Arcs - Tumblr Posts

1 year ago

EXCITING NEWS! ^_^

I have two very exciting things to share with you all! First of all, since it’s the last week of Indie April, my debut novel, The Tengu And The Angel, is now on sale at a reduced price until May 1st! If you haven’t already read my angsty gay friends to lovers romance, and you’d like to grab yourself a copy, you can do so on Amazon! I’m linking the book’s Goodreads page below. so that you can be redirected to the right Amazon site for your country/territory. Oh, and on the subject of my book, I have another announcement about it coming up, but I can’t tell you right now. If you want to be among the first to know about it, you can now sign up to my mailing list! That’s right, Alina Capella has an official mailing list now, and if you sign up to it, you’ll be the first to know everything about my books, before I post anything on social media, including future releases! You’ll also get first dibs on ARCs, and some other fun surprises, like access to some of the notes I made while writing, and in future, maybe even some giveaways! If you’d like to sign up for my reading list, DM me with your email! I won’t flood your inbox with irrelevant crap—I’ll only send you emails if I have something to tell you, because face it, people sign up to mailing lists because they wanna hear about books, not the author’s personal life, am I right? And I promise not to give your email, or anything else you share with me, to anyone without your knowledge and consent, and if at any point, you want to be removed from my mailing list, all you have to do is tell me, and I’ll remove you, no questions asked!

DM me if you want to join my mailing list, and if you’d like to pick up a copy of my book, the link is below! ^^

The Tengu And The Angel
Goodreads
Kunio is eighteen years old and running away from home,…

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1 year ago

Big Announcement! ^^

The first draft of Night Of The Blue Moon is now complete! My sapphic fantasy about Greek mythology and adult magical girls is now 1/3 of the way to being published (I’ll need to write a second and third draft, obviously), but the first draft is complete! Hooray for being able to vomit all of my raw ideas onto paper! ^^

If you want to read the entire first chapter of the first draft for free, DM me with your email to get added to my mailing list! I send newsletters whenever I have something big to announce, like a sale, and the releases of my books, plus, people on my mailing list get first dibs on my ARCs! I won’t share your email with anyone else, and if you ever want out, all you have to do is let me know.

But anyway, the first draft is complete, and it shouldn’t be too much longer now until I’m ready to publish! ^^


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1 year ago

If you signed up for an ARC of SAILS OF BLACK AND BLOOD: THE REVENGE OF CAPTAIN VESSIA you should check your email inboxes!

ARCS ARE LANDING ON YOUR SHORES NOW!!!

If You Signed Up For An ARC Of SAILS OF BLACK AND BLOOD: THE REVENGE OF CAPTAIN VESSIA You Should Check

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9 years ago
The Hardest Part of Writing Good Character Arcs—and How You Can Make It Look Easy! - Helping Writers Become Authors
You ready for this? The number one mistake authors make with character arcs is that they try to remake their character into someone new. Find out why!

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4 years ago

I'm developing a story in my head and I'm thinking about writing it down. The thing is, I have it in my head like a tv show, each episode something new happens and it has a theme around it (It will be a detective story, each episode there is a new crime and new things revolve around it) but if I want to write it down. The chapters will be so short and it will be hard to keep up with it. Do you have any idea to basically how to turn a tv show (in my head) to a novel with decent chapters. TIA!

Turning Episodic Ideas (Like a TV Show) Into a Novel

Guide: All About Story Arcs in Television and Novels

In order to tackle this question, I think it would be helpful if we dive into the concept of “arcs” and what they mean in television vs what they mean in books. Because as much as it may seem so at times, TV dramas are almost never only episodic. Each episode ties to the rest of the episodes through various types of story arcs.

What is a Story Arc? 

Story arcs are a series of events centered around a particular conflict or theme that plays out from the beginning to end of a specified time period. In TV, that time period may be an episode or a few episodes, a season, or the entire series. In books, that period may be a part/act, book, or series. Both books and television juggle these different kinds of arcs simultaneously.

Story Arcs in Television

Episode arcs are the story arcs that play out from the beginning of a TV show episode to its end. So, in a detective show, it would be whatever crime they’re solving in that episode. The crime is introduced at the beginning of the episode, investigated throughout the episode, and solved by the end of the episode.

Season arcs are the story arcs that play out from the beginning of a season to the end of the season. In many TV dramas, this conflict revolves around a “big bad” that will be defeated by the end of the season. The “big bad” is typically introduced at the end of the previous season, is battled throughout the season, and is defeated by the end of the season.

Series arcs are the story arcs that play out from the beginning of a series to the end of the series. This is the conflict at the heart of the show, that is introduced at the beginning, plays out throughout the entire series, and is resolved at the end. In speculative fiction shows like The X-Files, Once Upon a Time, or Lost, this conflict revolves around the mythology behind the story. Such as the alien conspiracy Mulder and Scully are constantly up against in The X-Files, the curses and battle between light and dark in Once Upon a Time, and the Jacob vs The Man in Black/light vs dark conflict that tie together the fates of the characters in Lost. In contemporary drama, such as family dramas or crime dramas, the series arc may be based on the overall story’s mythology (such as with This is Us or Blindspot) or it may be situation/character based, as in something like Designated Survivor.

Character arcs are the arcs that center around the internal conflict of each main character. 

Story Arcs in Novels

Section arcs are conflicts that are specific to a section of the book, such as a part or an act. In a heist story, the section arc of part one might revolve around the conflict related to planning the heist and recruiting the crew. In Leigh Bardugo’s Six of Crows, for example, it was breaking Mattias Helvar out of Hellgate because they needed him for the bigger heist. Not all books have section arcs.

Story arcs are what we call the arc of the whole book/story (book one, book two, book three, etc.) that is introduced at the beginning of the book, plays out through the book, and is resolved by the end of the book.

Series arcs, in books just as in TV, are the story arcs that play out from the beginning of the series to the end of the series. In George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire/Game of Thrones series, the series arc was the conflict of getting “the rightful ruler” on the Iron Throne.

Character arcs (just as in television) are the arcs that center around the internal conflict of each main character.

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Turning Episodic Ideas Into a Novel

So, now that we’ve had a recap of different kinds of story arcs, we can tackle the heart of your question, which is how to turn episode-like ideas into a story with chapters.

The answer is this: you need to figure out a story arc to tie all of these “episodes” into a bigger picture, and if you want this book to be a series of books, you’ll want a series arc, too. And, whether you do a stand alone or a series, you’ll need to figure out some internal conflicts for your main characters so you can have character arcs, too.

These arcs are what take your individual “episodes” and ties them into a bigger story that spans the book from beginning to end. You could choose to make the story arc and your protagonist’s character arc one and the same if you want something more character-centric. Or, you might choose a “big bad” who is somehow behind all of the episodic conflicts, even if indirectly. You might even go with a situational conflict, like cleaning up crime in a particular part of the city and/or overthrowing a corrupt police chief.

I hope this helps!

ETA: golden-apple said: Or making it an anthology of short stories

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Have a question? My inbox is always open, but make sure to check my FAQ and post master lists first to see if I’ve already answered a similar question. :)


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11 months ago

Still here 👋👋👋👋

As a writer, I wanna check if the TRV fandom is alive or not

Reblog if you are a part of the Tokyo revengers fandom and consume TR content


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