10 Things The Walking Dead Has To Do To Keep Me Watching
Column by Kelly Thompson
What are the 10 things The Walking Dead needs to do this season to keep me watching? Let's find out!
Return to the Masculine: The Reemergence of Men's Pulp Fiction in the Age of eBooks
Column by Keith Rawson
"Men's pulp fiction" is making a big bloody,six guns blazing, nuclear fallout of a comeback in the age of eReaders and you should come along for the ride!
Big ‘A’ Little ‘a’: Writing Between the Concrete and Abstract
Column by Jon Gingerich
One the most widely misunderstood — yet crucial — skills a writer must learn is the ability to put specific actions on the page that transcend into larger, universal concepts.
Primer: Gene Wolfe - The Subtle Master
Column by Rajan Khanna
A primer on the work of Gene Wolfe, one of the masters of speculative fiction.
Library Love: Reader’s Advisory - Expert Advice On What To Read Next
Column by Stephanie Bonjack
The end of a great novel is no cause for despair! Get your next fix using these helpful tips.
Direct-Address Commafication
Column by Stephen Graham Jones
Donate now to help save the direct-address comma! Get it off the endangered species list! All it takes is one well-placed keystroke, people. All it takes is a little integrity.
Seven Badass Authors And Their Potentially Deadly Research Methods
Column by Kimberly Turner
New rule: You can't call the research for your book "grueling" unless it involves a gun to your head, beatings from Hells Angels members, feigning madness, or eating someone in the jungles of Peru.
Sherlock Holmes (On CBS) Vs. Sherlock Holmes (On BBC)
Column by Rob Hart
Both CBS and BBC now have modern-day takes on Sherlock Holmes. Comparisons were inevitable. Let's discuss.
Storyville: Story Dissection - Maker of Flight
Column by Richard Thomas
Richard dissects another of his short stories, this time, the contest winning, "Maker of Flight."
The Blagger's Guide to David Foster Wallace
Column by Cath Murphy
Do you develop indigestion at the prospect of consuming Infinite Jest’s 1097 pages? Dine instead on this tiny, bite-sized knowledge snack about the man the Chicago Tribune once called a genius.
























