Hey, there! If any of you are interested in reading our review on Millie Maven, a fantasy trilogy written to be an analogy of Christianity, check out write2ignite.com! We posted our review here, and we’d love it if you’d check it out. It’s our first guest blogging opportunity, and there will be quite a few…
Author: Mara Scudder
Writing Templates
If you need help determining some of the core aspects of your story, these templates are for you! From determining your protagonist’s desire, fear, and flaw to making the most sympathetic villain ever, these free, printable templates can help dive in to what actually drives your story. Looking for a theme? Puzzled as to what…
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse: The Perfect Mentor-Apprentice Relationship
We’ve all seen it a hundred times before. The grizzled old mentor is called out of retirement at last. Hardened and tough from years of experience, he is extremely doubtful and perhaps even adamantly against training someone as inexperienced and arrogant as our young protagonist. But full of energy and will, the stubborn apprentice wins…
Falcon and the Winter Soldier: “Do Better, Senator. Do Better.”
There were certain aspects of good storytelling that Disney+’s Falcon and the Winter Soldier did well. The villain, Karli, is sympathetic yet also evil. Karli is confused, hurt, and willing to hurt others if it will supposedly make things right. The series resolved several open threads from both protagonists’ character arcs, including Bucky’s struggle over…
Merida from Brave: It’s All Right To Let Your Characters Be Wrong
Vindication is not only an action, but a very strong emotion. For decades, screenwriters and authors have utilized this tool to pull in their viewers (or readers) and encourage them to cheer for their protagonists. We hear story after story of a brave hero who’s misunderstood and underestimated by his world or society, and only…
The Story Fortress is Live!
We are thrilled to announce that the Story Fortress is live! From DuckTales to Wednesday Addams to Newsies, we’re launching with a wide variety of articles focusing on case studies from every genre. We have nine articles up all ready, and we have many, many more in the making. We’ll post here weekly, as well…
Johnny Tremain Vs. Fitz: How to Make Arrogant Characters Relatable
Johnny Tremain is one of my (Mara’s) very favorite pieces of fiction. Ester Forbes crafted a character that captured my interest and sympathy from the very first page and didn’t let go until the very last. This is ironic because Johnny is, at least in the beginning, one of the most arrogant characters I have…
Keeper of the Lost Cities: When You Miss Your Character’s Epiphany
We’ve all had an epiphany. That moment when you realize what you’ve been missing this entire time, and begin to set out to fix it. Those moments can be some of the most powerful, emotional moments of our entire lives. And that is what makes them so important in stories. The epiphany is the moment…
Ani from The Goose Girl: How Your Characters Can Gain Confidence the Right Way
Princess Anidori-Kiladra Talianna Isilee is one of those characters who deeply lacks confidence. We’ve all seen those types of characters before. You start a movie or flip open a book and find yourself faced with the same old self conscious protagonist who feels woefully inadequate. As she goes on and on about how she isn’t…
DuckTales: How to Write Awesome Humor Without Sacrificing Your Tone
If you’re like me, you tend to struggle with incorporating humor in novels that are meant to be serious. Your story takes your protagonist to her limit. You find the two things she cares for most, and make her pick one. You watch her struggle through the painful process of rooting out a flaw that…