Category: writing tips

  • What Does NaNoWriMo Look Like Now?

    What Does NaNoWriMo Look Like Now?

    Never fear, the spirit of NaNoWriMo lives on, even if the website is gone. The challenge is to now find your own community to write with, whether that is online or in-person. And of course, you can write by yourself. Whatever your goals have been for the November challenge of writing 50k words, you have…

  • Friday’s Findings: Keeping a Writing Journal

    Friday’s Findings: Keeping a Writing Journal

    I work as a technical editor for an airline. A year and a half ago, my department moved into the gigantic new hangar the airline built. While I love the new building, I never thought it would help me in my writing. But it does. It just so happens the science fiction novella I’m working…

  • Is It Preptober?

    Is It Preptober?

    Next month will be the first November in decades that the official NaNoWriMo website will not exist. Does this mean no National Novel Writing Month? Will there be a NaNoWriMo community? Should I do NaNoWriMo? I can only speak for myself, but I plan to do NaNoWriMo. Which means this is Preptober. Preptober: It’s a…

  • Friday’s Findings: Ask Why

    Friday’s Findings: Ask Why

    Why Writers Should Ask “Why” Before Writing a Novel Before a writer sketches an outline, builds a character profile, or writes the first sentence, there’s a question worth pausing to ask: Why am I writing this novel? Most of the time, I write for fun. I never think about the why. But I keep coming…

  • Test Your Novel’s Potential

    Test Your Novel’s Potential

    “Is my novel idea worth pursuing?” How can you know you will fall in love with your novel without spending hours of writing, stringing together thousands of words, and creating dozens of scenes before realizing it doesn’t work? Try this: Jessica Brody, author of Save the Cat Writes a Novel, recommends just writing the single…

  • Some books on writing craft

    Some books on writing craft

    The Happy Writer by Marissa Meyer is a warm, encouraging guide that helps writers rediscover joy in the creative process by balancing productivity with self-compassion. Through practical advice and personal insights, Meyer reminds authors that success comes not just from word counts, but from cultivating happiness in their writing life. I’ve read two different fiction…

  • Friday’s Findings: Your Novel’s Word Count Breakdown

    Friday’s Findings: Your Novel’s Word Count Breakdown

    Have you ever asked yourself, “Is my middle too saggy?” Of course, I’m talking about the first draft of your novel. I have several novels in the first draft stage, and I plan to revise them over the next couple of years, Lord willing. Here’s the thing: before I start rewriting them, I want to…

  • Friday’s Findings: Tension

    Friday’s Findings: Tension

    What is tension in fiction? It is the anticipation, the dread, of unknown events or other elements in a story that compel a reader to keep going. Ask this question for each of your characters: What are you afraid of losing the most? The answers should give you an ample supply of tension, conflict, and…

  • Friday’s Findings: Ways to Start a Writing Session

    Friday’s Findings: Ways to Start a Writing Session

    In my last blog posting, I talked about using copy work to get started for a writing session. The concept goes like this: for five minutes, copy word-for-word, a few paragraphs of your favorite author or novel. Then start your actual work-in-progress (WIP). It made me realize copy work is just one way to warm…