Frankly, I don’t know how writers ever survived before the
internet. I suppose they must have gone outside more.
Now, there’s definitely no substitute for real life
experience, getting out there and seeing the world for yourself, meeting
interesting people, even doing the job of your protagonist.
But it’s not always possible to do so for every single
setting and every single character, let alone job.
And for that, we have the internet. Here are some of my
favourite resources from the intarwebs, I hope you find them useful.
Plot
Perhaps unsurprisingly, I find the Novel Factory plotting
method the most useful (having come up with it and all that) and I couldn’t
imagine the tedium of trying to plot my novel without using the software: http://www.novel-software.com/
http://www.novel-software.com/novelwritingroadmap.aspx
- Again, I’m going to be unashamedly biased and point out this step-by-step
roadmap / formula / thing I’ve developed to help me successfully plot my
novels.
Character
http://faceresearch.org/
- create a character portrait by merging the faces of lots of random people.
Unfortunately a limitation is the interesting fact that the more you average
people’s faces, the more attractive they get, and that it’s face only – no
body.
http://whatsin-yourpocket.tumblr.com/
- this person takes pictures of what’s in people’s pockets – great for
inspiration for more in-depth character development.
http://www.markmenjivar.com//projects/you_are_what_you_eat
- this photographer carried out a project taking pictures of the contents of
people’s fridges – fascinating insight into character!
Location
http://www.rightmove.co.uk/
- I often use Rightmove to find out more about where my characters live. It’s
fantastic because you can often get blueprints, as well as pictures of the
outside, inside and garden of real people’s homes. The only downside is that
people tend to make their houses presentable, which is somewhat
unrepresentative of reality.
http://www.eplans.com/
- fantastic resource of blueprints and computer generated pictures.
https://www.thehouseplanshop.com
– more blueprints, including some commercial buildings – great for getting the
nuts and bolts right, especially if you’re plotting a mystery, where the
details are critical.
General
http://www.flickr.com/
- there are thousands, probably hundreds of thousands of amateur photographers
on flickr, and searching their database can give you better quality imagery
than simply searching google images.
http://www.deviantart.com/
- deviant art is a great resource of amazing artwork that can be used to
inspire and build depth for character and location.
http://www.google.com/imghp
- Google images. Pictures of whatever you want. From the intarwebs.
Thanks for list!
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