
Your adventure
Live your adventure. /
If it exceeds your limits /
Grow within it.
.
.
#haiku #poem #poetry #graduation #westhighschool #photo #adventure #grow #limits #knoxville #davidebooker #june #wednesday #2021

Your adventure
Live your adventure. /
If it exceeds your limits /
Grow within it.
.
.
#haiku #poem #poetry #graduation #westhighschool #photo #adventure #grow #limits #knoxville #davidebooker #june #wednesday #2021
Filed under 2021, haiku, photo, photo by David E. Booker, Poetry by David E. Booker

Road
Adventure begins /
with an open heart and a /
mind light as a cloud.
.
.
#haiku #poem #poetry #poemoftheday #photooftheday #road #adventure #cloud #sky #heart #mind #oldnorthknoxville #davidebooker #may #friday #2021
HOW TO MAP OUT YOUR HERO’S ADVENTURE IN YOUR MANUSCRIPT
How do the most successful authors of our time construct their stories? If you read them, and if you also read some ancient myths, you will begin to see parallels. You will feel smacked upside the head with parallels. You’ll realize that the top authors of today use storytelling techniques that writers used back when plans were being drawn up for the pyramids.
An excellent book about ancient myths is The Hero With a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell. The title says it all. Across cultures and generations, some variation of a hero figures into every beloved story. And the typical story is about an individual who goes on a quest or a journey. By the end, the individual becomes a hero. This is called the Hero’s Adventure.
The Hero’s Adventure is the most archetypal story of all because it’s the basis for more novels than any other kind of story. Novels of all different genres, from romances to thrillers to sci-fi, are based on the Hero’s Adventure.
So what is the Hero’s Adventure? You know it already, and you may even have elements of it in the story you’re working on. But I suspect you haven’t yet methodically and thoroughly appropriated it for yourself.
The Hero’s Adventure Basic Recipe
The person who accepts the challenge and prevails is elevated to a special position, somewhere above human, somewhere below god. She is the hero.
For examples of this in literature: http://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/how-to-map-out-your-heros-adventure-in-your-manuscript?et_mid=688770&rid=239626420
Filed under writing tip, Writing Tip Wednesday, writing tips
4 Things Science Fiction Needs to Bring Back | Cracked.com.
Sample:
It’s tempting to look around at today’s literary scene, with its Twilight and its Fifty Shades of Grey, and wonder if we shouldn’t just flush the whole goddamn concept of written language down the toilet — maybe start again with some sort of hybrid colorwheel/odor system for communicating thoughts. Strangely, the one genre thriving in the swamp of modern literature seems to be science fiction. It’s kind of appropriate, actually: All of our crazy high technology has made publishing and distributing books about crazy high technology much more approachable and widespread than ever. But even the best works could stand to learn a little something from the past, so here are a few things that I miss about old science fiction, and would like to see come back.
Read more: http://www.cracked.com/blog/4-things-science-fiction-needs-to-bring-back/#ixzz2whMw9XfP
Filed under science fiction, writing tip, writing tips