Hashtag Haiku: #funwithshortforms
Take a break from all that serious writing to play with a couple short forms--one old, one new.The Art Of The Rewrite
A true rewrite is not just editing, proofing or copy-editing, but a complete re-imagining of the work. Here’s a four-part process to fortify writers with a successful re-writing plan that works.Storyville: The Journey of "Rudy Jenkins Buries His Fears"
In:
Research
The journey of a single short story can be a difficult one. Track "Rudy" on his epic voyage.
“I tell the truth, even when I lie.”: A Discussion of Unreliable Narrators
Can your narrator be trusted?? Reliable narrators are the norm, but unreliable narrators are great to read and fun to write.When To Show, When To Tell
Maintaining action is paramount in fiction, but sooner or later we’ll need to deliver expository details for our stories to make sense. So, how do writers engage while providing character depth?Strong Words: Pumping Up Your Writing With Better Vocabulary
In:
Vocabulary
Flexing your vocabulary muscle makes your writing better, stronger, and able to leap tall buildings in a single bound.
Writing Sentences With Impact
A guide to writing more active, more immediate, more powerful sentences that will grab your reader’s attention and make them remember what you’ve written.Storyville: Cover Letters and Bridging the Gap
In:
Research
Once you've got a story written, how do you send it out into the world?
Sixth Sense Settings: Writing Rich, Descriptive Scenes
Incorporating tone/mood into your settings for realistic descriptions that keep your reader hooked.Write Characters In A Representation-Free Zone
Many writers eschew compelling characters in favor of mannequin tropes that serve as props for preexisting social messages, or characters a reader can “relate to.” Here’s why it’s always bad writing.Out of Order: A Discussion of Nonlinear Narrative Structure
A Discussion of Non-linear Narrative StructureStoryville: Finding Your Voice
Embarking on the quest to find your very own literary voiceDon't Leave Me Hanging...
The ending is the most important part, and as a writer you should want to write a spectacular ending because, hey, you did a heck-of-a-lot of work on the beginning and middle parts.An Exquisite Corpse: Tips for Brainstorming your National Novel Writing Month Plot
In:
Plot
How to Generate plot ideas for your NaNoWriMo novel.
Which P.O.V Is Right For Your Story?
A list of the different modes of point of view, with a breakdown of the advantages and disadvantages of each.Cliche, the Literary Default
Stories start from a default position of cliché: readers go into stories with expectations, and if too many are fulfilled the spell is broken. So, how do writers engage when the odds are against them?This Is Not Oklahoma: OK vs. Okay
In:
Grammar
This Is Not Oklahoma: OK vs. Okay. In the Age of the Laze Abbreviation, can we all just agree that it looks stupid?