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Showing 3539 Columns
Showing 3539 Columns
March 3rd, 2023
Original robot image by Alex Knight - Original background image by Polina Kovaleva The age of AI has been a long time coming, but between platforms like Dal-E and ChatGPT, it looks like it’s finally here. ChaptGPT’s arrival has sparked debate from chat rooms to boardrooms to classrooms.
Read Column →March 1st, 2023
Header image by Roy Christopher Quoting and paraphrasing are common in writing disciplines such as journalism and academia, but plagiarism is anathema, punishable by excommunication. While endemic to the creative practices of hip-hop, the practice of interpolation is also hotly debated. The orthodox rule there was no biting, but if you can take what someone else wrote and make it better, that’s worthy of respect.
Read Column →February 28th, 2023
Throughout the past 10+ years of working in a mix of publishing and academic environments, I’ve learned that craft books are hit and miss. Some students and writers really love and depend on them, whereas others feel like after a while, they get a bit stale or repetitive or maybe aren’t giving them the helpful push or inspiration they wanted. Personally, I was the type of writer and student who devoured craft books.
Read Column →February 22nd, 2023
photo: Heike Huslage-Koch, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons David Sedaris never submitted pieces to lit mags. David Sedaris never tried to find an agent.
Read Column →February 21st, 2023
Header image via Madison Inouye I’m trash for an author newsletter. It seems like lately, every author, published or pre-published, has created an author newsletter, and every time they mention their email offerings on my Twitter feed, I simply must sign up. I’m just a huge fan of getting fun emails in my inbox and of feeling a connection to the authors I’ve read and love — or even the authors I follow on social.
Read Column →February 17th, 2023
So, you know the horror film—a quiet, dark house or maybe a creepy barn, with a full moon outside. The last final girl is walking towards the basement or the loft or the cornfield when all of a sudden—BAM. A cat jumps in the window. Something tips over. An animal runs out of the pile of hay. It’s a jump scare, and it works, but there’s no depth to this horror. It’s a moment, and it will not linger.
Read Column →February 15th, 2023
Image via Wikipedia Commons More. That’s the theme of 2023 when it comes to book bans: more. There have been more challenges, more protests, more pieces of legislation than there have been in the recent past.
Read Column →February 14th, 2023
Flame image via icon0 Swooning over fictional characters is one of the perks of being a bookworm. They’re dashing and charismatic, romantic and audacious. But there’s also the characters we’d never want to run into in real life. Sometimes they’re the villains, sometimes they’re the unlikeable protagonists, and sometimes they’re side characters whose toxic traits take up the entire page.
Read Column →February 13th, 2023
Valentine’s Day. Roses. Chocolates. Cutesy stuffed animals and fancy dinners. A baby with a bow. February is a month for lovers, but even with so much sweetness in the air, there’s still plenty to enjoy for those whose tastes run a little darker.
Read Column →February 10th, 2023
Image via Fernando Arcos Today I want to talk about two ways you can make your writing more inclusive. They're things you might not even think about, but your readers will definitely notice and appreciate when done well. Both can be summed up in this quote from Alan Baxter:
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