Skip to content

Which one are you making?

David Gane
David Gane

Some people eat fast food. It's quick and convenient, but it also isn’t filling.

Some like avant-garde food. It challenges conventions, is unique, and is meant to be savoured.

And some like a good home-cooked meal. Traditional, flavourful, and filled with memories. It is made with love and care.

We can like eating one or two or all, but only like cooking or two. Do you know which one you’re cooking?

On Writing

David Gane Twitter

Co-writer of the Shepherd and Wolfe young adult mysteries, the internationally award-winning series, and teacher of storytelling and screenwriting.

Comments


Related Posts

Members Public

Responses help your reader

If your audience locks into the emotional journey of your main character, then they’ll know how to respond when your character responds.  If a stranger approaches and the main character seems relaxed, then the audience will be comfortable as well. If they seem threatened, there’ll be tension.  Your

Members Public

A Novel is like a party

“For me, a novel is like a party. Anybody who wants to join in can join in, and those who wish to leave can do so whenever they want.” — Haruki Murakami

Members Public

What's it for?

Seth Godin recently asked two questions in a blog post: "Who's it for? What's it for?" When writing, do you know who it's for? It doesn't have to be an audience with a capital "A." It doesn't have to be for any audience; it can be for just you. But