This is the continued saga of my foray into Janice Hardy’s Revise Your Novel in 31 Days at-home workshop. (blog.janicehardy.com) This is one assignment that was actually a pleasure for me, because my characters told me who they were before I … Continue reading
L.L.Peters
In my previous post I announced that I was going to follow Janice Hardy’s Revise Your Novel in 31 Days at-home workshop. (blog.janicehardy.com) Today’s assignment was to make notes, with no actual revisions, to discover places I may want or … Continue reading
There is a wonderful blog for writers called Fiction University by Janice Hardy. (blog.janicehardy.com) Her current project is an at-home workshop for the month of March titled Revise Your Novel in 31 Days. My inner critic cries Hallelujah! Since I … Continue reading
Nathan comes home from his first day at school. Mother asks, “What did you learn today?” He replies, “Not enough. I have to go back tomorrow.” As writers, we have to have realistic and attainable goals. Writing is something that … Continue reading
Extreme Pantser – Someone who writes a story with no preconceived idea as to where the story is going or how it will end. Extreme Outliner- Someone who plans out the entire story, scene by scene, before the first line … Continue reading
The gooey donuts, fresh from the oven, smelled like heaven in a bag and made my mouth water. I quickly downed the first one in the car, then sighed with satisfaction as I licked the warm glaze from my fingers … Continue reading
Head-hopping is when a writer jumps from one character’s point-of-view (POV) to another’s without a clear break. New writers may do this without even realizing it. Their intent is to pass on enough information to the reader to make the … Continue reading
Do I have the talent to write or am I just fooling myself? I ask that question almost daily. Talent is great, wonderful, and a powerful step in the right direction, but many workshop leaders and published authors agree it … Continue reading
The Writing Gene – Do You Have It? William Shakespeare had it, Edgar Allan Poe had it, even Dr. Seuss had it. So what is it? It’s what drives you—compels you to write. It’s a desire to leave something of … Continue reading
I once critiqued part of a story for an English professor. I told her I could really “see” the character as a scornful, snobby woman. She was shocked. That was not who her character was. One of the goals of … Continue reading