kristan hoffman

kristanhoffman.com

Original fiction (including web series Twenty-Somewhere)
and blog by writer (and future author) Kristan Hoffman

Riley impromptu photoshoot 023

More

Kristan also blogs at

Just Between Us
The Dieline
daily inkstar
iluv2read

Advertisements

Powered By

WordPress

Featured Fiction

Weekly episodes about three twenty-something friends trying to navigate their lives

All Content by Category

Search

 

Subscribe

  Add to Your Reader
  LiveJournal Feed

Archives

Copyright

All words and images on this site are the creation and property of Kristan Hoffman unless otherwise credited.

Currently Reading

Randomized Love

Lots of reading

Saturday March 8, 2008 - filed Filed under: Reading/Writing

The Witch of PortobelloThis past week has been chock-full of reading, and I’ve loved every minute of it. First I finished The Witch of Portobello, another wonderful Paulo Coelho book. I’ve realized that his style is essentially “fable meets self-help book,” and I like it. I don’t think it’s something I’d attempt to emulate within my own style, but imitating it might make a good exercise.

The ZahirLast week I finished his book The Zahir, which is my favorite of his so far. The characters are very rich and engaging, and their plights are more “normal” than in the other two books. But The Witch of Portobello had a better (twist!) ending, like The Alchemist.

The rest of my reading consisted of excerpts from the 10 finalists for the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Contest.

Continue reading →

The four obstacles

Saturday February 2, 2008 - filed Filed under: Personal, Reading/Writing

The Alchemist by Paulo CoelhoI just finished reading The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho (in English, not the original Portuguese). I had a hard time getting into its style, which some people compare to that of Saint-ExupĂ©ry’s The Little Prince, but I think the big difference is… about 180 pages. You can get away with being crisp (in terms of sentence structure and character development) and overtly allegorical in a short work, but in a novel, it gets kind of weird. At least, it did for me.

That being said, I definitely appreciate the morals that Coelho presents. Particularly as a young, struggling writer, I found a lot to take away. Basically, Coelho says that following one’s dreams is a person’s only obligation in life, and that doing so contributes to the happiness and positivity of the world. However, not everyone has the courage to try. Why? Because of the four obstacles.

Continue reading →