Show Notes for Episode 55: Answering Your Questions: Volume Two
Holly and I (host Rebecca) dive back into the many pages of questions that we’ve gotten (and continue to get) from our listeners while preparing another two parter on a different topic.
Today we look at choosing a specific POV and issues with limitations as well as how to describe creatures to readers without exposition or lengthy bits of wordage. These two questions were a lot of fun for us both to answer.
So join us in this week’s episode and if you have a question for us join us in the forums at HollysWritingClasses.com and get to typing!
After the episode: Have something to say? A question to ask? Jump into the FREE forums at HollysWritingClasses.com (no purchase or ownership of courses necessary) and share with us.
Share, rate and subscribe for weekly episodes! Good reviews help us find more writers like us!
Mentioned in the Podcast
- Write Page-Turning Scenes (affiliate link – supports the podcast)
LINKS
- AIARWIP FORUM
- AIARWIP Ko-Fi (support the podcast!)
- All the ways to support AIARWIP
- AIARWIP Redbubble
- AIARWIP Facebook
- AIARWIP Instagram
- AIARWIP Twitter
- AIARWIP Website
- HollysWritingClasses
- Holly’s Ko-Fi (support Holly!)
- Holly’s Personal Website
- Holly’s Blog
- Rebecca’s Website
Credits: Producer – Rebecca Galardo. Sponsor – Holly’sWritingClasses.com. Intro written by Holly Lisle and performed by Mark Hermann. Our podcast is 100% free and sponsored only by Holly’s Writing Classes.
Thank you so much for answering my question! It really clarified a lot, and I like how illustrations can be a bonus for readers. Focusing on feelings instead of precise description is also great for my muse. I love drawing the creatures I envision, but my muse prefers the freedom to change things around to keep things interesting. 😀 So I often have many different interpretations of the same creature.
The POV question was also very helpful. I always wonder which POV would best suit a given story, and your answer helped me understand each one’s strength better. 🙂
It was a fantastic question, really. A lot of people struggle with description.