As long as the character is developed, I can "enter their mind/thoughts" quite easily. It's a skill that comes in handy for dialogue and dialect especially but loads more too in the way of elements.
I *think*, I'm not sure, but I think I'm best at characterization.
I might just be going by what I like best, but I think that's what it is.
When I think of a story, obviously, I think of the plot and stuff, but I spend more time thinking about my characters, and what they would do in different situations. I'm a character writer. I focus alot on my characters.
Characterization, I guess. I don't really know but I love making people up. Then, once they're a bit vivid in my mind, I'd make them do things so I guess conflict's second.
Always act like a duck on water; appear calm and unruffled, but paddle like the devil underneath.
I think I'm better at discribing things. Which includes sight, touch, sounds, etc. Which sometimes I get over exagerated and over discribe everything. So maybe that's a flaw??
I once got 100% for a ballad that my teacher couldn't make head nor tail of because it had beautiful imagery . In short anything but plot. I have several really good character/theme/setting stories, but none of them have half-decent plots.
Wise man never plays leapfrog with unicorn - Tibetan Proverb
Dialogue because I'm not so good at anything else! HA Plus, I really like to listen when people talk, and I feel as thought I have a grasp on how different personalities and people display themselves by the way they talk. ~Classy
"Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?” -John 11:25-26
There are two kinds of folks who sit around thinking about how to kill people: psychopaths and mystery writers. I'm the kind that pays better. ~Rick Castle
Personally I use "Dialogue" because it's an easy motor to most of my plot lines and character development. Also, I think it's one of my strong points and I've always thought it a good thing to stick to my strong points, so my personal opinion is that, definitely in my own case, Dialogue's the strongest element.
No, it's not that you didn't succeed. You accomplished a lot, but, if you want to touch people, don't concentrate so much on rhyme and metre. Think more about what you want to say instead of how you're saying it. — LCDR Geordi La Forge
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