Categories
-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- Check It Out – Throughout the Website | ScribblerWorks News on Fiction – Bad Times
- Some Spiritual Thoughts, Poetry, and Reviews | ScribblerWorks News on Books – Cordelia’s Honor
- Adding the ScribblerWorks Logo | ScribblerWorks News on Non-Fiction – What Will Harry Do?
- Christmas Cards, Poetry, & Reviews | ScribblerWorks News on Movies – Hitch
- Blake Snyder, Reviews, and Poetry | ScribblerWorks News on Writing Books – Save the Cat!
Tags
- Action/Adventure
- Actors Co-op
- Alternate History
- Arcana
- Batman
- Biography
- Christianity
- Chuck Dixon
- Colleen Doran
- Comics
- DC Comics
- Doubtful
- Fantasy
- Harry Potter
- Historical Fiction
- History
- Horror
- Humor
- IDW
- Inklings
- Inspiration
- Ireland
- Joss Whedon
- Marianne Savell
- Memory Sorrow & Thorn
- Movies
- Mystery
- Peter S. Beagle
- Politics
- Psychology
- Recommend
- Reporting
- Roger Zelazny
- Romance
- Scholarship
- Science Fiction
- Shakespeare
- Sherlock Holmes
- Soundtracks
- Superheroes
- Television Series
- Traditional Folk
- True Blue Tops
- Wonder Woman
- Young Adult
Meta
Tag Archives: Doubtful
Writing Books – Story Engineering
by Larry Brooks I really wanted to like this book. It seemed to me that Brooks has a pretty useful theory/method for approaching the writing process. My problem is that his presentation of that method is difficult to wade through. … Continue reading
Writing Books – How To Write a Screenplay in 3 Days
by Jackie Lynn Young Mr. Young subtitles his book “The Marathon Method.” The main title itself is enticing to any screenwriter hoping to speed up the amount of time it takes to work on a script. But unfortunately, the title … Continue reading
Posted in Writing Books
Tagged Doubtful, Movies
Comments Off on Writing Books – How To Write a Screenplay in 3 Days
Fiction – Looking For The King
by David C. Downing Sometimes you run across a work that sits in a limbo spot: it is neither so bad that you give it a “thumbs down,” nor so good that you feel comfortable recommending it. For me, Downing’s … Continue reading