Fiction writing Essays

  • Reflective Essay on Fiction Writing

    769 Words  | 2 Pages

    Reflective Essay on Fiction Writing I’ll be honest. I was worried about writing fiction up until I realized that fiction is just nonfiction exaggerated, nonfiction with a wider allowance for artistic merit, and nonfiction with the gaps filled in. And fiction doesn’t have to be as imaginative, in a fantasy sense, as I had thought. It’s still very real, or at least mine is. For the nonfiction essay, I wrote a string of memories, anything I could think of and that I could potentially expand

  • The Importance of Elements of Fiction in Writing Short Stories

    1065 Words  | 3 Pages

    Elements of fiction are the most important things in writing short story. Every element represents difference explanation and interpretation of what is the meanings that author want to deliver to the reader. Meaning also was trying to deliver to the reader by Dorothy Parker through Elements of fiction of short story called “A Telephone Call”. Elements of fiction itself have several major parts, there are plot, character, setting, point of view, language, tone, and style, theme, and also symbol.

  • On Writing in America: The Politics, Criticism, and Fiction of William Dean Howells

    3695 Words  | 8 Pages

    On Writing in America: The Politics, Criticism, and Fiction of William Dean Howells Upon hearing of an event which has become known as "The Haymarket Incident," a violent outbreak that involved strikers at the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company on May 4, 1886, William Dean Howells felt provoked to respond.1 Whatever personal motives this highly publicized incident sparked in Howells, who was successful novelist and influential critic of the literature and social issues of his time, the strike

  • Fiction Writing

    1235 Words  | 3 Pages

    Fiction Writing I sat inhaling and exhaling the sweet sent of this unfamiliar room. As I sat on the solid cherry parquet floor with my back supported by the dusty pink wall, tears of bleakness rolled down my pale cheeks. I drew in a long breath of air in order to calm myself down. I had run up the huge spiral staircase of this huge house, in less than a minute. As adrenaline was still pumping through my body, I found a room to escape my parents' annoying bickering. Earlier, when I had thrown

  • Fiction Writing - Is There No Turning Back?

    867 Words  | 2 Pages

    Fiction Writing - Is There No Turning Back? Down a long narrow pathway, I stood there confused and frightened feeling that there was no way out. The £10 was still in my pocket but soaking wet. I shouldn't even be here. Why didn't I just listen for once? Sitting in front of the television watching Eastenders (omnibus) my mum walks through from the kitchen, "Can you please go down to the groceries for me?" Excuse me; go down the groceries right in the middle of my favourite program

  • Creative Writing: A Narrative Fiction

    644 Words  | 2 Pages

    Right after Roman said these words, a voice spoke from behind the shadows, "I know of a way to help him, but I don't plan on telling you three." Immediately, the three sides turned their heads to see what appeared to be a black silhouette emerging from the darkness behind the group. What the sides thought they saw was no silhouette, but a new side, one they haven't seen or met before. The new side that stood before them was dressed in all black, from head to toe. Smudged black eyeshadow covered

  • Treasure Hunt in Egypt- Fiction Writing

    963 Words  | 2 Pages

    It all began with a man named Rick who was a treasure hunter. He would travel all over Egypt to find gold and jewels in various historical temples. This time he was in Karnak searching in the Temple of Amun-Ra, the dwelling of the sun god. Rick assembled a selective team to help him on his exhibition. They were in search of the Book of Amun-Ra, also known as the Book of the Living. This book was the opposite of the Book of the Dead, instead of giving those who have died life to continue into the

  • Creative Writing: Jotaro's Narrative Fiction

    656 Words  | 2 Pages

    "I'm never gonna dance again, guilty feet have got no rhythm!" Singing loudly and out of tune, a rude awakening to Jotaro who was still enjoying a dream he was going to write out later. Walking from his room, grogy in pajama pants alone, Jotaro found Joseph in the kitchen, making breakfast. He can see it was a simple breakfast; just bacon, eggs and toast. Jotaro stood in the doorway to the kitchen, watching Joseph sing dramatically as he made a face on a plate with the food. "Now that your gone

  • Women Need a Place to Write in Woolf's Essay, A Room of One's Own

    541 Words  | 2 Pages

    A room of one’s own is based in the format of a lecture at a women’s college on the topic of women and fiction. Woolf bases her essay around the thesis that “women need money and a room of their own in order to write fiction”. Characters such as Mary Beton, Mary Carmichael, and Mary Seton are used as imaginary narrators, whom of which are grappling the same topic as Woolf. The narrator uses Oxbridge and various libraries to reflect on different educational experiences available to men and women.

  • Historical Fiction: The Educative Powerhouse of 20th Century

    1785 Words  | 4 Pages

    Historical fiction seems to be the most significant of these genres, however, as it teaches people of the past to educate them for a better future. Men learn from their past mistakes, and when man’s mistakes are told as tales, one is more inclined to listen if the story entertains him. This is why historical fiction contributes the most to the combined literary effort of the twentieth century. Ernest Hemingway was one of the authors who contributed to this flood of historical fiction during

  • Journalism, Real Creativity and Reactionary Creativity

    869 Words  | 2 Pages

    Journalism, Real Creativity and Reactionary Creativity On January 1, 2002 I had finally finished authoring my latest fiction book, which is titled The Great Teen Fruit War, A 1960’ Novel. The work was quite a Promethean task to complete, having 162,000 words on 468 pages presented in 46 Chapters. When I read my final draft, I think I felt a little like Victor Frankenstein must have when he first fully viewed the monster that he had created. The Great Teen Fruit War is set in 1960’ Hammonton

  • Alyssa

    706 Words  | 2 Pages

    me ever since I was younger. She always had her nose in a book, and being her little brother I tried to emulate her thirst for words. My sister is my role model, in my everyday life, but I also have to look up to her when it comes to reading and writing. She is able to manipulate words to conform a complete and truly beautiful thought. Alyssa has impacted my literacy and language development through her passion for reading and her ever-growing imagination, which has lead to the way I read, write

  • Pornography In John Bechdel's Fun Home

    1785 Words  | 4 Pages

    Narratives are a popular genre throughout literature and within this genre one can find graphic narratives. Sometimes there are images of activities or body parts that some people would think of as explicit. The narrative Fun Home includes s a few images that some may believe to be inappropriate and even pornographic. Since, this narrative contains these images, some jump to the conclusion that the book is pornography, which is not true. Per Google, pornography is defined as “printed or visual

  • Incandescent Artist

    796 Words  | 2 Pages

    “The mind of an artist, in order to achieve the prodigious effort of freeing whole and entire work that is in him [no particular gender], must be incandescent” (Woolf 56). It is important for fiction writers to remain anonymous in every way possible, even androgynous. The reason for this is to keep their work free of bias in general, and the opposite sex. This includes keeping their opinions hidden, so that they can get their overall point across. It allows the audience an opportunity to form their

  • American History: Colonial Period, Revolutionary Time Period and The Post-Modernism Period

    665 Words  | 2 Pages

    of post modernism. Post modernism is the current way way of writing. These time periods range from 1607-current. We have read and learned the ways of writing from 400 years in the matter of nine months. We truly need more time to truly understand all of these ways of writing. The colonial time period was the first time period that we had to joy of learning about this year. This time period took place from 1607-1764. This style of writing was very interesting because it pretty much started when the

  • Holding Onto Reality

    982 Words  | 2 Pages

    just that: grabs on to the realest, most relatable ideas about the Information Age, and refuses to let go. I have had a difficult time talking and writing about Borgmann. For our class listserv responses, I felt like I had nothing to comment on. In our class discussions, I had a hard time figuring out what everyone was talking about. Borgmann’s writing style (and diction and even content) is clear and straightforward, and it leaves me at a loss for anything to interpret or explicate. Borgmann writes

  • Analysis Of Thug Matrimony By Wahida Clark

    1008 Words  | 3 Pages

    The “Thug” series written by Wahida Clark is urban fiction, and the novels from the series have become bestsellers (New York Times and Essence). This series has taken the world by storm, and is full of sex, drugs, murder, and drama, and has set the world of urban fiction on fire. Clark has been called “Queen of Thug Life Fiction” since writing the novels. Clark calls her novels Thug Love Fiction, which is one of the subgenres of urban fiction. While reading the “Thug” novels, you may either know

  • Analysis Of Henry Rider Haggard About Fiction

    830 Words  | 2 Pages

    Henry Rider Haggard’s piece titled “About Fiction” exemplifies the major concerns of writing in the 19th century, mainly the production of unsatisfactory literature due to the lack of realism. This evaluation will focus on his view, argument, major ideas and political engagement. Haggard use of language throughout is critical towards fiction written in styles that are not English Fiction, even referring to readers of sub-par literature as “like a diseased ostrich.”(pg173)Through using pictorial

  • Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own: Women and Fiction

    1151 Words  | 3 Pages

    the terms, women and fiction. Woolf divided this thought into three categories: what women are like throughout history, women and the fiction they write, and women and the fiction written about them. When one thinks of women and fiction, what they think of; Woolf tried to answer this question through the discovery of the female within literature in her writing. Virginia Woolf Throughout her life Virginia Woolf became increasingly interested in the topic of women and fiction, which is highly reflected

  • Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own

    1324 Words  | 3 Pages

    women writers by first exploring the nature of women and fiction, and then by incorporating notions of androgyny and individuality as it exists in a woman's experience as writer. Woolf's first assertion is that women are spatially hindered in creative life. "A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction," Woolf writes, "and that as you will see, leaves the great problem of the true nature of women. . .and fiction unresolved" (4). What Woolf seems to say is that being female