My name is Kevin Montique and I am an upcoming author who mainly works in the realm of fiction. My writing tends to use a lot of imagery to help readers paint the scene I describe in vivid details. I myself am a very visual person. As an author, visualizing the scene is key for me when writing as it can further ignite my inspiration, which I find tends to strengthen my stories. As far as genres in fiction, I like to use fantasy elements in a realistic setting so some of my stories will have protagonists with special powers while still being in a world familiar to readers.
When it comes to digital writing, my writing changes depending on the format I plan to write in. And the main reason causing that is I care more about the design/aesthetics than usual in this genre of writing. Typically when writing I tend to lose myself in the process and won't come out of that zone unless I hit a snag, finish what I'm writing, or get fatigued. With digital writing, it's hard to stay in that zone due to my mind constantly thinking about how things will translate on the monitor. How will the audience see this when reading my work, and will it come out good? Will doing this create the effect for readers I'm seeking? Am I making the process of reading simple, hard, or tedious? These are the sort of questions that travel my brain when digitally writing, and they can occasionally create problems by making me want to do something that I may not know how to, just to achieve a certain effect for my work. But those problems are more so fun challenges that push me to want to learn more in order to enhance my writing for the better. As a writer, I accept these challenges in hopes that it'll develop me into the author I've always viewed myself as, and I hope that comes across in my work.
Is this what death is like? Go to YouTube
Here's my Ebook The Vessel
Here's my EL3 Review Quing's Quest: The Death of Videogames
Here's my Twine Story IUAG & The Undying Ember