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Are You A Fiction Or Non-Fiction Writer?

By: Sebastian Marders

Creative writing generally refers to any form of original writing that exhibits the inner thoughts and feelings of a writer, either as a pass-time or as a way of living, with a touch of illusion mixed into the reality.

Most of the time, it is also used to refer to literature, together with its branches, forms, and aspects. Unlike technical writing, creative writing knows no boundaries because the topics are freely chosen by the writer, depending on his interests, target readers, and medium of expression.

As a writer, he can write as many articles as he wants because he has a lot of possible topics to develop. There are no rules to follow - no word limits, no time frames, no criteria; you can write as many words as you would like, as many chapters as you can, without the threat of being rejected.

There are two general forms of creative writing. The first thing that comes into the minds of most people upon hearing the words creative writing is a form of writing where the characters, setting, and action is based purely in imagination.

The most popular example of this is fiction writing. This includes a wide variety of novels, compilations, prose and poetry. This form is more geared towards providing entertainment to readers. With the various styles and techniques of the growing number of fiction writers, the number of people engaged in fiction writing and reading increases at an impressive rate.

Short stories, tales, and parables are compiled in a vast number of books. Novels are serialized in countless volumes. Poems are brought together in myriads of collections.

How many times have you been wowed by the heart warming and touching scenes of movies or television programs that leave you teary eyed at the end of the show? How many books have you purchased from the bookstore that later on leave you attached and stuck in one corner, trying to finish reading as your attention was held captive from the introduction to the epilogue of the story? These are all products of the writer's extensive imagination and creativity.

Another branch of creative writing, most might not agree with, is non-fiction. Though primarily, non-fiction refers to any account of a subject presented as fact or reality, there still are some other aspects that make it fall under creative writing.

Take for example documentary films and reports. These usually are presented as statements of fact since they are based on real accounts of a subject. However, with the meddling of the writer's ideas or opinions towards the better outcome and more effective conveyance of the subject, creative writing enters the scene.

Other examples are magazine articles, letters, and other forms of self-expression. All of these may be based from real happenings, real people, and real places but for the sake of aesthetic appeal and literary values, these can be expressed in a more creative way, thus making them products of creative writing, too.

With all these options available, it is up to the individual to deceide for himself what form of writing will make him the happiest. This may just be the best thing about the craft in the modern era - the sky really is the limit.

Sebastian Marders loves writing about a variety of things and sharing the website that inspires each piece with his readers. If you would like to browse through some great free written fiction, including the featured short story, Dirty Blue Widgets, then please visit.

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