Columns

Showing 3528 Columns

6 Books To Celebrate Pride Month

June 18th, 2019

Header background by Steve Johnson I love heritage months so much because they make me think. They make me think about my own experience walking through the world and how it aligns or doesn't with the myriad experiences around me. These months are a focused opportunity to broaden our perspectives and truly appreciate the challenges various communities endure. Pride month is my favorite because it's symbol is the rainbow and it encompasses such a broad range of interesting individuals.

Read Column →

13 Books That Wouldn't Be Published Today

June 17th, 2019

In his new book of non-fiction, White, Bret Easton Ellis questions whether Cormac McCarthy’s dark western Blood Meridian would be published today. To paraphrase Ellis, Blood Meridian is an aesthetic masterpiece, but it’s also an ideological nightmare. It lives in the spot where aesthetics intersect with ideology. Or, not so much intersect as barrel towards each other like two trucks with burned-out brakes. After those trucks collide, would Blood Meridian come out of the wreckage whole?

Read Column →

Writing a Novel With Save the Cat!

June 13th, 2019

There is no right way or wrong way to write a novel. All you have to do, as Neil Gaiman once said, is “Put one word after another. Find the right word, put it down.” But even though there is only one way to write a novel – actually writing it – there are multiple strategies for plotting your novel. Outline? No outline? Pantser? Methodical plotter?

Read Column →

What Does It take to Get a Job in Publishing?

June 11th, 2019

Photo by Tim Gouw In the summer of 2012, I got an internship at W.W. Norton & Co., a privately-owned publishing company in New York City, known for their anthologies and critical editions. To a girl who grew up reading books in a small town in Pennsylvania, moving to the “biggest” city (Philadelphia was the “big” city) to work in books was the most exciting dream-come-true.

Read Column →

What Joy Williams and Denis Johnson Can Teach Us About the Art of First Sentences

June 7th, 2019

Author photos: Curtis Brown, Cindy Johnson Human beings are shaped by their environments as much as they shape their environments. So, too, do the first sentences of short stories shape the stories themselves, as much as they are shaped by their stories.

Read Column →

5 Lessons Fiction Writers Can Learn From Video Games

June 6th, 2019

Images via Jeshoots and rawpixel I’ve been playing video games about as long as I’ve been a writer, and for several years I was in the game industry — as a tester, designer, and writer.

Read Column →

How I Did an Unintentional Book Tour Without a Budget

June 5th, 2019

I never thought I'd do anything even remotely resembling a book tour. I'm a broke writer published by a no-budget indie press. Then, somehow, I found myself on the road, despite my lack of funds. And it isn't over—I have a few more stops scheduled before then end of the year. Here are some tips for those of you wanting to do the same.

Read Column →

8 Superb Books to Celebrate Rainbow Book Month

June 4th, 2019

In 2015, the American Library Association started GLBT Book Month: a nationwide celebration of authors and books that explore the experiences of the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender community. As of 2020, GLBT Book Month was renamed Rainbow Book Month™, in coordination with the Rainbow Round Table's name change in 2019.

Read Column →

The Most Nonsensical Terms Used in Book Blurbs

June 3rd, 2019

In a big first for me, this column was inspired by something positive. I was browsing books, and I saw this blurb on the back of Dathan Auerbach’s Bad Man: Cleanup on aisle 9: Bad Man will make a mess of your daily life, will haunt your next trip to the grocery store. And then you’ll want to reread it, just to see how Dathan Auerbach did that. And you’ll be scared all over again. -Stephen Graham Jones

Read Column →

The Importance of Work in Translation

May 31st, 2019

I love work in translation. I consider myself lucky because I can read in English and Spanish, opening the door to not one, but two amazing literary universes. From Miguel de Cervantes' Don Quixote to Bram Stoker's Dracula, I've been able to read classic works of literature in their original language. That said, my Portuguese is decent, but not decent enough to devour novels, and my Italian is that of a one-year old. I don't speak or read Russian or Japanese or Greek.

Read Column →
Learning | Free Lesson — LitReactor | 2024-05

Try Reedsy's novel writing masterclass — 100% free

Sign up for a free video lesson and learn how to make readers care about your main character.