Riley Adams's Blog, page 67
January 19, 2019
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 48,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
Have you visited the WKB lately? Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox! Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.
Business / Miscellaneous
Every Commercial Writer is His or Her Own Small Business: by John Gilstrap @killzoneauthors
Industry Notes: Europa Editions’ New Imprint; Chicago Press’ Buys Council Oak: @Porter_Anderson
Freedom And Long Term Business Thinking: @yarostarak @thecreativepenn
Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous
China’s OpenBook ‘Reading X’ Conference: Reader Engagement and Content Development: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
London Book Fair Names Its 2019 ‘Author of the Day’ Lineup @Porter_Anderson @holly_bourneYA @pubperspectives
Joyce Carol Oates Is Named the 2019 Jerusalem Prize Winner: @Porter_Anderson @JoyceCarolOates
Creativity and Inspiration / Goal setting
A Prescription for Writers: 3 Steps to Achieving Your Writing Goals: by Beth Ricanati @WritersDigest
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers
Why We (Still) Love Crime and Comic Book Heroes: @megfuzzle @CrimeReads
Read Like a Writer: Second Person Narrative Voice in Claudia Rankine’s “Citizen: An American Lyric”: @charlottedonlon @tspoetry
Four Places to Start with the Work of Ray Bradbury: @Ian_SMC @tordotcom
Tired of Series? Try These 10 Standalone Fantasy Novels: @coolcurrybooks @tordotcom
When Technology Betrays Us: 5 Classic Thrillers: @ezekiel_boone @CrimeReads
14 Literary Podcasts That Aren’t Hosted by Three White Guys: by Frances Yackel @ElectricLit
The Crime Fiction of Galway: by Paul French @CrimeReads
Beyond Crazy Rich Asians: A Look at Humorous Fiction: by Terri Frank @DIYMFA
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Fitting in Writing
If I Have Time to Brush My Teeth, I Have Time to Write: @GwenHuber
Creativity and Inspiration / Success
Why The More Successful Writers Fail The Most: @Bang2write
The 10-Step Checklist to Writing an Above-Average Novel: @KMWeiland
Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life
What It’s Like to Be a Writer with Anxiety: @losapala
An Incomplete List of the Non-Book Things You Can Get at the Library: @Kristen_Arnett @lithub
Writing: 5 Places to Write When You’re Fed Up with Working at Home: @helenahalme @IndieAuthorALLI
A Librarian’s Resolutions for the New Year : @Kristen_Arnett @lithub
On Writerly Jealousy: @egabbert @parisreview
Build Your Writing Community After You’ve Published in a Lit Mag: by Rachel Thompson
The Book Lover’s Guide to Volunteering: by Katie Yee @lithub
Transformative Journaling and Why it’s Different from Regular Journaling: @cbramkamp
How to Restore Your Love of Writing: @colleen_m_story
Words You Need To Redefine as a Writer: @TheLeighShulman @WomenWriters
What 1 Writer learned about writing two novels at the same time: by Diane Tibert
Artists Should Think Twice Before ‘Tidying Up’: @austinkleon
“What I Wish I’d Known When I Started Writing”: @jamesscottbell
The Novelist Who Works as a “Seasonal Associate” at Amazon: by Heike Geissler @lithub
Genres / Horror
8 Conventions For Horror Writers in 2019: @GiveMeYourTeeth
Genres / Memoir
Writing through Trauma: Two Published Memoirists Share Their Experiences with Writing and Finishing Their Books: @writeabook
Genres / Mystery
Crime Fiction Writing: Using Lands and Grooves to Solve Murders: @LeeLofland
Crime Fiction: Murders That Take Place at the Office: @mkinberg
Crime Fiction: When Characters Have (Perhaps Unjustified) Faith in the Accused: @mkinberg
Genres / Science Fiction
SF Novels That Get Special Relativity All Wrong: @jamesdnicoll @tordotcom
Genres / Screenwriting
7 Ways Star Wars Resistance Can Up the Ante Going Forward: @use_theforce_em @tordotcom
Screenwriting: Great Scene: “Rocky”: How budget issues helped to create the memorable ice rink scene: @GoIntoTheStory
Promo / Ads
Clever Ways Authors Are Using BookBub Ads: @CarlynAtBookBub @DavidGaughran
Promo / Book Descriptions and Copywriting
Employ These Powerful Verbs in Your Leadership or Author Bio: @LisaTener
Promo / Book Reviews
Ultimate List of the Best Book Review Blogs: @DaveChesson
5 Tough Tips for Surviving (and Triumphing Over) Bad Book Reviews: @austencats @WritersDigest
Promo / Connecting with Readers
How to Keep Your Audience Happy: @kikimojo
Promo / Miscellaneous
9 Ways to Share Your Favorite Books With Fans: by Audrey Derobert @BookBub
How To Psychologically Enhance Your Author Bio: @DaveChesson
How to Market Your Book: Beginners’ Self-Publishing Salon: @JyotsnaR @StonehamPress @IndieAuthorALLI
9 Book Marketing Tips Even Introverts Can Use: @Bookgal
5 No Good Reasons Authors Resist Marketing: @SmartAuthors @BadRedheadMedia
Promo / Platforms
How to Use Top Book Blogs to Build Your Author Brand: @DaveChesson @BookWorksNYC
Promo / Speaking
Tips for Public Speaking: @YvonneOrtega1 @EdieMelson
Promo / Video
Before You Shoot Your Next Video: 3 Tips for Speaking on Camera: @gigirosenberg
Promo / Websites
Create Your Author/ Artist Website: @JAZarins @WritersRumpus
Make Your Children’s Writing Website Focused: @KarenCV
Publishing / Miscellaneous
A Publisher Might Approach YOU: Four Stupid Mistakes to Avoid: @KJKabza @sfwa
UK Publishers’ 2018 Diversity Report: ‘More Needs To Be Done’: @Porter_Anderson
How to Get Included in a Short Story Anthology: @TimOMaraAuthor @CareerAuthors
Richard Charkin: ‘Try Another Word’: by Richard Charkin @pubperspectives
New Translated YA Book Shortlist from GLLI; New Translators’ Grants From SCBWI: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Blockchain in Publishing: Modeling the Future at Access Copyright: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Why (and When) Word Count Matters: @victoria_grif7
Publishing / News / Amazon
‘They Own the System’: Amazon Rewrites Book Industry by Marching Into Publishing: @JeffreyT1 @WSJ
Publishing / News / Data
American Publishers’ StatShot Report: Double-Digit Trade Growth in November: @pubperspectives @Porter_Anderson
Publishing / News / International Publishing
“Having attracted Nobel Prize-winner Wole Soyinka to the Pula Book Fair, Zagreb’s Ivan Sršen talks of promise in Croatia’s young editors”: @oliviasnaije @pubperspectives
De Marque Is French Canada’s Largest Library Ebook Lender: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Author Organizations Allege Copyright Infringement by the Internet Archive: @Porter_Anderson @mariraz
RightsTech’s Paul Sweeting on Europe’s Summit for Publishing and ‘Related Sectors’: @Porter_Anderson @themediawonk
Publishing / Options / Self-Publishing
Resource for Writers: A Self-Publishing Podcast: @ReedsyHQ @TheIWSG
Publishing / Options / Traditional Publishing / Pitches
How to Pitch a Picture Book: Breaking Into a Growing, Competitive Market: @lara_perkins @WritersDigest
Publishing / Options / Traditional Publishing / Querying
How to query a literary agent: @Catkcho @CBGBooks
Comp Titles in a Query and How to Use Them: @Kid_Lit
Publishing / Process / Book Design
The Joys of Designing a Debut Writer’s Book: @sarahmay_w @lithub
Publishing / Process / Legalities
Copyright Tips for Songs and Recipes: @SusanSpann
Writing Craft / Characters / Development
Catastrophe Theory and Characters: @DonMaass @WriterUnboxed
Taking Character Relationships to the Next Level: @AngelaAckerman @mythcreants
Writing Craft / Dialogue
How to Write Dialogue: 8 Tips and Exercises: @ReedsyHQ
Writing Craft / Diversity
Tackling The “Struggle Novel” as an Outsider: from Writing With Color
Writing Craft / Drafts
Famous Rules for Writers – Heinlein’s Rules -How many drafts are too many? @Peter_Rey_
Writing Craft / Miscellaneous
7 Crucial Things to Know Before You Start Writing a Book: @LisaTener
Getting the Details Right: @davidfarland
How Online Confessional Columns Are Reinventing the Diary Book: by Luna Adler @ElectricLit
How to Spot Bad Writing Advice: 6 Red Flags: by Bucket Siler
When Is It Appropriate to Dispel the Mystery? by Chris Winkle @mythcreants
Tips for Writing Sibling Relationships: from Just a Writing Aid
Want to Improve Your Writing? Change Your Thinking: @Janice_Hardy
Writing Craft / POV
Create Emotional Connections With Readers Using Deep Point Of View: @LisaHallWilson
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Naming
How to Give Your Characters Unforgettable Names: @EmmanuelNataf @ReedsyHQ @ElectricLit
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting
5 Uses for Subplots (and a Giveaway for a Marvelous Resource for Writers): @scribesworld
How to Structure Your Subplot by @ScribesWorld +Giveaway of Writing Resource:
How to Plan a Story in Scenes: 5 Steps: @nownovel
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Research
Erroneous Code in Fiction: @KJHarrowick @DanKoboldt
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Story Concept
The Secret to Writing a Great Book: Start With a Great Idea: @JeffGoins
Writing Craft / Special Needs
Writing With—And About—Invisible Disabilities: @TeacherPatti @WomenWriters
Writing Craft / Subtext
Subtext for Writers: What Lies Beneath: @SarahSallyHamer @EdieMelson
Writing Craft / Word Crafting
Subtlety in Word Choices: @FaeRowen
What is anaphora and how can you use it in fiction writing? @LouiseHarnby
Writing Tools / Books
6 Must-read Craft Books for Genre Fiction Writers: @DanKoboldt @DonMaass @JaneFriedman
Writing Tools / Resources
100 Best Writing Websites: 2019 Edition: @danasitar @thewritelife
10 Sites with Literary Agent Advice & Resources: @WritersDigest @JessZafarris
The Top Writing Links From Last Week Are On Twitterific:
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The post Twitterific Writing Links appeared first on Elizabeth Spann Craig.
January 17, 2019
Your “Easy As Pie” Guide to Subplots + Giveaway (Part 2 of 3)
by H.R. D’Costa, @scribesworld
Ah, subplots.
Once you get a handle on them, you’ll solve a huge problem.
You’ll be able to get your novel to the right length—without stretching your main plot too thin.
And while that’s a big benefit, it’s not the only one. Subplots can jazz up your story in multiple ways. We talked about that in Part 1 of this series.
Speaking of…
…here’s a quick overview of each part in this “easy as pie” guide to subplots.
In Part 1, we covered 5 uses for subplots.
In Part 2, we’ll cover how to structure your subplot—plus the golden rule to follow regarding subplots. (You’re reading Part 2 right now.)
In Part 3 (forthcoming), we’ll cover how to weave subplots into your story as well as conduct a subplot “safety check.”
Note: These subplot tips have been adapted from my writing guide Sparkling Story Drafts , which will help you write cleaner rough drafts, reduce your revision time, and get a crazy-good story onto the marketplace—faster. To learn how you could win a paperback copy, see the end of this post.
And now—fresh from the oven; mmmm!—today’s batch of tips…
How to Structure Your Subplot
Good news: the structure of your subplot doesn’t have to be extensive.
After all, it’s a subplot!
Structuring it should be fairly easy. First think about the story structure commonly found in main plots, and adapt it as you see fit. (This will usually entail some kind of “reduction.”)
If structuring the main plot is still a hazy area for you, consult this article on the essential plot points in a script outline. (Rest assured, these plot points work for novels, too!)
If you’re writing a cozy mystery, you might also find Elizabeth’s master outline to be helpful to work from. You can find it here.
While we’re on the topic of outlines…if you’re a “plotter” who outlines your story before you write, you’re probably totally onboard with sketching out the beats of your subplot in advance.
If you’re a “pantser,” who writes by the seat of your pants, without an outline, then sketching out your subplot in advance might make you feel uncomfortable. It might take away from your fun. In that case, use these tips retroactively, to evaluate the subplots in your rough draft.
Okay, with that plotter vs. pantser caveat out of the way, let’s get back to basic guidelines. At the very least, you’ll need three plot points for your subplot:
One to establish the subplot.
One to develop the subplot.
One to resolve the subplot.
To get a subplot worksheet that’ll help you keep track of your subplot plot points (plus more!), sign up here.
When you’re structuring your subplot (especially how you resolve it), there’s something you need to keep at the back of your mind…
The Golden Rule to Follow with Regard to Subplots
Remember how, in Part 1 of this series, I said that subplots provide a break from the main plot?
It’s no surprise, then, that subplots often exist parallel to the main plot, not really connecting to it.
As a result, if you’re not careful, your subplot can dangle from your story like a loose thread in a poorly made sweater.
Which means it’s going to feel extraneous.
It’s going to feel like filler.
To prevent this from happening, follow one golden rule:
Your subplot must intersect with the main plot.
Don’t just take it from me. Take it from literary agent Evan Marshall. As he explains in The Marshall Plan for Novel Writing:
The subplots and story lines that don’t work never really connect to the lead’s main story line. The reader patiently follows these threads, trusting they’ll converge at some point—but they never do…Don’t make this mistake; remember that readers assume from the very existence of a subordinate story line that it will fit somehow into the lead’s…story goal.
One word of caution: thematic intersections aren’t sufficient (even if you’re using your subplot to elucidate theme). Sorry theme aficionados :(
To truly be effective and possess the convergence that Marshall talks about, your subplot should affect the outcome of the main plot.
For example (as mentioned in Part 1 of this series), the subplot involving Kevin and Old Man Marley gives Home Alone its heart.
But this subplot does more than that.
That’s because, by rescuing Kevin from the burglars at the end of the film, Marley directly impacts the main plot.
Note: It’s usually not a good idea for your protagonist to be rescued at the end of your story. Why not? Getting rescued puts your protagonist in a passive position, which is generally undesirable. (See points #4 and #5 in this article by Michael Hauge.)
When this happens at the end of your story, it can undermine your entire climax. However, Home Alone is one of those exceptions that work.
That said, there are two structural spots when it’s usual for your protagonist to be in a passive position. One is at the inciting incident. In fact, passivity is one of its tell-tale signs.
The other is at the trough. This is my term for the setback (or series of setbacks) the protagonist encounters at the end of Act Two. (You may have heard the trough referred to as the “all is lost” or black moment.)
At the trough, your protagonist will often be stuck in a dicey situation. This is where subplots really come in handy.
Your subplot can contain the perfect resource to extricate your protagonist, so he’s free to participate in the climax.
This is a great way to create an intersection between a subplot and the main plot. Plus, because your subplot has been woven into your story from the outset (see Part 3 of this series for tips on how to do that), your protagonist’s extrication won’t seem contrived.
On the other hand, without the subplot, your protagonist’s extrication may come across as a deus ex machina—a plot device that annoys audiences to no end.
With a subplot in place, you avoid all this. (For the record, you can also avoid the dreaded deus ex machina through planting a well-timed setup.)
If creating intersections is a place where you get stuck, check out chapter 30 of Sparkling Story Drafts. I’ll walk you through examples, step by step. Don’t forget, we’re giving away copies of Sparkling Story Drafts. Details below…
Win a Paperback Copy of Sparkling Story Drafts
Three different opportunities to win—here’s opportunity #2!
For every post in this series, you have a chance to win a paperback copy of Sparkling Story Drafts ($24.99), which will help you write cleaner rough drafts, reduce your revision time, and get a crazy-good story onto the marketplace—faster.
For a chance to win today, answer this question in the comments: For you personally, what’s your biggest challenge regarding subplots?
Can’t think of anything offhand? No problem. Here are two alternate questions: (1) Has a subplot in a story ever annoyed you—and if so, why? or (2) What’s your favorite example of a subplot intersection?
Elizabeth will randomly select a winner from the comments by Wednesday, January 23.
Note: This giveaway is only open to residents of North America, South America, Europe, and the UK.
Good luck and happy writing!
Author Bio
A graduate of Brown University, H. R. D’Costa (a.k.a. HRD) almost became a lawyer. Twice. But then she realized that although she wanted to be a lawyer, she needed to be a writer. So she dedicated herself to studying films, screenplays, and novels in order to understand why some stories were gripping…while others were easy to walk away from.
Ultimately, she shared her discoveries in eight writing guides, including Sizzling Story Outlines: How to Outline Your Screenplay or Novel, Always Know “What Happens Next,” and Finish Your Rough Draft Without Freaking Out and Story Stakes: Your #1 Writing Skills Strategy to Produce a Page-Turner that Transforms Readers into Raving Fans of Your Screenplay or Novel, which one Amazon reviewer described as “a must-have in your top 10 books on writing.”
For practical, actionable writing tips designed to help you keep readers glued to your pages, visit her website scribemeetsworld.com, which is also home to the Ultimate Story Structure Worksheet (downloaded over 37,000 times by writers from around the world). Get it here.
Lattice-style pie by Dilyara Garifullina; Gold light by Maxime Valcarce
How to Structure Your Subplot by @ScribesWorld +giveaway :
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The post Your “Easy As Pie” Guide to Subplots + Giveaway (Part 2 of 3) appeared first on Elizabeth Spann Craig.
January 13, 2019
Your “Easy As Pie” Guide to Subplots + Giveaway (Part 1 of 3)
by H.R. D’Costa, @scribesworld
Have you ever tried to make a pie crust from scratch?
In my experience, when you press the dough into the pie pan, there’ll be areas where the dough is thick and knobby, almost like the hills of a tea plantation…
…and there’ll be areas where the dough is thin.
So, so thin.
Working with the main plot of your novel can be like that.
There’s only so much of it to go around.
After a certain point, if you try to extract more out of it, you’ll stretch it too thin. You’ll end up with plot points that are bland and repetitious.
Savvy writers recognize this.
They don’t try to extract more than their main plot can give.
Instead, they take a break from the main plot. Like bakers who take scraps of dough to fill in holes in a pie crust, these writers fill their pages with other material.
This is where subplots—secondary stories that are subordinate to the main plot—come in. (Sometimes, a subplot is referred to as the B-story, while the main plot is referred to as the A-story.)
Subplots are one of the best ways to get your novel to the right length, without stretching your main plot too thin.
Of course, you can’t be obvious about it. Then your subplots will feel like filler—and your readers will get bored and start skipping pages.
Not good.
However, readers will be less likely to deem your subplot a stall tactic (even though that’s exactly what it may be)—if you integrate it skillfully into your story.
That’s what this “easy as pie” guide to subplots is all about. With it, you should pick up some tips so that your subplots enhance—rather than detract from—the main plot.
The guide is divided into three parts. Below is a quick overview:
In Part 1, we’ll cover 5 uses for subplots (you’re reading Part 1 now).
In Part 2 (forthcoming), we’ll cover how to structure your subplots (plus the golden rule to follow regarding subplots).
In Part 3 (forthcoming), we’ll cover how to weave subplots into your story as well as conduct a subplot “safety check.”
Note: These subplot tips have been adapted from my writing guide Sparkling Story Drafts, which will help you write cleaner rough drafts, reduce your revision time, and get a crazy-good story onto the marketplace—faster. To learn how you could win a paperback copy, see the end of this post.
Ready? Grab a fork, and let’s dig in!
5 Uses for Subplots
If your subplot has an additional function—if it’s not just a stall tactic—then it’s more likely to feel integral to your story…
…and less likely to feel like filler.
Makes sense, right?
So now it’s time to figure out what kind of contribution you want your subplot to make.
Because subplots are flexible, you have multiple options at your disposal. Below are 5 suggestions to get you started.
Use a subplot to:
Elucidate theme or convey character arc. One of my favorite examples is from What Women Want. I love how the subplot between Nick and his daughter demonstrates how much Nick has changed.
Speaking of change…
…in a post on working with theme, Elizabeth mentions exploring “whether the victim in the book had really changed his stripes before he was murdered (as he swore he had).”
Sounds like great subplot material to me!
Increase emotional involvement by highlighting the stakes. Think of the senator’s kidnapped daughter in Silence of the Lambs.
Increase emotional involvement in a subtler fashion by gracing a story with heart. While the hijinks of Home Alone are fun, the heartwarming relationship between Kevin and Old Man Marley elevates the film into something more.
Update readers about reoccurring characters in a series. Fans of a series don’t just invest in the protagonist of the series. They also invest in the supporting cast.
A subplot can provide a great opportunity for fans to reconnect with the characters they love.
Quick tip: to create this kind of subplot, pick a series trope that involves a reoccurring character and build your subplot from there.
Conceal a clue or create red herrings and plot twists. A subplot built around a romance with a new lover yields plot twists in The Verdict, The Devil Wears Prada, and The Dark Knight Rises.
To get a subplot worksheet that conveniently lists all of these uses (plus more!), sign up here.
By the way, there’s nothing wrong with combining multiple functions under the same subplot. In fact, this approach can give your story greater depth and focus, preventing it from turning into one big sprawl.
Now that you’ve sorted out the content of your subplot, it’s time to reflect on its structure. That’s what we’ll cover in Part 2 of this subplot series. Stay tuned!
Win a Paperback Copy of Sparkling Story Drafts
Three different opportunities to win—here’s opportunity #1!
For every post in this series, you have a chance to win a paperback copy of Sparkling Story Drafts ($24.99), which will help you write cleaner rough drafts, reduce your revision time, and get a crazy-good story onto the marketplace—faster.
For a chance to win today, answer this question in the comments: Have you ever used a subplot for one of the purposes listed in this article? If not, what purpose did you use your subplot for?
Elizabeth will randomly select a winner from the comments by Wednesday, January 23.
Note: This giveaway is only open to residents of North America, South America, Europe, and the UK.
Good luck and happy writing!
Author Bio
A graduate of Brown University, H. R. D’Costa (a.k.a. HRD) almost became a lawyer. Twice. But then she realized that although she wanted to be a lawyer, she needed to be a writer. So she dedicated herself to studying films, screenplays, and novels in order to understand why some stories were gripping…while others were easy to walk away from.
Ultimately, she shared her discoveries in eight writing guides, including Sizzling Story Outlines: How to Outline Your Screenplay or Novel, Always Know “What Happens Next,” and Finish Your Rough Draft Without Freaking Out and Story Stakes: Your #1 Writing Skills Strategy to Produce a Page-Turner that Transforms Readers into Raving Fans of Your Screenplay or Novel, which one Amazon reviewer described as “a must-have in your top 10 books on writing.”
For practical, actionable writing tips designed to help you keep readers glued to your pages, visit her website scribemeetsworld.com, which is also home to the Ultimate Story Structure Worksheet (downloaded over 37,000 times by writers from around the world). Get it here.
5 Uses for Subplots from @scribesworld:
Click To Tweet
Lattice-style pie by Dilyara Garifullina; Evergreen wreath by Erwan Hesry
The post Your “Easy As Pie” Guide to Subplots + Giveaway (Part 1 of 3) appeared first on Elizabeth Spann Craig.
January 12, 2019
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 48,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
Have you visited the WKB lately? Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox! Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.
Business / Miscellaneous
Broadening your business: @HollowLandsBook
The role of the book wholesaler in the supply chain from indie authors to bookstores: @ClareFly shares her experience of a visit to @Gardners:
Pushing Ourselves in 2019:
Why Freelance Writers Must Avoid Perfectionism: @TheJohnSoares
Publishing predictions for 2019: @agentsavant @annerallen
Capstone And Earplay Partner on Children’s Titles for Alexa: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous
International Prize for Arabic Fiction Names 2019 Longlist: @Porter_Anderson
Details Announced for Germany’s Guest of Honor Program at Taipei International Book Exhibition: @Porter_Anderson
Words Without Borders January: Enter 2019 Laughing @Porter_Anderson @SusanHarrisWWB
Creativity and Inspiration / First Novels
Finished a First Novel? Do’s and Don’ts for What to do Next: @annerallen
Creativity and Inspiration / Goal setting
How to smash your 2019 writing resolution: @beprolifiko
How to SetUp Your KanBan Board to Reach Your Writing Goals in the Next 90 Days: @createastorylov
How to Make a Vision Board for 2019: @Margo_L_Dill
7 Ways to Turn Your Writing Resolutions into Realities: @Gabino_Iglesias @LitReactor
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Quotes
45 Inspiring Quotes to Become the Best Writer You Can: @WritetoDone
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers
The Moral of the Story: Aesop’s Fables: by Anthony Madrid @parisreview
The Secret Syndicate behind Nancy Drew: @anxiouscook @JSTOR_Daily
Why You Should Read The Chronicles of Narnia in Publication Order: @mari_ness @tordotcom
George R. R. Martin On His Three Favorite Books: @penguinrandom @BookTrib
6 Reasons We Still Love L.M. Montgomery’s “Anne of the Green Gables” 110 Years Later: @EmmanuelNataf @ReedsyHQ @LitReactor
Creativity and Inspiration / Miscellaneous
The positive creative impact of limits: @beprolifiko
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Fitting in Writing
How To Guard Your Writing Time: @AriMeghlen @RPoli3
Build Productive Writing Habits: How to Write More in the Time You Have: by J. J. Hanna @WritersDigest
Creating a Writing Practice that Works: @SperryEditorial @StoryGrid
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Writer’s Block
How to Actually Focus on Writing: The Dangers of Pseudo-Working: @weems503 @write_practice
20 Tips for Unsticking a Stuck Wordsmith: @PeggySueWells @EdieMelson
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Writing Quickly
10 Ways to Become a More Productive Writer: @TCKPublishing
Creativity and Inspiration / Success
Breaking Down the Strategy for Writing Success: @LiveWriteThrive
Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life
“For writers and artists, the ability to self-reinforce is more important than talent”: @SPressfield
Reducing phone time and going analog with life: @pubcoach
9 Literary Party Games for Your Brainiest Friends: by Frances Yackel @ElectricLit
How to Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Edinburgh: @AuthorVMonet @lithub
Writing Tips: 5 Ways Meditation Can Help Authors: by Ange de Lumiere @thecreativepenn
What We Can Learn from Teen Writers: by Harrison Demchick
6 Practical Ways to Grow as a Writer in 2019: @createastorylov
9 Lessons Learned from a First Attempt at NaNoWriMo: @JessZafarris @WritersDigest
How to Balance Your Writing Life with Chronic Health Problems: @_HannahHeath
Letting Go: In Writing and in Life: @DonnaGalanti
Genres / Historical
5 Considerations for Writing About Historical Figures in Fiction: by John Thorndike @WritersDigest
Genres / Mystery
How Agatha Christie hides her plot secrets in plain sight: @samjordison @GuardianBooks
Posed Bodies as an Element in Crime Fiction: @mkinberg
10 Ways to Stop Embarrassing the Hero of Your Murder Mystery: @LeeLofland
Why the Open Road Is the Perfect Setting for a Thriller: by James Anderson @SignatureReads
Mutual influence as an element in crime fiction: @mkinberg
Thoughts on Planting the Body in a Cozy Mystery:
How to Write Small Town Crime Fiction: @BryanGruley @CrimeReads
Crime Writing: Test Your Knowledge: Traffic Stops, Lights, and Officer Safety: @LeeLofland
Genres / Non-Fiction
Writing Tips: 7 Mistakes First-Time Nonfiction Authors Make: @FriendsWFibro @thecreativepenn
Genres / Short Stories
A Three-Part Flash Fiction Formula: @Aeryn_Rudel
Real Life Diagnostics: Finding Conflict in Flash Fiction: @Janice_Hardy
Promo / Ads
How an Author Doubled First-in-Series Sales Using BookBub Ads: @CarlynAtBookBub @BookBub
Promo / Connecting with Readers
How to Create an Ideal Reader Avatar to Focus Your Book Marketing: @SmartAuthors @BookWorksNYC
Promo / Miscellaneous
One Important Way You Can Help Your Book Publicist: @sharonbially @WriterUnboxed
Getting Comfortable With the New Marketing for 2019 (podcast): @cksyme
Promo / Newsletters
How To Use Your Mailing List To Increase Engagement With Facebook Posts: by Eileen Coleman @pbackwriter
Promo / Podcasts
11 Essentials and Optionals for Podcasting: by Christopher Dean @Writers_Write
Promo / Websites
How Improving Your Author Website Can Help Sell More Books: @fostertravel @JFbookman
Publishing / Miscellaneous
Industry Notes: Denmark’s UNSILO Working With BMJ; France’s Vivendi Approved To Buy Editis: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Russian Officials Pledge New Support for Independent Booksellers in 2019: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Why Doesn’t America Love the Novella? @TobiasCarroll @ElectricLit
Books, Games, Film: Choose the Next Path for Storytelling: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
So You’ve Published Your Book… Now What? by Robert Wood @standoutbooks
Publishing / News / International Publishing
Germany’s Bestselling Books of 2018: Crime, Politics, and Big Questions: @HannahSJohnson @SebastianFitzek @pubperspectives
Book Aid International 2018 Reports Biggest Year Yet, in Africa and Middle East: @Porter_Anderson @Book_Aid
Wimpy Kid’s Jeff Kenney’s new book releases in 18+ markets: @Porter_Anderson @wimpykid
Open Access: Germany’s De Gruyter Signs ‘Read and Publish’ Deal in Iowa: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Publishing / Options / Self-Publishing
5 Questions On Self-Publishing Answered: by Neil Wright @Writers_Write
Publishing / Options / Traditional Publishing
6 Tips for Working with a Literary Agent: @TCKPublishing
Inside the Agent-Author Relationship: @WritersDigest
Writing Craft / Characters / Antagonists
7 Tips On How To Make Your Antagonist More Prominent: by Erica Sunarjo @mythicscribes
Writing Craft / Characters / Emotion
5 Ways to Express Character Emotion: by T.D. Storm @DIYMFA
Finding the Emotional Core: @JoEberhardt @WriterUnboxed
Writing Craft / Dialogue
Five Ways to Edit Dialogue: @tishmartin1416
Your Ultimate Guide to Dialogue Tags and 150+ Words for ‘Said’: @ReedsyHQ
Tips for Writing Bilingual Characters: by Iron Inkpen
Writing Craft / Drafts
Switching Gears: Getting Good Ideas on Paper: @davidfarland
Why 1 Writer Loves 2nd Drafts: @VictoriaGHowell
A Faster Way to Write a First Draft: @Janice_Hardy
Writing Craft / Lessons from Books and Film
The 12 Most Gratuitous Robot Deaths in Science Fiction: by Stubby the Rocket @tordotcom
Writing Craft / Miscellaneous
Tips for Your Novel’s Climax: @Lindasclare
To Epilogue… or Not: @ZaraAltair @ProWritingAid
The 10 Rules of Writing Large Casts of Characters: @KMWeiland
Discovery Writing: 2 Tripwires and a Pitfall: @SeptCFawkes
Using Fiction Writing Techniques to Enhance Your Creative Nonfiction: @elawilliams_ @DIYMFA
On Autobiographical Fiction: @WritersCramp1 @LitReactor
Writing Craft / Pacing
Writing a Page-Turner: @valerie_francis @StoryGrid
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting
What Should be in Act Three? @HankPRyan
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Story Beats
Hereditary Beat Sheet: @DonRoff @savethecat
Writing Craft / Scenes
Categorizing Scenes: @StoryGrid
Scene writing tips: 5 ways to avoid filler: @nownovel
Writing Craft / Series
Is Your Book a Series, -Ogy, or Stand-Alone? by John Gilstrap @killzoneauthors
3 Good Reasons to Write a Sequel: @DeannaCabinian @WritersDigest
Writing Craft / Settings and Description
One Simple Tip To Improve Your Description: by Robert Wood @standoutbooks
7 Research and Writing Tips for Setting a Book in Another Country: @sejal_badani @WritersDigest
Writing Craft / Subtext
The Importance of Subtext: @MargieLawson
Writing Craft / Word Crafting
“Whilst” Breaks Through to US: @byagoda
Writing Craft / World-Building
Getting Started With Worldbuilding: by Chris Winkle @mythcreants
The Top Writing Links From Last Week Are On Twitterific:
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January 10, 2019
Planting the Body in a Cozy Mystery
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
If you’re writing a cozy mystery, there are little things that come up sometimes. Writing is a Choose-Your-Own-Adventure process. You have so many different choices that can take the plot in different directions that it can seem overwhelming.
It doesn’t have to be that overwhelming, though. There are choices, but you can address them as they come along. Here are a few things to consider when planning the discovery of your victim:
The timing: You have a couple of different choices in timing the body’s discovery. You could start out with the discovery of the victim, which can be a fun way to shake things up a little bit. The only problem with that, I’ve found, is that you will need to deal with backstory more than you might otherwise have done. One way of getting around that is to include backstory about the victim and his or her relationships with others in suspect interviews.
My editors at Penguin preferred the victim to be discovered in the first 30-50 pages of the book, for pacing reasons. So if you don’t start off with the body, you might consider having a couple of scenes with the future victim interacting with one or two future suspects to make things easier to write later in the story. The suspects will be easier for the sleuth, who is merely a gifted amateur, to figure out.
The place: The location of the body needs to be somewhere accessible. It should be a place that all of the suspects have access to. It could be the victim’s own house (victim either didn’t lock up well or knew her attacker) or it could be a public place…but not too public because we don’t need the body discovered until the killer gets safely away (for now, anyway).
Who discovers the body? An easy way to get your sleuth involved is for him or her to discover the body and feel a sense of ownership. Of course, if your sleuth is finding all the bodies in your entire series, you might be stuck in the “Murder, She Wrote” Cabot Cove syndrome (Jessica Fletcher found a heck of a lot of bodies in a very small town. Statistically, she should probably have been considered as a possible serial killer. :) )
Alternatively, it could be good for someone close to your sleuth to discover the victim. That way the sleuth still feels looped in (maybe she’s even called before the police are called) but isn’t always falling over bodies.
Other considerations: Your sleuth, if he discovered the body, clearly needs to call the police. But depending on how close his relationship is with the police department, the sleuth may feel the need to find information on his own. Maybe he carefully assesses the scene before the officials arrive.
Another note: the condition of the body doesn’t require much description. The more description you include, the less-cozy the discovery scene. The readers can fill in the details by simply knowing that the victim was strangled, shot in the head, or pushed out a third-story window. Cozies are all about escape and not forensics, so you can go light on detail with these books.
Are you a mystery reader or writer? What else have you observed about victim discovery scenes?
Thoughts on Planting the Body in a Cozy Mystery:
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January 6, 2019
Pushing Ourselves in 2019
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
I realized at some point last year that I wanted to write a new series. For one thing, it’s nice to have an additional revenue stream, especially if a series may appeal to a different pool of readers. For another, I wanted to make sure that I was still growing. I wanted to try something different to keep myself sharp.
Writing a new series or a new genre (or both) is one way to creatively stretch. But there are other ways of pushing ourselves. The beginning of the year is a good time to assess where you stand in your writing business. And it is a business, which is sometimes tough for writers to wrap their heads around.
My income has increased in direct relation to the number of books I’ve published. It’s also increased whenever I’ve added new streams of revenue by diversifying into new formats (print, digital, audio), and distributors and retailers (using aggregators like Draft2Digital, PublishDrive, Smashwords, Ingram, and StreetLib to reach retailers all over the world).
As with anything, I think it’s important to break down any of these tasks into many smaller tasks. Don’t let it be overwhelming if it’s something you want to tackle in 2019.
To get you started, here are some questions to ask yourself and then places to start:
Have you not published your book at all yet? Are you new to self-publishing? Try these nice overviews from both industry expert Jane Friedman and from writer James P. Sumner (video) on the ALLi blog.
Is your book in print? To have your book on KDP Print, Amazon’s print publishing, you’ll need to have a full cover (with spine and back cover) as a PDF. Your ebook cover designer should be able to handle that for you without much additional cost. You’ll also need your book file to be available as a PDF. A free service like KDP, Reedsy or Draft2Digital can help you create your own file, or you can hire a formatter. More help to get you started with your Amazon print project is here.
Is your book available as an ebook? Here you’ll need an ebook cover from your designer. You’ll also need your book formatted for epub or kindle. Again, the free services above can help you if you want to format it yourself. From there, you simply upload to KDP and other retailers. (I think it’s important to go wide, especially if you are planning on writing more than one book, so I won’t recommend KDP Select here.)
Is your book available at Nook, Apple, Kobo and smaller worldwide retailers? If you already have an ebook cover and files, this is one of the easiest ways to go wide on this list. You can either elect to directly upload to these retailers (a process very similar to when you uploaded to Amazon), or you can use a distributor or aggregator to do so (they take a small percentage of your royalties). Smashwords, Draft2Digital, PublishDrive, and StreetLib are all good choices. You can even use all of them…just make sure that you’re not duplicating services (don’t have both Draft2Digital and Smashwords distribute to Apple, for example).
Is your ebook available for purchase by libraries? This is another no-brainer if you already have an ebook file and cover. You can’t upload directly to OverDrive, which supplies libraries. But you can go through a distributor (any of the ones listed above) to get your books there.
Is your book available in audio? Audio has become very popular for readers. ACX is the main platform that writers use to get their books produced as audio books. You can pay a narrator upfront, consider a royalty-sharing option with your narrator, or you can even narrate yourself. ACX distributes to Audible and iTunes. More information can be found here. Other options include Findaway Voices (info here) and TekTime.
Is your printed book available for purchase at libraries and bookstores? This means going through IngramSpark. You’ll need your own ISBN (I recommend those anyway, if you intend on going wide and publishing a good number of books) and a PDF of your full print-version cover and PDF of your book’s text. There are set-up fees for print…$49 a title…but I don’t think I’ve ever paid it because they frequently run free set-up promotions (make sure you receive their emails). The current promo (until March 31) is NANO17. IngramSpark isn’t quite as intuitive as KDP Print, but I believe it’s easier than given credit for. Here’s an article by Debbie Young on why it’s a good idea to use both Amazon’s KDP Print and IngramSpark together.
Is your book available for translation? As with audio, you can pay a translator upfront (although the costs may be prohibitive). Or you can post your book as available for translation on a site like Babelcube or Tektime and use a royalty sharing agreement. My thoughts on translation options in my posts here and here.
There are other ways to diversify and create multiple income streams for your writing business. You can be a public speaker, teach an online class, pursue affiliate income, or look for sponsors on Patreon.
What types of creative and business goals do you have for 2019?
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January 5, 2019
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 48,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
Have you visited the WKB lately? Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox! Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.
Business / Miscellaneous
Confidence, Connection & Convergence: Self-Publishing Review 2018: @OrnaRoss @IndieAuthorALLI
Editing: How to create compelling editing quotations: @LouiseHarnby
The Fear and Joy of Writing on Proposal: @maryannmarlowe @WomenWriters
Tokyo’s new Bunkitsu Bookstore With an Admission Fee: @Porter_Anderson @bunkitsu_rpng
China Bestsellers for November: The ‘Double Eleven’ Sales Boost: @Porter_Anderson
Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous
Tips for Oral Storytelling: @helpfulsnowman
Creativity and Inspiration / Goal setting
The Five Biggest New Year’s Resolution Mistakes and How to Avoid Them: @WriteNowCoach
Trends For Authors And Creative Goal Setting 2019: @thecreativepenn
Share Your Writing Goals to Increase Chances of Success: @colleen_m_story
About Those New Year’s Goals: @RachelleGardner
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers
9 Mysteries Set in The Immediate Aftermath of WWI: @jpwrites1 @CrimeReads
How Book Maps Led to One Author’s Love of Fiction: @VaughnRoycroft @WriterUnboxed
The Good, The Bad, and The Delicious: 20 Unexpected Literary Cookbooks: @knownemily @lithub
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Fitting in Writing
3 Tips from an Engineer to Help You Write Efficiently: @BMWtheCreative
Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life
A defense of creative writing in the age of standardized testing: @JustinParmenter
Jonathan Franzen’s 10 Rules for Novelists: @lithub
Why Writing Friends are Important: @jodimeadows
Tsundoku (Books piled everywhere): @austinkleon
How to write if you have a long commute behind the wheel: @GoIntoTheStory
What One Person Can Do to Get People Reading: @mattgrantwriter @lithub
Writing and the Creative Life: Why Creative People May Feel More Anxiety: @GoIntoTheStory
Creating Priority Lists When Everything Seems Important: @TheLeighShulman
Is A Writing Retreat Right For You? by Paige Duke @standoutbooks
Tips to Help Organize 2019 with Calendars and Apps:
Genres / Memoir
Jaime Lowe’s 8 Rules For Writing Memoirs: @kicklikeagirl1 @Writers_Write
Genres / Miscellaneous
What is the “Core” for Your Genre? @davidfarland
Genres / Screenwriting
Script To Screen: “The Last of the Mohicans”: @GoIntoTheStory
Promo / Blogging
Get Your Blog Ready for 2019: @EdieMelson
12 Strategies for Blogging Your Way to Expert Status: @NinaAmir
Promo / Miscellaneous
Your 2019 Book Marketing Plan, Month by Month: @NewShelvesBooks @BookWorksNYC
7 Ways to Use Bookmarks for Marketing Your Book: @KarenHWhiting @EdieMelson
Create your author mood board in five minutes: @helpingauthors1
Promo / Platforms
What Is a Writer Platform and How Do You Build One? @ChadRAllen
Promo / Podcasts
3 Things To Know About Podcasts When You Know Nothing: @Writers_Write by Christopher Dean
Promo / Social Media Tips
Bookstagram for Indie Authors: Strategy: by Laura Hartley @BookWorksNYC
Promo / Speaking
Using Props While Making a Book Presentation: @AuthorCathyLamb
Publishing / Miscellaneous
Books to Film: Josh Malerman’s Debut ‘Bird Box’ Lands on Netflix: @Porter_Anderson @JoshMalerman
Tips for Winning Writing Contests: @FinishedPages @hopeclark
Winter Issues: ‘Beyond the Book’ Looks at 2018 in Review: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives @BeyondTheBook
Be Careful Inputting Your Metadata on Amazon: by Gordon Long @IndiesUnlimited
How to find your perfect co-writer (dead or alive): @LuWrites
Copyrighted Treasures Move Into the Public Domain, on a ‘Snowy Evening’: @Porter_Anderson @DukeCSPD
Publishing / Options / Self-Publishing
Self-publishing Role Models for 2018: @IndieAuthorALLI
Publishing / Process / Legalities
Public Domain Day Is Coming: On January 1st, 2019, Copyrighted Works Will Enter the Public Domain for the First Time in 21 Years: @jdmagness @openculture
Publishing / Process / Self-Publishing
5 Questions on the Book Production and Marketing Matrix: @JFbookman
Writing Craft / Beginnings
Five Strategies for Getting Started: @davidfarland
Writing Craft / Characters / Arc
Character Arc and Narrative Arc: @VictoriaMixon
Writing Craft / Characters / Development
Don’t Make Your Characters Do the Impossible: @ZoeMMcCarthy
4 Steps for Writing Realistic Protagonists Who Are Nothing Like You: by Donna Levin @WritersDigest
Character Building with the Enneagram: @RDCwrites @RMFWriters
Writing Craft / Characters / Protagonists
Creating Likeable Protagonists: @davidfarland
Writing Craft / Characters / Supporting Characters
The 17 Best (and Worst) Cartoon Sidekicks of the 1980s: @cloudy_vision @tordotcom
Writing Craft / Common Mistakes
Five Common Storytelling Mistakes in the Pursuit of Social Justice: by Oren Ashkenazi @mythcreants
Writing Craft / Dialogue
8 Ways to Make Your Characters Sound Distinctive: @LauraDiSilverio
Writing Craft / Endings
When Should A Story End? by PJ Parrish @killzoneauthors
Writing Craft / Humor
In Defense of Puns: @JamesGeary @parisreview
Writing Craft / Miscellaneous
How to Level-Up Our Writing: @craicer @JamiGold
Don’t Overload Your Readers With Your Message: @writing_tips
Tips for More Meaningful Stories: @writingandsuch
10 Non-Writing Things You Can Do To Improve Your Writing: @wendypmiller
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting
The Dual Plot Structure That Makes Stories a Success: by Chris Winkle @mythcreants
How to Choose Your Story’s Plot Points: @KMWeiland
Writing Craft / Punctuation and Grammar
‘Flier’ or ‘Flyer’? @GrammarGirl
Pronoun Order: @GrammarGirl
Three Simple Rules for Pluralizing Names: @HopeTDougherty
Writing Craft / Revision
Read your way into editing your novel: @MsRachaelBlok @CurtisBrown
See Oscar Wilde’s Handwritten Edits to The Picture of Dorian Gray: @lithub
Writing Craft / Revisions / Critiques
3 Mistakes Writing Groups Make and How to Fix Them: @TCKPublishing
Writing Craft / Settings and Description
How do you Describe a Place? 6 Setting Tips: @nownovel
Writing Craft / Voice
Ask the Editor: Tips for Identifying Your Story’s Narrative Voice: @writingrefinery @DIYMFA
Writing Tools / Apps
Keeping Track of Everything in Scrivener with Metadata: @Gwen_Hernandez
Writing Tools / Resources
10 Podcasts every author needs in their life: @sacha_black
14 of the Best Online Writing Communities for Aspiring Authors: @ReedsyHQ
Writing Tools / Spreadsheets
How to Spreadsheet Your Novel: @StoryGrid
Uncategorized
The links I shared the last couple of weeks, plus my links that got the most engagement on Twitter in 2018:
Show Don’t Tell Explained: Examples of Turning Bad Writing into Great Writing: @TCKPublishing
Remainder of the Top Tweets for 2018…the links I shared that received the most engagement on Twitter:
How to Fix a Plot Hole in Your Novel (From 14 Writing Experts): http://ow.ly/f1cR30mLx0M @writingcookbook #TopTweets2018
Rights Roundup: A Handful of Titles for the Holidays: http://ow.ly/EonV30mOqat @Porter_Anderson @malusken @GuillaumePitron @SiriPettersen #TopTweets2018
A defense of creative writing in the age of standardized testing: http://ow.ly/k2Tw30n8KCf @JustinParmenter #wkb31
3 Tips for Improving Show, Don’t Tell: http://ow.ly/PXZB30mCVNr @KMWeiland #TopTweets2018
Gave up on NaNoWriMo? Try a gentler, year-round writing challenge: http://ow.ly/KCxp30mUUTN @inkyelbows #TopTweets2018
9 Writing Tips for Beginners: http://ow.ly/RJ1r30mTwMZ @writingcookbook #TopTweets2018
Public Domain Day Is Coming: On January 1st, 2019, Copyrighted Works Will Enter the Public Domain for the First Time in 21 Years: http://ow.ly/z0p830n8Gqf @jdmagness @openculture #wkb5c
On The Many Visions of Voyeurism in Crime Fiction: http://ow.ly/1QhE30mM4FR @ClaireFuller2 @CrimeReads #TopTweets2018
What Writing Fanfiction Taught Me as an Editor: http://ow.ly/CsAa30mCozO @writersyndrome @UncannyMagazine #TopTweets2018
How to Use Swag to Support Your Book Marketing: http://ow.ly/CgjB30mTxOs @proflangley @JaneFriedman #TopTweets2018
How To Define Your Character’s Narrative: http://ow.ly/VW4V30mUBKI @Writers_Write #TopTweets2018
6 Iconic Literary Road Trips in the US To Inspire Your Inner Creative: http://ow.ly/Ci3W30mLwSj @WomenWriters #TopTweets2018
The Top Writing Links From Last Week Are On Twitterific:
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January 3, 2019
Tips to Organize 2019
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Happy New Year! Hope everyone enjoyed their holidays.
One thing I like to do at the beginning of the year is planning. To me, setting up my year on my calendar isn’t really about goals–it’s just a way to help me visualize when I need to reach out to my production team for editing and design help (and to post upcoming releases on my website for readers to see my timeline). A reader once suggested that I have a ‘Coming Soon‘ page on my site to help her keep my releases straight, and I’ve found that works well.
Ways to stay organized:
Production calendar. I use my Google calendar and then I also put it on my wall calendar. First off, I know how long it takes me to write and revise a book from start to finish: three months. With that in mind, I know an approximate date to ask my editor for help with the book and to send ARCs to my ARC team. While my editor makes edits, I work on the outline for the next book in that same series. Then I contact my cover designer and ask her to make a cover for that book (a book that won’t come out for another seven months or so). I also start setting up my book for preorder online at Amazon, Draft2Digital (for Nook, Apple, Kobo, etc.), StreetLib, Ingram, and PublishDrive. I announce the preorder on social media and on my website. This process helps keep me on track and prevents any issues from arising that might result in the delay of a book.
Blog editorial calendar. I use OneNote for this, but lots of other apps would work (there is also a free download on Gabriela Pereira’s blog). In OneNote, I have a blogging notebook and then a blog editorial calendar section. I have one page that lists the date and the post name and then I use other pages in the section to draft ideas. Not only does it help me keep track of what I’m planning on posting, but I can also list ideas for posts in a spot that helps me remember them and eventually write them. I also enjoy looking at the entire past year of blogging at a glance. If you’ve ever wasted valuable time trying to think of blog posts at the last minute, this is the perfect tool for you.
Google Keep for reminders. Google Keep is a free app that will sync across your devices. It has a nice voice recording feature which helps me record book ideas on the fly. I also like that it can remind me of various things…especially since I think of tasks I need to complete when I’m falling asleep.
Google calendar. Because being organized isn’t just about keeping track of my writing. My Google calendar has everything on it from changing the air filters and the smoke detector batteries to dental appointments and cover conferences. (I do also put big stuff on a wall calendar so that I can more easily see conflicts).
Evernote. I use Evernote for everything from my recipe collection (including notes as to what worked and what bombed) to what I gave everyone for Christmas or their birthday each year.
The most important thing is to find out what works best for you in terms of staying organized and then stick with it.
What are your favorite ways to stay on top of things?
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December 30, 2018
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 48,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
Have you visited the WKB lately? Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox! Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.
Happy New Year! Be sure to scroll down for the most popular links I shared in 2018. :)
Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous
Moscow’s ‘Non/Fictio№ 20’ Book Fair Hosts 400 Events, 300 Exhibitors: by Eugene Gerden @pubperspectives
Creativity and Inspiration / First Novels
9 Writing Tips for Beginners: @writingcookbook
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration
3 Ideas To Inspire Your Writing During The Holidays: @mishy1727 @TheIWSG
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers
Five Books With Manipulated Memories: by W.L. Goodwater @tordotcom
Editor Roundtable: Jane Eyre: @TheWritership @StoryGrid
8 of the Best Cocktails from Classic Literature: by Alex Day and David Kaplan @SignatureReads
I Hear Santa’s Sleigh: On The Polar Express and What It Means to Believe: @use_theforce_em
When Calvin Met Hobbes: Calvin and Hobbes’ Most Memorable Christmases: @EmmanuelNataf @LitReactor
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Fitting in Writing
The One Tool You Need to Write Consistently: @NinaAmir
Tips for Fitting in More Writing: @createastorylov
Gave up on NaNoWriMo? Try a gentler, year-round writing challenge: @inkyelbows
4 Essential Strategies for Distraction-Free Writing: by Jon Rumens @NaNoWriMo
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Writer’s Block
How the Grinch Beat Writer’s Block: 4 Lessons from Dr. Seuss’ Classic Christmas: Story by Cassie Lipp @WritersDigest
Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life
The Angst of Trying to Write Better Emails than Gmail’s Smart Compose Autocomplete: @DKThomp @TheAtlantic
Are You Taking Productive Breaks? @LisaEBetz @A3writers
Business Musings: Getting To The Stories You Love to Write: @KristineRusch
10 Perfect Writer Gifts We Just Made Up: @RL_Maizes @ElectricLit
Why Is Writing So Difficult? Here Are 3 Reasons Why: by Erin Sturm @thewritelife
What Do You Do If You’re Constantly Unhappy with Your Writing Life? @losapala
Write Your Own Touching Holiday Story With a Handy Chart: by Jess Zimmerman @ElectricLit
Writing at Christmas: @writing_ie
Genres / Horror
7 Tips For Writing Horror Stories: @AlanBaxter @thecreativepenn
Genres / Miscellaneous
Walking the Line When Submitting to the Christian Market: @RachelleGardner
How to Write Scientific Fiction: Analyzing Carl Sagan’s ‘Contact’: @DustinGrinnell @WritersDigest
Genres / Mystery
Disapproval of Character Marriages as an Element of Crime Fiction: @mkinberg
Jessica Fletcher and ‘Murder, She Wrote’ Are Alive and Well: @JonDLand @CrimeReads
Crime Novels that Take a Witty View of Society: @mkinberg
What You Can Learn about Writing Cozy Mysteries from Hallmark Christmas Movies: by Jennifer Donovan @MinotaurBooks @CareerAuthors @hallmarkmovie
Genres / Non-Fiction
How to Define and Describe Your Readership: A Confusing Issue for Nonfiction Book Proposals: @JaneFriedman
Genres / Romance
What Makes a Compelling Romance Novel? @ReedsyHQ
Genres / Screenwriting
Screenwriting: Reflections on “It’s a Wonderful Life”: @SunsetGunShot @GoIntoTheStory
“A Charlie Brown Christmas”: The Christmas Classic that Almost Wasn’t: @rxena77
Genres / Young Adult
Paying it Forward with YA Fiction: @claireneedell @CareerAuthors
Promo / Connecting with Readers
Your Ideal Reader Informs All 7 Stages of Publishing: @BookWorksNYC @SmartAuthors
Promo / Miscellaneous
How to Use Swag to Support Your Book Marketing: @proflangley @JaneFriedman
Promo / Newsletters
Simple Steps to an Author Auto-Responder: @MarcyKennedy
Promo / Video
Guest Post! What Authors Can Get Out Of Video Content: by Kayleigh Alexandra @Draft2Digital
Publishing / Miscellaneous
LIMA’s Tani Wong on Leveraging Content Through Licensing: @Porter_Anderson
Climate Crisis and Fake News Top 2018 International Research Papers: @Porter_Anderson @altmetric
Industry Notes: MVB US Announces Successful Pubnet 2.0 Migration: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
3 Publishing Veterans From the ‘Cubicles of the Business’ Now Rep Authors as Agents: @blackpooltower @missjkill by @Porter_Anderson
Publishing / News / Data
2018 in Review at Canada’s Wattpad: 51 Percent More Readings in Muslim Romance: @Porter_Anderson @AshleighGardner
Publishing / News / International Publishing
IPR License Signs S. Fischer Publishing Houses in Germany to Its Network: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
In Paris, a Meeting of Franco-Arabic Publishers: Challenges and Hopes: @oliviasnaije @pubperspectives
Publishing / Process / Legalities
Upon My Death: What Happens To An Author’s Unfinished Work? @helpfulsnowman
Writing Craft / Characters / Development
How To Define Your Character’s Narrative: @Writers_Write
Make Your Characters Flawsome: by S.E. White
Writing Craft / Lessons from Books and Film
3 Ways Ursula K. Le Guin Can Help You Improve Your Writing: by Rebecca Langley @standoutbooks
Writing Craft / Miscellaneous
3 Writing Challenges That Will Make You a Better Writer: @DavidHSafford @write_practice
How Eavesdropping Can Improve Your Writing: @EdieMelson
Writing Craft / POV
Write Third-Person Narrative Better: @KathyEdens1 @ProWritingAid
How Many Viewpoint Characters in Your Novel? @SnowflakeGuy
Writing Craft / Punctuation and Grammar
Problem Words and Abbreviations: @ZoeMMcCarthy
Writing Craft / Scenes
Tips for Writing Powerful Scenes: @SarahSallyHamer @EdieMelson
Writing Craft / Settings and Description
The Sights, Sounds and Smells of Writing About Food: @FinishedPages @womenonwriting
Writing Craft / Word Crafting
Tips for Using Strong Verbs: @TCKPublishing
Uncategorized
Rights Roundup: The Midway Point at London Book Fair: @Porter_Anderson @LondonBookFair @pubperspectives #TopTweets2018
Interested in being a full-time writer? My thoughts on what it takes: (guest post with @annerallen ) #TopTweets2018
How To Focus On Writing Right Now: http://ow.ly/Xp2o30mGtYv @BadRedheadMedia #TopTweets2018
‘In Regard To’ vs. ‘In Regards To’: http://ow.ly/9qJk30mzO6n @GrammarGirl #TopTweets2018
3 Tips for Improving Show, Don’t Tell: http://ow.ly/PXZB30mCVNr @KMWeiland #TopTweets2018
Three Ways to Edit Scenes: http://ow.ly/udz230mtkEl @Lindasclare #TopTweets2018
How to Cherish Language: http://ow.ly/2bXY30mBMDv @KMWeiland #TopTweets2018
Rights Roundup: A Handful of Titles for the Holidays: http://ow.ly/EonV30mOqat @Porter_Anderson @malusken @GuillaumePitron @SiriPettersen #TopTweets2018
Lose The Plot: http://ow.ly/TB3W30moAR1@LouiseVoss1 @WomenWriters #TopTweets2018
Bucket List for Writers: http://ow.ly/9fjG30myyN6 by Keith Cronin @WriterUnboxed #TopTweets208
What Writing Fanfiction Taught Me as an Editor: http://ow.ly/CsAa30mCozO @writersyndrome @UncannyMagazine #TopTweets2018
Want to Self-Publish Fiction Successfully? Follow These 9 Tips: http://ow.ly/8ZkI30msJia @annerallen #TopTweets2018
Dialogue Isn’t Everything (How to Keep Your Characters Busy): http://ow.ly/A43i30mAh7Q @FinishedPages @womenonwriting #TopTweets2018
Screenwriting: Top 5 Scene Description Mistakes Writers Make: http://ow.ly/qer530mqssf @Bang2write #TopTweets2018
10 Books to help you feel like a real writer when you’re discouraged: http://ow.ly/wmTR30mguaW @JanetBoyer @annerallen #TopTweets2018
Max Boot’s ‘Corrosion of Conservatism’: A ‘Big Book’ for WW Norton at Frankfurt: http://ow.ly/s9Tc30m9Oy8 @Porter_Anderson @MaxBoot #TopTweets2018
How Wilkie Collins found sensation in ordinary life: http://ow.ly/mTqz30lOMcC @samjordison @GuardianBooks #TopTweets2018
The 12 Best and Worst Things That Can Happen After Your Freelance Article Is Accepted: http://ow.ly/Z87J30lUGA8 @Susanshapironet @WritersDigest #TopTweets2018
A Librarian’s Life: Buddy, the Library Isn’t a 7-Eleven”: http://ow.ly/5jAt30lPHQa @Kristen_Arnett @lithub #TopTweets2018
Breaking the 4th Wall in Scene Description: http://ow.ly/ziCt30m7NjR @GoIntoTheStory #TopTweets2018
Giving Ourselves Permission to Write: http://ow.ly/jEtf30lZJg5 @KerrySchafer @WomenWriters #TopTweets2018
5 Ways to Use the Enneagram to Write Better Characters: http://ow.ly/JglO30lXGuF @KMWeiland #TopTweets2018
Urban Fantasy Noir: 7 Urban Fantasy Crime Novels With Dark Sensibilities: http://ow.ly/hGJW30lY1gw @Richard_Kadrey @CrimeReads #TopTweets2018
A Fantasy Geek’s Guide to YouTube: Weapons and Warfare: http://ow.ly/6V9V30m64vX @RMarpole @FantasyFaction #TopTweets2018
10 Exercises to Become a Better Writer: http://ow.ly/XCUY30lTKrj @ReedsyHQ #TopTweets2018
7 Novels That Capture the Pain and Chaos of Alcoholism: http://ow.ly/oaHl30lQ3Jm @laura_june @lithub #TopTweets2018
How to Write Historical Fiction That Comes Alive: http://ow.ly/fjrA30m642d @JimmyWriter @CareerAuthors #TopTweets2018
The Satisfaction of Excellence: The Growth Mindset for Writers: http://ow.ly/I3zW30lqaeF @jennienash #TopTweets2018
What is the Best Service for Print on Demand Books? http://ow.ly/Cq6230lKCU3 @ReedsyHQ #TopTweets2018
‘Vintage Man Booker’ Is Launched, an Online Retrospective on the Prize’s First 50 Years: http://ow.ly/4PmH30lHVbY @Porter_Anderson @ManBookerPrize #TopTweets2018
The Dos and Don’ts of Supporting Your Local Library: http://ow.ly/QxIu30lE9ZE @Kristen_Arnett @lithub #TopTweets2018
Use The 7 Deadly Sins To Strengthen Your Antagonist’s Motives: http://ow.ly/kjlX30lsB2b @Writers_Write #TopTweets2018
How to Start a Local Writing Group: http://ow.ly/V0G930lyfy5 @shaylaleeraquel #TopTweets2018
Crafting A Fall: Turning Heroes to the Dark Side: http://ow.ly/HXy230lt0U7 by Aaron Miles @FantasyFaction #TopTweets2018
“Mistakes I Made as a New Indie Author”: http://ow.ly/ypxe30lxWoB @Creativindie @annerallen #TopTweets2018″
Use reversal to hook the reader: http://ow.ly/abCZ30lLOez @kseniaanske #TopTweets2018
Interested in being a full-time writer? My thoughts on what it takes: http://ow.ly/tkmz30mZCR7 (guest post with @annerallen ) #TopTweets2018
Five Books About Unconventional Pirates: http://ow.ly/jCFR30lJJQj @seesarawrite @tordotcom #TopTweets2018
Why Backstory Should Be The Scar Tissue Of Your Book: http://ow.ly/rzPw30lEa3u @Writers_Write #TopTweets2018
On (Re)Writing Real-Life Tragedy: http://ow.ly/v1oS30lhywz @KimberlySBelle @WomenWriters #TopTweets2018
5 Things George R. R. Martin Can Teach You About Writing: http://ow.ly/KUEW30lebAu @FredBobJohn #TopTweets2018
The 13 Unluckiest Characters In Fiction: http://ow.ly/k8SP30lnaUK @xymarla @LitReactor #TopTweets2018
Telling LGBTQ Love Stories with Happy Endings Is a Form of Resistance: http://ow.ly/pKlW30l6Twl @CamillePerri @ElectricLit #TopTweets2018
New Report: American Teens Spend Less Time Reading: http://ow.ly/gkx830lvyg7 @Porter_Anderson @jean_twenge #TopTweets2018
For the Love of Libraries: http://ow.ly/RYb130l92bM @SarahMMcCoy @WriterUnboxed #TopTweets2018
10 Reasons Book Reviews Still Matter: http://ow.ly/jDkx30ln0QW @Gabino_Iglesias #TopTweets2018
Poems for Any Occasion: http://ow.ly/wVP730l3MM9 @AnnieNeugebauer @LitReactor #TopTweets2018
How young writers are leading a poetry comeback: http://ow.ly/PmTh30lmKFL @JenHijaz @NewsHour #TopTweets2018
Punctuation Boot Camp: http://ow.ly/fJps30llQjz by Gail Radley @TheWriterMag #TopTweets2018
When To Utilize An Ensemble Cast and How To Do It Well: http://ow.ly/JxN830lpGjr @JoshuaIsard @LitReactor #TopTweets2018
A plea to authors to speak out about piracy: http://ow.ly/5jt830lmPNu @Roz_Morris #TopTweets2018
What It Means to Be a Writing Teacher in the Age of School Shootings: http://ow.ly/XRHe30kJybQ @elisejuska @ElectricLit #TopTweets2018
How to Create a Character Profile: the Ultimate Guide (with Template): http://ow.ly/LfvG30kJyfs @ReedsyHQ #TopTweets2018
Agent Spotlight Interview with Literary Agent @eerie_o : http://ow.ly/OfHw30kLe6k @NatalieIAguirre #TopTweets2018
How the Truth Your Character Believes Defines Your Theme: http://ow.ly/2UcJ30kG8Kf @KMWeiland #TopTweets2018
9 Things I Learned From Reading 45 Books At Once: http://ow.ly/YmWS30kNAvQ @Gabino_Iglesias #TopTweets2018
Who Will Buy Your Book? Validation isn’t the Point: http://ow.ly/YWBm30kA5YY @t_mcallister @The_Millions #TopTweets2018
What is a Denouement? And How to Use It: http://ow.ly/GUZV30kKqTf @ReedsyHQ #TopTweets2018
4 Ways to Write a Better Antagonist: http://ow.ly/FcGx30kNApk @KMWeiland #TopTweets2018
Tips for Reading Longer Classical Novels: http://ow.ly/xSRd30kRy5a @VivGroskop @GuardianBooks #TopTweets2018
12 Rules for Writing a Biographical Novel: http://ow.ly/gfMw30kMgAw @sallykoslow @CareerAuthors #TopTweets2018
Discover the Plot of Your Post-Apocalyptic Novel With a Handy Chart: http://ow.ly/9MZz30kQXx7 by Jess Zimmerman and Halimah Marcus @ElectricLit #TopTweets2018
Why Your First Novel Isn’t Crap: http://ow.ly/5wBw30kSEQA @LisaLisax31 #TopTweets2018
What Does It Mean to Be a Disabled Writer? http://ow.ly/SQm830kmA0m by Alex Lu @Keah_Maria @esmewang @ElectricLit #TopTweets2018
Want Publishing Success? Be a Great Writer and Clever Marketer: http://ow.ly/3t4C30kka5Z @EvatopiaLit @BadRedheadMedia #TopTweets2018
7 Reasons You Need To Hire an Author Assistant Right Now: http://ow.ly/kzF330k9jWb @TheRuralVA @BadRedheadMedia #TopTweets2018
8 Types Of Opening Scenes That Could Work For Your Book: http://ow.ly/CINF30kpXFR @Writers_Write #TopTweets2018
9 Quotes About The Library As A Temple: http://ow.ly/4dIZ30kfJgK @TomBlunt @SignatureReads #TopTweets2018
Supporting Disability Amongst Writers: http://ow.ly/yt8w30k4LKj @nick45wood @sfwa #TopTweets2018
How Reader Analytics Can Support Publishers’ Decisions: http://ow.ly/QSqN30kHMVb @Porter_Anderson @ContecMXOficial #TopTweets2018
10 Cliffhangers That Make Readers Turn The Page: http://ow.ly/RbpQ30kjnXu @Writers_Write #TopTweets2018
The Novel Within the Novel: 8 Meta Stories With Thrillers Inside: http://ow.ly/Gimz30k3BQJ @sarabooks @CrimeReads #TopTweets2018
Rejected? Top 5 Tips What To Do About It: http://ow.ly/FsGe30ke8AG @Bang2write #TopTweets2018
What is a plot point? Find and Plan Clear Story Events: http://ow.ly/XbZU30kcyuw @nownovel #TopTweets2018
Reading Your Story Out Loud in the Revision Period: http://ow.ly/f2h330kxIUh @NickPWilford @TheIWSG #TopTweets2018
Important Reasons Authors Need to Think About Blogging: http://ow.ly/kOpk30kuirv @kikimojo @BadRedheadMedia #TopTweets2018
On Telling Ugly Stories: Writing with a Chronic Illness: http://ow.ly/7fPM30jUHe9 @TisforThompson @parisreview #TopTweets2018
What Exactly Does a Librarian Do? Everything: http://ow.ly/eadf30jAI7l @Kristen_Arnett @lithub #TopTweets2018
A Bunch of Hard Truths About Publishing: http://ow.ly/kXM730jWJUT @RuthanneReid #TopTweets2018
The Best Podcasts for Writers: http://ow.ly/cMjt30jADT8 @WrittenWordM #TopTweets2018
Why All Writers Should Play Dungeons & Dragons: http://ow.ly/Sgwn30jZSDc @ElectricLit #TopTweets2018
Writing Realistic Antagonists: http://ow.ly/xOhB30kc8nN @TyreanMartinson @TheIWSG #TopTweets2018
6 Simple Ways To Help You Find Out What Your Memoir’s About: http://ow.ly/E7Fz30jYhTO @Writers_Write #TopTweets2018
10 Literary Classics We (Not So) Secretly Hate: http://ow.ly/mXIs30jzxkX @knownemily @lithub #TopTweets2018
How To Show Your Alpha Hero is In Control Even When Writing In Deep POV: http://ow.ly/FGYZ30jStXZ @LisaHallWilson #TopTweets2018
How to Find the Conflict in a Story: http://ow.ly/uGVx30jXKmX @DavidHSafford #TopTweets2018
10 Literary Holidays We Desperately Need: http://ow.ly/eeSc30jGLaE @helpfulsnowman #TopTweets2018
Creating a fantasy map: making your fantasy world real: http://ow.ly/ozlq30jywOF @Magpie_Richie @SchmidtJesper #TopTweets2018
Is British English Conquering America, or Vice Versa? http://ow.ly/HUsa30juvjG @lynneguist @nytimesbooks #TopTweets2018
Rights Roundup: The Midway Point at London Book Fair: http://ow.ly/NB8930jqQLo @Porter_Anderson @LondonBookFair @pubperspectives #TopTweets2018
Developing Your Cozy Mystery Story Concept: http://ow.ly/PQD730jCRe2 #TopTweets2018
John Grisham’s 8 Dos And Don’ts For Popular Fiction: http://ow.ly/P1Ue30jmY9l @writerswrite #TopTweets2018
Kerouac’s 30 Rules for Writing: http://ow.ly/ZrXU30jpyQc @Writers_Write #TopTweets2018
10 Success Tips from J.K. Rowling: http://ow.ly/b2MX30ju6mi @JennyHansenCA #TopTweets2018
PEN America takes on the problems writers face in online harassment with a new guide for protection: http://ow.ly/qo0N30jIMTT @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives #TopTweets2018
Real World Writing Schedules: http://ow.ly/8sNx30jpz3d by Karl J. Folk @kseniaanske #TopTweets2018
The Strange Magic of Libraries: http://ow.ly/me4530joRAC @StuartKells @parisreview #TopTweets2018
How to Create Pre-Launch Buzz: http://ow.ly/AWop30j1G9E @BadRedheadMedia #TopTweets2018
How to plan a successful DIY book tour: http://ow.ly/8xpf30jvxXF @byJenAMiller @TheWriterMag #TopTweets2018
11 Ways to Promote Preorder Books that Drive Real Results: http://ow.ly/aXmD30juo1U @ThereseWalsh #TopTweets2018
10 Things The Gym Taught Me About Writing: http://ow.ly/Y2XH30itajQ @Gabino_Iglesias @LitReactor #TopTweets2018
Top Ten Peeves of creative writing teachers: http://ow.ly/skP830iK8G8 By Melodie Campbell @annerallen #TopTweets2018
Agent Spotlight Interview with @literarycarrie from @LDLiteraryhttp http://ow.ly/p6Rg30iL1EG @NatalieIAguirre #TopTweets2018
What’s Your Ideal Writing Life? http://ow.ly/O0mq30iMuTp @LifesizeLD @WritersDigest #TopTweets2018
How Authors Can Build An Indie Empire: How You Advertise Matters: http://ow.ly/8I7230iSu6S @TraciTyneHilton on @EdieMelson #TopTweets2018
Writing a Cozy Mystery: The Murder: http://ow.ly/9U4P30iAwSt @LauraDiSilverio #TopTweets2018
Ten Reasons Why You Need an Editor: http://ow.ly/nZmD30izWM8 @carolcram @WomenWriters #TopTweets2018
13 Writers Who Grew to Hate Their Own Books: http://ow.ly/rY9N30iqMrq @knownemily@lithub #TopTweets2018
Norway’s Big Translation Rights Year: ‘An Increasing International Appeal’: http://ow.ly/BgGQ30jbRqb @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives #TopTweets2018
Want To Invent A Fictional Language? Here’s How To Do It: http://ow.ly/QDAy30iRVYb by Robert Wood @standoutbooks #TopTweets2018
Pros and Cons of Pre-Plotting a Novel before Writing: http://ow.ly/XCW730iTC1q @plotwhisperer #TopTweets2018
Crime fiction: when sleuths have to go back to the drawing board: http://ow.ly/xdND30j18Jz @mkinberg #TopTweets2018
How Netflix is Changing Science Fiction (Beyond Big Marketing Gimmicks): http://ow.ly/jIdC30iHEp7 @AlasdairStuart @tordotcom #TopTweets2018
Ten Steps to Perfect Cover Design: http://ow.ly/fZpH30imlMw @RuthanneReid #TopTweets2018
An Agent Or Editor Is Interested: What Next? http://ow.ly/iykG30imlHI @jules_writes #TopTweets2018
It’s Okay to Use Adverbs: http://ow.ly/VSp130imm2u @Janice_Hardy #TopTweets2018
Strategies for bringing yourself back to writing: http://ow.ly/PY3v30imlyC @MichalskiLiz @WriterUnboxed #TopTweets2018
On Ghostwriting: http://ow.ly/OsvQ30imlsv @GhostwriterBook @ReedsyHQ #TopTweets2018
Opening Action: how to make it work: http://ow.ly/JuTK30imlZM @ml_keller #TopTweets2018
Ten Things Learned from Ursula K. Le Guin: http://ow.ly/1QHX30imli0 by Karen Joy Fowler @parisreview #TopTweets2018
How to Grow Your Writing Portfolio This Year: http://ow.ly/leEV30ikAe2 @RDCwrites #TopTweets2018
Real Writers Power thru the Flu, Right? Wrong: http://ow.ly/HM8230imlVY @RosanneBane #TopTweets2018
Agent Nermin Mollaoglu: The French Market Is Beginning To Open Its Doors to Turkish Books: http://ow.ly/YbMs30iDTJS @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives #TopTweets2018
Nuclear Radiation for Writers: http://ow.ly/NjoQ30ikAc8 @DanKoboldt @RebeccaEnzor #TopTweets2018
How Writers Can Beat Imposter Syndrome: http://ow.ly/FoBi30ikAaj @kcrosswriting @lornafaith #TopTweets2018
3 Steps to Increase your Discoverability: http://ow.ly/E1iW30hFBWw by Bryan Oettel @CareerAuthors #TopTweets2018
5 Tips on Writing Multiple Points of View While Keeping the Reader in Suspense: http://ow.ly/z52c30hJFMU @TRRaganAuthor @WritersDigest #TopTweets2018
Improve Your Novel By Writing a Screenplay: http://ow.ly/KjZV30hpQD6 @JocelynRish @MartinaABoone #TopTweets2018
How to Write a Hook: 8 Tips to Lure in Readers: http://ow.ly/OymN30hmYnW @nownovel #TopTweets2018
Unpublished Writers and Websites: Should You Have One and What Should It Say? http://ow.ly/tfeR30hcj8O @JaneFriedman #TopTweets2018
How to Write When You Don’t Have Time: http://ow.ly/mG4a30hlTWr @SeptCFawkes #TopTweets2018
The semicolon is pointless, and it’s ruining your writing: http://ow.ly/Kk6q30hFzS7 @shadimirza #TopTweets2018
Why Even New Writers Need to Prepare an Author Bio: http://ow.ly/YZbW30hA1bZ @annerallen #TopTweets2018
Presenting Your Book Cover (in a Media Kit): http://ow.ly/8eQ530hymDZ @BuildYourBrandA #TopTweets2018
A.A. Milne on Happiness and How Winnie-the-Pooh Was Born: http://ow.ly/im0230hRZgI @brainpicker #TopTweets2018
How Indie Presses Are Elevating the Publishing World: http://ow.ly/ppcO30hCkEr @jbakernyc @RMoralesKearns @lcheuk @ForestAvePress #TopTweets2018
55 Social Media Hashtags For Authors (And How To Use Them): http://ow.ly/JBbq30hvyVg @WritersRelief #TopTweets2018
The Top Writing Links From Last Week Are On Twitterific:
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The post Twitterific Writing Links appeared first on Elizabeth Spann Craig.
December 15, 2018
Twitterific Writing Links
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 48,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.
Have you visited the WKB lately? Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox! Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.
New Stuff
Reedsy has a podcast designed to help new writers learn more about writing and self-publishing a book, “one chapter at a time.” Find out more here.
Happy Holidays to all who celebrate. I will be taking a blog break until I return two weeks from today with all the top tweets from 2018. I’ll be back on a regular blogging scheduled on Friday, January 4.
Business / Miscellaneous
How to be prolific: @thecreativepenn @beprolifiko
Teaching Writing: Writing Conferences: What to Do When a Writer Doesn’t Say Much? @LannyBall
Don’ts for Publishers in 2019: by Richard Charkin @pubperspectives
Crisis Management For Authors: @cksyme @thecreativepenn
7 Things You Need In A Writing Partner: by Gila Green @Writers_Write
6 Tips to Manage Your Book Editor: by Dana Isaacson @CareerAuthors
How Do I Get a Foreword for My Book? by Alex Fullerton @IngramSpark
Conferences and Events / Miscellaneous
British Book Awards Expanded for 2019 in Children’s Books, Small Presses: @Porter_Anderson
ALDUS Network’s Facts and Figures 2018 Report: Book Fairs in Europe: @Porter_Anderson
Do Bookstore Events Even Matter? by Dana Kaye @BookBaby
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration
6 Iconic Literary Road Trips in the US To Inspire Your Inner Creative: @WomenWriters
10 Creative Writing Exercises for Beginners and Writers: @TCKPublishing
Creativity and Inspiration / Inspiration / Reading as Writers
8 Books about Family Money: @bykathywang @ElectricLit
11 Modern Classics of Conspiracy Noir: @DwyerMurphy @CrimeReads
George R. R. Martin Might Never Finish A Song of Ice and Fire, and That’s OK: @Rosserford @BNBuzz
A Reading List of Books Published Posthumously: @JRRamakrishnan @ElectricLit
9 Great Medical Thrillers—Chosen by a Physician: @LydiaYKang @CrimeReads
8 Modern Gothic Mysteries to Read Now: @wendywebbauthor @CrimeReads
Creativity and Inspiration / Productivity / Writer’s Block
6 Ways to Deal with Your Inner Critic: @writingthrulife
Creativity and Inspiration / Writing Life
Why You Should Stop Calling Yourself An ‘Aspiring Writer’: @Bang2write
5 Lessons From a Lost Novel: @KMWeiland
Three ways to get the most out of your writing community: @TheLeighShulman
A Reading List for Combating Impostor Syndrome: @natasha__young @ElectricLit
Writer Wellness: Handling Reviews and the Sedentary Lifestyle: @allisonmaruska @colleen_m_story
Writer Confidence: Do You Self-Reject? @JamiGold
How To Stop Being An Unhappy Writer: @Bang2write
Tips for Making the Writing Life Less-Stressful:
Genres / Fantasy
History for Fantasy Writers: Millers: by E.L. Skip Knox @mythicscribes
Genres / Horror
Plausible Scares: Blending the Real and Unreal in Horror Fiction: @DustinGrinnell @WritersDigest
5 Horror Techniques from the Writers of “Hereditary”: @mindofkyleam @ProWritingAid
How Horror Changed After WWI: @monstersamerica @lithub
Genres / Miscellaneous
10 Essential Elements to Include in Your Gothic Novel: @CareerAuthors
Genres / Mystery
Make Your Mystery Suspects Suspicious: @ZaraAltair
Why Investigative Reporters Become Mystery Writers: by Steven Cooper @CrimeReads
Your Sleuth in First Person Point of View: @ZaraAltair
Sidekick – The Sleuth’s Mirror: @ZaraAltair
The Sleuth Triumphant – Confront the Killer at the End of Your Mystery: @ZaraAltair
Developing a New Cozy Series: Nuts and Bolts:
The Detective Closes In – Begin the Final Act of Your Mystery: @ZaraAltair
Defining a Cozy Mystery: @vickidelany @KillerNashville
On The Many Visions of Voyeurism in Crime Fiction: @ClaireFuller2 @CrimeReads
Where to Hide the Body: Setting in Murder Mysteries: @eawright @WomenWriters
Crime Fiction: Using Moles for Inside Information: @mkinberg
Planted Evidence as an Element of Crime Fiction: @mkinberg
Genres / Non-Fiction
Enliven Your Nonfiction Writing: @AnneJanzer @NonfictionAssoc
8 Tips for a Marketable Nonfiction Book Proposal: @melanievotaw @NonfictionAssoc
Genres / Picture Books
Children’s Books Get More Political and More Progressive: @jpinsk @TheAtlantic
Genres / Romance
The Origin of Clinch Covers on Romance Novels: by Jessica Avery @BookRiot
Promo / Ads
How to Use Paid Promotions to Launch Your Book: @kikimojo
Promo / Blogging
How to Write a Great Blog Post: A Beginner’s Guide: @crsmihai
Promo / Book Reviews
The Plus Side of Negative Reviews: by Craig Tuch @pbackwriter
Promo / Connecting with Readers
Staying Afloat in the Roiling Sea of Books: @jamesscottbell
Promo / Miscellaneous
7 Ways To Market Books For Children: @kareninglis @DavidGaughran
Being Published: Publicity: @emma_darwin
Have You Pre-Sold Your Book? @JFbookman
7 Ways to Write Book Promotion into Your Novel: @Bookgal
Promo / Platforms
Build Your Writer Platform: Create a Strategic Plan to Grow Your Writing Career: @KimberleyGrabas
Promo / Social Media Tips
How to Use Instagram Stories for Your Author Platform: @EJWenstrom @DIYMFA
How Authors Can Get the Most Out of Twitter: @ReedsyHQ
Promo / Video
Popular BookTube Channels for Possible Author Promo: @ReedsyHQ
Publishing / News / Amazon
Amazon Literary Partnership Is Accepting 2019 Applications in ‘A Writer’s Life Cycle’ @Porter_Anderson @nealthompson
Publishing / News / Data
AAP StatShot Monthly Report for October: A Rare Rise for Ebooks: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Publishing / News / International Publishing
UK Trade Associations Call for Professional Behavior in a Diverse Industry: @Porter_Anderson @MerylHalls @lizzykremer
Luiz Schwarcz Tackles Brazil’s Bookselling Emergency: ‘The Gift of Books’: @Porter_Anderson
Jorge Herralde of Spain’s Anagrama on Latin America and Being Adaptable: by Adam Critchley @pubperspectives
Industry Notes: Bologna Round Table in New York; New ‘Handmaid’ Images in Milan: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Denmark’s LEGO Has Licensing Partnership With USA’s Chronicle Books: @Porter_Anderson
Publishers Applaud Appeals Court Opinion in ‘Capitol Records v. ReDigi’ Copyright Case: @Porter_Anderson @pubperspectives
Publishing / Options / Traditional Publishing
5 Things to Know about Being Published: @nicolamorgan @TheIWSG
Publishing / Process / Book Design
How to Capture Alternating Plot Lines on a Book Cover: by Donna Cheng @lithub
Publishing / Process / Legalities
Copyright Clearance Center’s Michael Healy: South Africa’s Copyright Bill: @Porter_Anderson @copyrightclear
The Importance of Copyright Savvy: @KristineRusch
Pen Name Generators and 5 Steps to Choose a Cool Pen Name: @DaveChesson
Writing Craft / Characters / Development
Make Your Characters Memorable: Tips: @JordanDane @killzoneauthors
3 Redemptive Character Types: @SeptCFawkes
Writing Craft / Characters / Emotion
Evoking Emotions in Readers in a Masterful Way: @LiveWriteThrive
Writing Craft / Conflict
Tips for Writing Fight Scenes: from Sandy Dragon
Writing Craft / Dialogue
Adding Beats: Meaningful Actions that Move Your Story Along: @SueBEdwards
How to Write Better Dialogue: from Warrior Writers
Writing Craft / Miscellaneous
Writing by Intuition: @SeptCFawkes
Inciting Incident: Definition, Mythbusting, and Examples: @ReedsyHQ
Writing Craft / Plot Holes
How to Fix a Plot Hole in Your Novel (From 14 Writing Experts): @writingcookbook
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Naming
Creatively Smart Ways to Come Up With Your Book Title: @DaveChesson
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Plotting
Writing Subplots that Sing: @Lindasclare
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Research
4 Tips to Balance Research and Writing: @DanKoboldt @NaNoWriMo
Writing Craft / Pre-Writing / Story Beats
How Does the Catalyst Beat Vary According to Genre? (podcast): @savethecat
Writing Craft / Revision
Radical Revision: when the going gets tough, writers get radical: @RuthHarrisBooks
10 Ways You Can Improve Your Work With Critical Reading: by Rebecca Langley @standoutbooks
Writing Craft / Settings and Description
Unveiling your characters: Physical description with style: @LouiseHarnby
Writing Craft / Voice
Four Tips for Moving Between Fiction and Nonfiction Writing Voices: @kayladeanwrites @DIYMFA
Writing Craft / Word Crafting
The Pitfalls of Emotional Body Language in Your Writing: by T.D. Storm
What’s Wrong with Adjectives and Adverbs? @WritingForward
5 Ways Language Can Act Like A Character: @jcwalton24 @DIYMFA
Writing Tools / Resources
How to Introduce a Character – Fill-in-the-Blanks Worksheet & Tips: @EvaDeverell
The Top Writing Links From Last Week Are On Twitterific:
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