Steven R. Southard's Blog, page 24
February 20, 2022
How to Incorporate Critique Comments
You sent your story manuscript—your precious package of prose—to some writer friends for comment. It’s come back, littered with suggestions. Your ‘friends’ just called your baby ugly!
Sad to say, you’d better get used to this. You’ll have to toughen up. First, before you tackle those comments, remind yourself that those friends were addressing your story, not you personally. They want you to succeed, and figure you’d rather hear the harsh truth from them than to undergo many dozens of rej...
February 13, 2022
Physical Book, Ebook, or Audiobook?
As text delivery methods, physical (paper) books, ebooks, and audiobooks each appeal in different ways. But which provides the best reading comprehension and recall?
Of the three types, which one embeds the text more firmly in your memory? Perhaps there’s no difference at all, or perhaps the answer is different for each reader.
Few have researched this vital question. The only studies I could find compared two of these media, not all three, and they reached contradictory conclusions.
...February 6, 2022
27 Ways to Celebrate Jules Verne’s Birthday
Just two more days until Jules Verne’s birthday on February 8th. He’ll turn 194. How will you celebrate?
I have a few ideas for you. For convenience, I’ll separate them into categories.
Low-Cost At-Home Activities
Read (or re-read) one of his books. Perhaps the best way to celebrate.Join the North American Jules Verne Society.Watch a movie inspired by one of Verne’s books. There are dozens to choose from, some available on the internet.Toast to Verne with some French wine, and, as t...January 30, 2022
The Uses of Bars, Taverns, and Pubs in Fiction
Welcome to Poseidon’s Pub! Come on in. There’s an empty stool here at the bar. What can I get you?
Bars, taverns, pubs, taprooms, watering holes, alehouses, saloons, cantinas, grogshops, dives, and joints serve as frequent settings in fiction. Little wonder. They’re common settings in real life, too.
In fiction, though, they perform a different function than in real life. Let’s examine that subject.
To the reader, it should seem that your character enters the bar for any of the reas...
January 23, 2022
Don’t Read in Bed!
Many people read in bed at night. Researchers tell you it’s good for your sleep and overall health. I disagree. Let me explain.
First, I know all the reasons people urge you to read in bed. It helps you relax, stimulates your creativity, gives you more empathy, and makes you smarter. I’ve read blogs and articles by Maddie Thomas, Lilianna Hogan at WebMD, Jodi Helmer, and Dr. Michael Breus. Molly Cavanaugh even inflicts this practice on her children.
These people have it all wrong. Rea...
January 16, 2022
Scene Plotting
It’s tough enough to lay out the plot for a book. Now I’m supposed to have a plot for each scene? Seriously?
Yeah, seriously. This past week I watched on online Zoom presentation by author John Claude Bemis. He called the technique ‘microplotting.’ I’ll introduce it here, in my own words. Any differences between what he meant and what I wrote are my errors, not his.
First, why does each scene of your book need a plot, if the overall book already has one? Bemis says it’s because there w...
January 9, 2022
When Robots Write Better
Here’s a thought experiment. We know researchers push Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology further all the time. What if AI begins writing stories and novels better than humans do?
To make it more fun, let’s assume AI lags behind humans in all other areas. That is, AI programs start to write wonderful fiction, but accomplish nothing else of note.
At this point, that seems unlikely. According to this article by Andrew Mayne, AI has made some progress writing two-sentence flash fictio...
January 2, 2022
A Novel Plan
I heard you’d like to write a novel. That’s the word on the street, anyway. As they say, writing a novel is a one-day event. (As in, ‘one day, I’ll write a novel.’)
No, you’re more serious than that. You’re going to do it. For such a big undertaking, maybe you should have a plan. Lucky you, the internet can provide one. Wait, more than one. Way more. Uh-oh.
There’s the 3-Step plan by Stephanie Gangi, the 7 Steps for planning a novel by the Reedsyblog staff, the 10-Step Plan by The Writ...
December 26, 2021
8 (+2) Science Fiction Predictions for 2022
Yes, it’s true, not all of my previous year’s predictions have proven accurate. But some have. Rest assured, though. I’ve abandoned the flawed methods I used back then. Those crystal balls, tea leaves and tarot cards are for amateurs.
I spent all of 2021 working on a special astrological chart for science fiction literature. After all, it’s only natural to turn to the stars for scifi trends, right? Here are my predictions for 2022:
Games and Virtual Reality. This recent trend will cont...December 19, 2021
Looking Back, My 2021 Predictions Assessed
Another year, another set of (mostly) failed predictions. You’d think I’d give this up! At the end of 2020, I used special tarot cards to make predictions about science fiction books to appear in 2021. Let’s see how those prophecies panned out.
Prediction
: Disease stories. Inspired by the COVID-19 virus, there will be stories of even deadlier diseases, perhaps intelligent diseases. I see stories of pandemics, extreme isolation, and how characters deal with mass death.
Assessment
: I didn’t ...


