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Sample Lessons - Creative Writing with Jonathan Rogers
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Introduction
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Writing Through the Wardrobe
Lesson 1: Narration and Point of View - Sample -
Lesson 2: Inversion and Juxtaposition, Characterization - Sample1 Step
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Writing With HobbitsLesson 1: Scene-Setting and the Inciting Incident2 Steps
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Lesson 2: Dialogue2 Steps
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Writing Through To Kill A MockingbirdLesson 1: First-Person Narration2 Steps
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Lesson 2: In-Scene, Out-of-Scene2 Steps
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Writing with the Bog OwlLesson 1: Setting and Originality2 Steps
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Lesson 3: Bayard, Subjectivity, Objectivity2 Steps
Lesson 4,
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Writing Exercise
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It is not unusual for external, non-character-driven events to happen to the characters in a story. But a good story can’t be driven only by external events. It’s not enough to have things “happen to” your characters. Your reader always wants to know what the characters are going to do—how they will exert their wills, pursue their desires, alleviate their fears. That is the essence of character-driven action.
For this lesson’s writing exercise, you will practice mixing external action with character-driven action. Write a scene in which two characters experience the same external event, but act very differently in response to that event.