2343 readersIs having a good idea for a middle grade novel enough in publishing? What I'm trying to find out is at what point is a manuscript considered to be too much work? What does "too much work" mean from an editor's perspective? Do you ever encounter situations in which your love of a
1517 readersTo stand at the edge of the sea, to sense the ebb and flow of the tides, to feel the breath of a mist moving over a great salt marsh, to watch the flight of shore birds that have swept up and down the surf lines of the continents for untold thousands of year, to
2769 readersA guest by Everett Bogue of Far Beyond The Stars
There are millions of distractions that the modern day writer has to put up with in order to get their ideas out there. Twitter, Facebook, your feed reader, they’re all conspiring to distract you from getting your writing down on the page.
Did you know, when you’re
3831 readers
5 Things You Should Know About Writing
by James Mace
Believe in yourself! When one has a passion, they should pursue it. More often than not, when we are passionate about something, it is because we are good at it. Those who have a knack for storytelling should not let their tales be confined to the corners
3156 readers
Writing is serious business. I think we can all agree on that. Sure, there are times when the words flow from your mind to your fingers (to the keyboard to the screen) like water effortlessly flowing downstream. However, I am sure that we all have had our fair share of moments when writing feels like
2675 readersYou want to focus. Perhaps you made it your one word of the year. Focus, focus, focus. This is the year to focus and get things done. Except… the world seems to be conspiring to keep your mind splattered. Emails, pings, tweets, Facebook updates, blog posts, newsletters, text messages, phone calls, breaking news, advertising. Except…
1542 readers
Illustrator Chet Phillips created a quiz to test your knowledge of literary pets.
The quiz promotes Phillips' two card collections from the "Literary Pets" series. Each card holds a portrait of a famous literary titan morphed into cat or dog form. Just look at J.R.R. Tolkien's canine transformation (embedded above) into G.R.R. Tolkien. One quiz
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13458 readersOn Tuesday, November 1, a couple hundred thousand people around the world will participate in National Novel Writing Month, which, despite its intuitive name, I’ll explain here: The goal is to write a 50,000-word novel (that’s about 175 manuscript pages, based on a count of approximately 300 words per page) in thirty days.
That’s about 1,700
4204 readersTherese here. Today’s guest is returning author and WU friend Kristina McMorris. Kristina’s second novel, a dramatic WWII tale called Bridge of Scarlet Leaves, released just yesterday to high acclaim. “[Bridge of Scarlet Leaves] gracefully blossoms through swift prose and rich characters…this gripping story about two ‘brothers’ in arms and a young woman caught in
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2018 readersCreative writers are divided into two camps: those who outline and those who don’t: the ones who write straight on and on. Is it wrong to outline? Which method brings the best results?
Original Post: To Outline or Not to Outline, That is the Question
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