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Writing The Ultimate Historical Romantic Drama: Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Society Film Review & Writing Lessons

Posted on September 28, 2018 Written by Pinar Tarhan

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society
Image via Evensi.

Juliet Ashton (Lily James) is a young writer slowly recovering from the emotional trauma of World War II with the help of her career, her best friend/publisher Sydney (Matthew Goode), and her handsome officer boyfriend Mark (Glen Powell).

Farmer Dawsey (Michiel Huisman) runs a book club called Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Society (aff. link) with his neighbors, which they had to start to get out of trouble during the German occupation of the island.

When Juliet receives a letter from Dawsey asking where he can find a copy of one of her books, the two start corresponding and bond over their mutual love of reading. Juliet is excited about the book club, and she decides to write an article about them.

Much to Sydney’s objections (due to her publicity tour), Juliet hops on a boat to meet the bunch. While she is at first greeted with enthusiasm, one of the members turns hostile when she expresses intent for writing the article.

The more she gets to know the members, the more she bonds with them. And after she learns about the fate of one of the members, she sets out to find out what exactly happened to her and where she is with some help from Mark. Her growing feelings for Dawsey will further complicate and enrich her situation…

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Thoughts on the film

Based on the novel (aff. link) by Mary Ann Schaffer and Annie Barrows, Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society is the ultimate delightful historical romantic drama. Filled with rich, relatable, and likable characters; realistic and humane conflicts; and a sweet love story with a gorgeous geographical background, it is a film to be enjoyed again and again.

It is also not without comedy. The casting is also perfect, and one of my favorite characters is Isola (Katherine Parkinson – The IT Crowd, Humans–aff.link)- the friendly, warm and romantic bestie Juliet makes in Guernsey. She is the friend we all wish we had.

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Writing Lessons and Inspiration from the film Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Society

  • When writing a story that is close to your heart, you need it to finish it, even if it is just for yourself. You need the closure and the therapy.
  • When you get the bug for a story, follow that bug.
  • Sometimes the story you set out to write won’t be the one you end up writing, and that is okay. Sometimes you will need to follow the story wherever it leads you.
  • You either need to live an exciting life or know interesting people with different life stories and varying personalities. Preferably both.
  • Your first book might not sell very much and that is okay.
  • It is important to have people in your corner who believe in you, your writing and who will stand by you during all stages of your career. But it does help if one of those people is your best friend and/or your publisher.
  • It is okay to listen to your heart when it comes to what story you are writing, but it definitely helps you have resources when you are writing that story.
  • Writing a story when everything is fresh in your memory helps you write faster and with more raw emotion. (You can always edit later.)
  • Book clubs rock.
  • Traveling inspires all writers, so is following your heart and going off your plans.
  • Love, romantic or otherwise, inspires us immensely.

 

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What are your takeaways from this lovely film?

 

Filed Under: Fictional Writers: Writer Characters in Movies, TV Series and Books, Inspiration and Motivation Tagged With: glen powell, Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Society, Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society, guernsey literary and potato peel society film, katherine parkinson, lily james, Mary Ann Schaffer Annie Barrows, michiel huisman, motivation for writers, movies with writer characters, writer characters, writing fiction, writing inspiration

Favorite Cartoons and Images on Writing: The Funny and The Inspiring

Posted on July 6, 2013 Written by Pinar Tarhan

How’s your Saturday going so far? Since its the weekend, I wanted to cheer you up  by sharing some of the writing-related images that made me smile or just laugh out loud. Some of them also fueled me to move my butt and get to work. I’m sure you can guess which one(s).

Enjoy! And please don’t neglect to share your thoughts and stuff you like.

P.S. You can check out my Plain Old Writing Fun: My Favorite Cartoons on Writing post for my funny writing cartoons.

 

seo writer joke
I think I first found this through the Facebook page of PAGE International Screenwriting Awards.
inspirational words on writing
Image via WOW’s Facebook page.

 OK, this also goes for re-reading your previous stories. Getting hung up on old stories keeps us from writing new ones. And while I love creating a new story (it’s a great rush!), I also find it hard to say goodbye to the ones I spent so much time with.

 

novels adapted into movies
Image via PAGE International Screenwriting Awards.

 

how to become a better writer

 

 

query letter, writing query letters
Image via boscafelife.wordpress.com.

 I used this cartoon in  my  Why I Like Querying: 7 Reasons Querying Is Good for Writers post, but it is just too fun not to fun here. Wayne E. Pollard is terrific with writing cartoons, so you might just head to his site for more.

Image via elissabassist.com.
Image via elissabassist.com.
Image via mymthos.tumblr.com
Image via mymthos.tumblr.com

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Inspiration and Motivation, Writing Tagged With: funny cartoons about writers, funny images on writing, funny writing cartoons, motivation for writers, wayne e. pollard, writing, writing inspiration

Inspiration: Johnny B. Truant’s How To Be Legendary

Posted on November 5, 2012 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Normal? What do you mean normal?

image via rogerogreen.com

“There are two types of people: those who think they are normal, and those who know there’s no such thing.”

I love this quote, and recently I heard it again from Jeff Daniels’ character in the series Newsroom. I couldn’t get into the show, but I’m happy it reminded me of the quote.

I hate the term normal, because it is relative, invented by societies and cultures, and tons of people just kept trying to match up to it, without even questioning it. And the lot that questions it often gives up without trying enough, or believing that they can change anything.

The most common “normal” seems to be having a good job in a respectable corporation, climbing up the ladder while paying off a mortgage, having 2 kids and making a marriage work. Of course as time passes by, people work more and more, see those kids less, expect more from them (since they will face even a harsher competition for the best corporate jobs), have less fun and the vicious cycle continues. They do treat themselves to expensive stuff and some luxury holidays if they can afford it, without ever being able to appreciate it.

Bleak, right? I never wanted a corporate job. I never wanted a full-time job. I never believed marriage or having kids is a must. You want to get married? Fine. You want to have kids? Fine. But there is nothing wrong with doing things the way you want to.

And because I don’t want these things, I have been considered to be different/quirky/strange/eccentric by my friends and most of my family. They always believed that it is a temporary phase, just like I was expected to stop caring about the music that plays in the background. To get a stable job. To have a panicking biological clock because I’m past 25. What the hell?

I don’t fit in, because I have different dreams and plans. I aim to make it big as a writer, and even if I don’t, I’ll keep working as a writer. I’ll continue freelancing, writing those novels and screenplays, traveling and having the time of my life doing these. Of course this can be a lonely road since people around you either think you are crazy, or appreciate your guts and wish they could join you, but they won’t. It’s safer to stick to “normal” and “expected.”

So you do feel the need to read/meet people who feel the same way about things. People who do their own thing, and lead the life they want to lead. Johnny B. Truant is one of them.

On Johnny

I first came across his writing while reading Copyblogger where he guest-posts, but frankly, I could never really relate until I read his “Why Your Blog Is Going Nowhere (and the Truth about Getting Traffic).” on Jon Morrow’s boostblogtraffic.

Now don’t think that it is going to be the same old post. Just because everybody has discovered the draw of the “how-not-to-succeed/what-you-are-doing-wrong” sort of posts, don’t think his going to be similar. For one, he is blunt and uncensored. He also gives a lot of tough love, taking into consideration that it might just not be applying the wrong strategy, but you might also suck as a writer. Ouch.

But he does give advice that will work (if you apply them) whatever your problems might be. Now, I never let a good post go to waste-meaning I don’t just read and forget about it. I check the links, and see if the author is taking his own advice. I also read the posts the links take me to, because I always end up finding valuable resources and ideas for my writing. There’s also the benefit of reading more, which in turn makes you a more informed, varied and prolific writer.

So I did read the blog post he linked to, the one about how he wrote and published a novel on Kindle in 29 days, and the uncensored one (the other one he linked to,) and I decided, again, that he knew what he was talking about, and that I liked how he was talking about it. So I downloaded his free e-book How To Be Legendary.

HOW TO BE LEGENDARY – Review and Quotes

Image via johnnybtruant.com.

 

His analogies about Matrix got to be the second thing I liked about the series, the first one being Keanu Reeves. I might be alone in this, but I wasn’t remotely into the world where Neo wasn’t a slave to- it was just as bleak and lifeless and full of weird characters as the first one he didn’t feel he belonged to.

But the enslaving world in the analogy is the “normal” life as we are expected to live, and the liberating path is the one we choose for ourselves. It might end up being “normal” but it is important that we chose it willingly, and will be happy that we chose it to the last second we have on earth.

It is honest, fun and in-your-face.

“You’ll get old and then you’ll die, so there’s no point in hedging your biggest bets. It’s truly now or never.”

Not only doesn’t he book reinvent the wheel, but he openly admits to it. He admits his own procrastination and the period where he did things for the wrong reasons, and how he made them right.

You aren’t probably going to get any epiphanies reading the book, but it is a great motivator if you are struggling to put in the work for what you want to do, or presenting that work to the outside world. It will also remind you of how legendary people actually got to be legendary, and that not everyone will put in the work they need to.

So the book is helpful, though not everyone might feel that way. It helps, and will help, only if you are ready to get going. Like I completed this post in the midst of a major cold I’m fighting off. And yeah, it is nice to feel on track instead of feeling depressed over the obstacles/excuses (aka the lack of energy/lack of time/lack of inspiration…)

“The ‘I don’t have time’ excuse is the lamest excuse to ever exist. It makes me angry, because it is so fragrantly bullshit.”

Pay extra attention to what he says about trying to make things perfect. You can find the book here.

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Filed Under: E-Book Reviews Tagged With: freelance writing, how to be legendary, inspiration, inspiration for writers, johnny b. truant, jon morrow, motivation for writers

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