• Friday’s Findings: Character Viewpoint and Description

    Friday’s Findings: Character Viewpoint and Description

    I am a technical editor for an airline, and recently my department moved from one building to a new one. I love my new office. Everything is new and clean. It’s located in an airplane hangar, so I can just step away from my desk and go see the airplanes up close as the mechanics…

  • Friday’s Findings: Read, Read, Read

    Friday’s Findings: Read, Read, Read

    “Read, read, read. Read everything – trash, classics, good and bad, and see how they do it. Just like a carpenter who works as an apprentice and studies the master. Read! You’ll absorb it. Then write. If it’s good, you’ll find out. If it’s not, throw it out of the window.” —William Faulkner Friday’s Findings…

  • Warning: No Info Dumping, Part 3

    Warning: No Info Dumping, Part 3

    For the past year, I’ve been creating a story in my mind. It started with a single scene, but since then I’ve daydreamed of several scenarios in which my story fermented, busted, and grew. And grew some more. If I wasn’t already working on other pieces of fiction, I’d go ahead and give it my…

  • Warning: No Info Dumping, Part 2

    Warning: No Info Dumping, Part 2

    In my last blog entry, I talked about the dos and don’ts of info-dumping. Now, I’d like to offer some case studies of info-dumping in action. While these may exaggerate info-dumps in action, they can still cause the writer to ask herself, ‘Have I done this?’ Info-dumps mostly pop up in these areas of description…

  • Warning: No Info Dumping, Part 1

    Warning: No Info Dumping, Part 1

    Let’s talk about some do’s anLet’s talk about some do’s and don’t’s of info-dumping. I try to find ways to include how things work in my sci-fi and fantasy stories, but I’m not always sure I avoid info-dumping. I try to. But it’s an easy trap to fall into, especially as a speculative fiction writer.…

  • Some books on writing craft

    Some books on writing craft

    The following are two completely different books for the writer. One is about a structured process and the other is about organically discovering your creativity. We can benefit from both. Save the Cat Writes a Young Adult Novel by Jessica Brody I just finished Jessica Brody’s Save the Cat Writes a Young Adult Novel and…

  • Friday’s Findings: Imposter Syndrome as a writer

    Friday’s Findings: Imposter Syndrome as a writer

    Over the last few years, I’ve encountered the term imposter syndrome, and I’m like, “What is that?” Imposter syndrome is a thought pattern that reoccurs in someone’s mind and tells them they’re not good enough at what they do. For example: “I’m not a good teacher.” “I’m a terrible physician.” “I’m not as good a…

  • Friday’s Findings: Five things I’ve learned in five years, part 2

    Friday’s Findings: Five things I’ve learned in five years, part 2

    A few weeks ago, I named five things I learned about the writing craft in the last five years, which are things about the actual writing process. As I came up with that list, I serendipitously came up with items that didn’t relate directly to the craft but to the writing life. These would be…

  • Science Fiction & Fantasy I’ve Read Lately

    Science Fiction & Fantasy I’ve Read Lately

    I’ve been traveling in time with my speculative fiction reading lately. While the first two reviews below are recently released science fiction novels, the third review goes back a few years. Then I got brave. I read a fantasy from a few decades ago. Here’s what I thought: Cascade Failure by L. M. Sagas Science…


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