Writing Bundle: 31 Ways to Describe a Goat + Conflict Dialogue: A guide to writing more flavorful descriptions and angrier dialogue
Book Details
Author(s)Wanda Winters
ISBN / ASINB01EGAAOXM
ISBN-13978B01EGAAOX9
Sales Rank1,101,363
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Buy this writing bundle and save 25%.
BOOK 1:
Problem: You start describing a character and get writer's block.
Solution: You flip to a random page of 31 Ways to Describe a Goat and get inspired.
This book is not about a goat. It’s about making your life easier.
You will get writer's block writing descriptions and this book will ease that suffering. You will write faster than ever. Faster writing means more books. More books means more money. Don’t fear the blank page. Dominate it.
BOOK 2:
“Any scene where two characters are talking about a third is a crock of shit.” – David Mamet
Don’t write a crock of shit. Write drama. The secret to drama is conflict. Inside you will find 2,273 examples of conflict dialogue from Oscar-winning movies like The Departed, and Emmy-winning TV shows like Fargo.
EXAMPLES:
Who the f--k are you? “I'm the guy who does his job, you must be the other guy.”
You guarding the fence, or are you guarding him?
You are rude and uncouth and presumptuous. "Why can’t you just answer the question?"
You're a shit cop, you know that right? "Well I'm getting promoted next month so how bad can I be?"
That guy is the worst actor I've ever seen in my life. The blood coming out of his ear was the most honest thing he's done so far.
BOOK 1:
31 Ways to Describe a Goat
Problem: You start describing a character and get writer's block.
Solution: You flip to a random page of 31 Ways to Describe a Goat and get inspired.
This book is not about a goat. It’s about making your life easier.
You will get writer's block writing descriptions and this book will ease that suffering. You will write faster than ever. Faster writing means more books. More books means more money. Don’t fear the blank page. Dominate it.
BOOK 2:
Conflict Dialogue
“Any scene where two characters are talking about a third is a crock of shit.” – David Mamet
Don’t write a crock of shit. Write drama. The secret to drama is conflict. Inside you will find 2,273 examples of conflict dialogue from Oscar-winning movies like The Departed, and Emmy-winning TV shows like Fargo.
EXAMPLES:
Who the f--k are you? “I'm the guy who does his job, you must be the other guy.”
You guarding the fence, or are you guarding him?
You are rude and uncouth and presumptuous. "Why can’t you just answer the question?"
You're a shit cop, you know that right? "Well I'm getting promoted next month so how bad can I be?"
That guy is the worst actor I've ever seen in my life. The blood coming out of his ear was the most honest thing he's done so far.

