Hidden away at in the middle of a blog post by Brandon Sanderson, he said that the lectures from his creative writing class were all online.
Say what?
So, I went to check them out. And sure enough, there they were. Each lecture is broken into multiple videos separated more-or-less by topic. Many of the videos also have the notes for the class. In a word, it's awesome! (Thanks to WriteAboutDragons for doing all the hard work.)
Want to know how Brandon plots his books? Go here.
How about advice on participating in a writers group? Got that.
Creating sympathetic characters. Meeting agents. World building. Fight scenes. And more and more. In fact, there are over 15 hours of lectures all online for your learning pleasure.
And if you're like me and don't want to click the next lecture each time, I've got you covered.
I created one, massive playlist that will start at the beginning and play all the way through to the end. Of course, you can start anywhere in the playlist and it will happily load the next video and the next. So you can sit back and enjoy for as long as you want.
You can find the playlist here.
Personally, I'm going through the lectures as I prepare for Nano next month. I'm just past the class where he talks about creating characters and I'm going through the exercises. If your a video learner, and like Brandon's style of writing, you might like his classes, too.
Go ahead and give them a try. It's free.
* They say a picture is worth a thousand words--this picture surely is. It's titled Secrets by Sarah Horrigan. I got sucked into all the wonderful images on her photo stream, it's well worth your time. In fact, I may contact her and see if she'll let me do a whole blog post on her work. It's great.
5 comments:
Wow! What a find! And thank you for linking them together. I will definitely check this out. Thanks for the post.
Thanks for passing this along.
Thank you for posting about this! What a great way to prep for nano.
I'm glad you like the playlist. I also have a playlist with Dan Wells' presentation on 7-point plot structure.
You can find it here: http://bit.ly/QoKMzj
Thanks for that awesome posting. Useful, and it saved MUCH time! :-)
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