat out of hell” or “fights with the strength of ten men,” then your stuff is full of clichés. This goes for characters as well. (See my post on character clichés for more on this. I struggle mightily with this one too.) Boxing priests, reluctant vampires, cynical but tender-hearted bad boys, etc. Kill them off, all of them.

8. Trust Others–I’ll admit that this one is tough for me. My stories are my babies, and I hesitate to let anyone get too close to them. But I have to. I had my wife read the opening chapter of a novel I was once working on, and she finished it, completely confused. I realized that if I couldn’t get through to her, then I wouldn’t be getting through to most other people. Everyone needs feedback.

9. Be Your Own Best Salesman/Saleswoman–Even if you get an agent and a publisher to publish your book the traditional way, odds are that you’ll still be doing quite a bit of the marketing yourself. Unless your last name is Koontz, Clancy, Steele, or Meyer, your book won’t be getting a million-dollar advertising budget. So trust that you’ve written a good story, a story that people want to read, and get out there and tell people. Facebook, Twitter, blogs, websites, all of them and more. Tell people why your book matters, and don’t stop.

10. Try to Enjoy It–Writing and publishing a book isn’t easy. You spend countless hours in front of a computer screen or scribbling into notepads. You get frustrated, you get writer’s block, you pitch it all and start over, and eventually, you expose yourself to the public. But guess what? You can still love it. Isn’t that why you started writing in the first place? Love it like you love your family members: They can get you mad, and while it’s not always easy to love them, you still do. It’s essential to who you are.

No, this isn’t an exhaustive list, and maybe I’ll add a tip or two now and then. If you’d like, leave a comment about any tips that you think are important. I’d love to hear them.

C.T.

Writers doing research

It’s near and dear to my heart, the subject of research, and for all writers, no matter their genre, good research is a necessity. I have an MLS degree and am trained in academic librarianship, and I teach academic research and information literacy, so to that point, I’m thinking of starting a page on this blog devoted to curious/interesting/useful online research tools.

It’s a thought still in its infancy, so you’ll have to bear with me. But I’ll tweet anything interesting that I find or that I’m presently using, and I’d welcome any suggestions. All of the good ones, in time, will (ideally) make it onto the research page.

That is all. Go back to writing.