Home > Work > Wonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction
1 " ...your antagonist is a hero in their own mind... p.192 "
― Jeff VanderMeer , Wonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction
2 " Agency in fiction has to exist in the context of the worldview. Otherwise agency is not just meaningless or unconvincing, it is often laughable. Unfortunately, agency is often thoughtlessly given to characters who would not have it in reality. p.189 "
3 " Think about how backstory fits the tale you're trying to tell... p.195 "
4 " Imbuing fiction with a life that extends beyond the last word is in some ways the goal: the ending that goes beyond the ending in the reader's mind, so invested are they in the story. "
5 " The world is filled with people who have too much imagination solely because the people around them have too little. "
6 " Sometimes insight into character and dialogue means being silent. "
7 " If we start off on a journey toward Mordor without our bearings, tagging along with people we know nothing about and care nothing about, we might decide to go AWOL. "
8 " WRITE WHAT’S RANDOM. Some writers require chaos to find inspiration. You might be someone who needs a jolt to the system—who needs to tell yourself, on seeing a duck wearing a sun hat, being led on a leash by a child, “I need to write about that duck, that hat, that child.” You don’t require anything more than surprise and the unexpected moment for inspiration. That sudden shock—that introduction of chaos into the world—serves as the catalyst back into writing what’s interesting, personal, or uncomfortable. "
9 " Some people can stick to one type of writing and be perfectly happy. I’m not one of them. Once I knew that, and once I stopped trying to pigeonhole myself for the sake of a career and originality and beating Georg Büchner, I didn’t suffer any significant writer’s block again. The lesson I take from that experience is that the way to beat writer’s block is to get to know yourself better as a writer, and once you know yourself, accept yourself. You’re not Shakespeare or Joyce or Gertrude Stein or Theodore Sturgeon or Joseph Mitchell or Tillie Olsen or Fran Lebowitz or James Redfield. For better or worse, you’re you. "
10 " As much as possible, allow yourself to be a raw nerve end that internalizes whatever is experienced in life. "
11 " Be fiercely protective of your imagination, and nurture it. "
12 " I’m not an answering machine—I don’t have a message for you! What I have for you is a story. "