my1stpost said:Don't write about boyfriend/girlfriend stuff because everybody else writes about it and it's just crap.
Don't write about every other typical teenage topic like drugs, gangs, leaving home, love/romance etc.
And don't end your creative off with something like "and i woke up from my dream bla bla bla"
Great notes there, Thanks for that.Absolutezero said:Some general notes:
Cliche is out, unusual is in.
Try writing from a unique perspective. Don't do a child's voice unless you can balance it with sophisticated writing.
Pick an unusual, but not stupid, location. It will help create interest.
Don't do anything to do with angsty teenages. Or driving around in cars, picking up girls.
Don't make your protagonist die if you are writing in first person.
Do NOT do the journey of the HSC. Markers are sick of it. It is not original or creative.
Don't use excessive swearing.
Stories about terrorist plots to assisinate the prime minister have 'apparently' been shown to police. For this reason I'd avoid them.
Try something out of the box. If you come up with it in five minutes, chances are 60 000 year 12 students out there also did.
Write from experience, but never just tell a real life story. Chances are your life isn't that interesting (a general statement).
Don't make up highly obscure facts if you know they're are not true. Unless your plot revolves around this 'alternate universe' idea.
Definitely. I was reading past HSC Creatives and they always have something that is ironic or funny or a pun that is to contrast to what is said at the beginning. You need some surprising. Of course, that is difficult.Absolutezero said:One of the hardest parts of creative writing is finding an appropriate ending. To find a twist that is orginal is exceedingly difficult. I recommend you end will a realisation of something (an epiphany if you will) by the character. Something that wouldn't be the most obvious answer.
An quick example would be Frost's poem "The road not taken"
"I took the one less travelled by/ And that has made all the difference"
Another would be The Gift, a song/story by Velvet Underground. Basically, a boy sends himself in a box to his girlfriends house across the country.
"... [she] plunged the long blade through the middle of the package, through the masking tape, through the cardboard, through the cushioning and (thud) right through the center of Waldo Jeffers head, which split slightly and caused little rhythmic arcs of red to pulsate gently in the morning sun"