About This Writing Stuff…

This week on the blog, Ceridwen Dovey expounds the concept of “bibliotherapy” and the restorative power of reading fiction. Kristen Lamb encourages writer to be secret-keepers… and to get more rest. Jami Gold explains what it means to add layers to your characters and Anne R. Allen councils us against worrying too much about plot purloiners.


Over at Career Authors, Paula Munier cites three mistakes by debut writers that potentially exasperate agents and editors while Glenn Miller advises us on how to be trustworthy writers. C.S. Lakin offers tips on preparing your scenes, Sarah Chauncey talks effective use of POV in memoir, and from Mythcreants, Chris Winkle enumerates six manuscript mistakes that a copy editor might (or might not) help you fix.


Enjoy!


Can Reading Make You Happier? by Ceridwen Dovey


Secret-Keepers: Generate Page-Turning, Nerve-Shredding Tension and Rest for Success and Why Busy is Seriously Overrated by Kristen Lamb


Make Characters Unique with Layering by Jami Gold


What if Somebody Steals Your High-Concept Book Idea? by Anne R. Allen


Are You Making One of These Risky Moves for Writers? by Paula Munier


This is What Happens When You Stop Lying to Readers by Glenn Miller


Questions to Consider When Plotting a Scene by C.S. Lakin via Jane Friedman


The Tricky Issue of POV in Memoir by Sarah Chauncey via Jane Friedman


Six Common Wordcraft Mistakes in Manuscripts by Chris Winkle

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Published on January 12, 2019 05:11
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